112th Congress
Ways and Means Committee speculates that ACA could cause employers to drop ESI
Posted on May 1, 2012
The Ways and Means Committee Republicans released a report today estimating that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) provides large employers with an incentive to stop offering health care benefits to employees. Ways and Means Staff analyzed survey information from 71 of the Fortune 100 companies who reported that they will spend $38.4 billion on health care for active employees in 2014. The report indicates that if these large employers choose to drop health insurance coverage for active employees, they would save a collective $28.6 billion in 2014. They reached this conclusion by subtracting the $9.9 billion in mandate penalty payments that the companies would accrue as a whole if they opted out of the requirement from the $38.4 billion health care expenditure total. They speculated that if these large employers did indeed choose to drop health insurance coverage for active employees, they would save a
collective $28.6 billion in 2014. The report also noted that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) does not expect such an exodus from the ESI market. CBO argued last year that “if firms could have attracted employees more cheaply by dropping health benefits and adding wages or other benefits that cost less, then they would have done so.”
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House passes student loan bill
Posted on April 27, 2012
The House passed H.R. 4628: Interest Rate Reduction Act 215-195 to hold subsidized student loan interest rates at 3.4 percent for one year. House Republicans attached a Democratically unfavorable rider to the bill. The rider would tap into the Prevention and Public Health Fund, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) provision designated to improve public health efforts such as screening programs. The White House has threatened to veto such a bill, arguing that further slashing the Prevention Fund would cause harm to those in need of preventive services.
The Senate will debate its own student loan interest rate freeze bill on May 7. While the House bill pays for the bill through cuts to the Prevention and Public Health Fund, Senate Democrats will fund the bill through tax increases on certain corporations.
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House approves IPAB repeal
Posted on March 23, 2012
Members of the House approved H.R. 5, the Protecting Access to Healthcare (PATH) act, by a vote of 223-181, with only seven Democrats supporting the bill and ten Republicans opposing. H.R. 5 would repeal the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB), a provision under the Affordable Care Act. IPAB, a 15-member government agency, would have the power to force cuts to providers if Medicare expenditures rose beyond a predetermined cap. The board’s decisions would be immune from the court system, and thus would carry the full force of law. IPAB was tasked with finding Medicare savings and instituting medical tort reform across the country.
For more information on IPAB, click here.
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Update: Prevention and Public Health Fund
Posted on February 27, 2012
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 created the Prevention and Public Health Fund (Prevention Fund) to improve American health through disease prevention efforts. The ACA allotted almost $20 billion over 10 years to the Prevention Fund with the goal of improving wellness and restraining cost growth incurred by the increasing prevalence of chronic disease. This fund is structured as a trust fund, and is not subject to the annual appropriations process.
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House approves CLASS repeal
Posted on February 2, 2012
By a vote of 267-159, the House approved a bill (H.R. 1173) yesterday to repeal a long-term care program, Community Living Assistance Program and Supports (CLASS), a provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Twenty-eight Democrats joined a unanimous Republican Conference in support of the repeal. CLASS was added to the ACA as the first federally sponsored long-term care program available to most working adults on a voluntary basis. This repeal comes after an announcement in October 2011 from the Obama administration, stating that they had no intention of implementing the program due to financing issues. The repeal of the (CLASS) program has been a priority of the Republican controlled House, but it seems there is little chance that a similar bill would pass in the Democratic-controlled Senate.
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Prominent Republican Discusses Importance of Medicaid on Senate Floor
Posted on December 19, 2011
Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, gave a speech on the Senate floor warning members of the dire consequences to Congressional powers if the Supreme Court finds in favor of States on the ‘Medicaid Commandeering’ argument. The Court has agreed to hear oral arguments on multiple challenges to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) over a three day stretch in late March of 2012. These challenges include an objection by States of the Medicaid expansion provisions of the ACA, which require States to expand Medicaid eligibility to 133% of the federal poverty level (FPL) in order to receive additional federal dollars.
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Sen. Wyden (D-OR) joins Rep. Ryan (R-WI) on Medicare Plan
Posted on December 18, 2011
Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon teamed up with Republican Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin on a Medicare overhaul plan that would provide beneficiaries with a fixed amount to buy private coverage or pay for a traditional fee-for-service plan. Different from the Ryan plan introduced earlier this year, the Ryan-Wyden proposal would not do away with Medicare, but instead would leave it is an option for beneficiaries to purchase with their vouchers. However, this plan would not ensure that the voucher would make Medicare affordable, nor would it preclude private insurance policies from designing benefit plans to exclusively attract healthy beneficiaries.
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House passes bill with 2-year SGR fix
Posted on December 16, 2011
Introduced by Republican leadership only days earlier, the U.S. House of Representatives has passed a legislative package, some of which is paid for by reducing funding of certain components of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The legislation provides funding for the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, preempts certain rules issued by the Environmental Protection Agency, extends unemployment insurance, and prevents a reduction in physician payments under Medicare (the “SGR fix”), among other provisions. The legislation is paid for, at least in part, by increasing the amount of ineligible premium sharing tax-credit money that can be recoped by the IRS under the ACA, and by cutting the Public Health and Prevention trust fund by $8 billion.
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House votes to include Social Security in Medicaid eligibility formula
Posted on October 28, 2011
On October 27th, the House voted 262-157 to pass H.R. 2576, a bill to strike out a “glitch” in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that would have allowed middle-class couples to enroll in Medicaid starting in 2014. Under the ACA, before the new bill passed, the majority of Social Security benefits were not taxed, and thus not reviewed when determining Medicaid eligibility. A couple earning as $60,000 per year could have gained access to Medicaid. H.R. 2576 moves to include Social Security benefits as income when calculating modified adjusted gross income (MAGI). MAGI is used to determine Medicaid eligibility. On Tuesday, October 25th, the Obama administration publicly supported the bill.
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Ways and Means Committee moves to redefine MAGI
Posted on October 13, 2011
Today, the House Committee on Ways and Means approved, 23-12, largely along party lines, legislation that would affect eligibility under federal health care reform law. The proposed legislation, H.R. 2576, revises the computation of modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) for the purpose of determining eligibility for premium assistance tax credits and Exchange subsidies, Medicaid, and CHIP. Under the current definition, MAGI equals adjusted gross income (AGI) plus any tax-exempt interest and foreign earned income otherwise excluded from AGI. Because a portion of Social Security benefits is currently excluded from gross income (and therefore from AGI) for income tax purposes, the current MAGI definition allows only the taxable portion of Social Security benefits to count toward eligibility requirements. Representative Diane Black (R-TN) introduced H.R. 2576 to expand the definition of MAGI to include the entire amount of Social Security benefits received. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimate that the legislation would reduce deficits by almost $3 billion over the 2012-2016 period and by about $13 billion over the 2012-2021 period. CBO and JCT have found that adding nontaxable Social Security income to the MAGI definition would reduce Medicaid enrollment, beginning in 2014, by between 500,000 and on million people, depending on the year. The number of people purchasing insurance through the Exchanges could increase as a result.
Click here for H.R. 2576 background and proposal explanation.
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