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>A Principled Path to Rational Health Care Reform

>https://www.heritage.org/Research/HealthCare/wm2448.cfm

by Nina Owcharenko
WebMemo #2448

Congress will soon unveil legislation to reform the health care system. The policies outlined by President Obama during his campaign and those being discussed in Congress would centralize control over the health care system in Washington.

The chief danger of this approach is that it would directly interfere in the personal health care decisions of Americans. There is a much better alternative: a system that recognizes diversity across the states and differences in individual health care needs and preferences.

A Consensus on the Problems

There is little disagreement that the current health care system needs an overhaul. Today, health care costs continue to rise while people have fewer choices and are less secure that the coverage they have today will be there tomorrow. The U.S. spends over $2.4 trillion on health care (almost 17 percent of GDP), and the government accounts for almost one-half of all health care spending.[1]

Premiums continue to rise in the private sector. Employer-based family coverage has increased from an average of $6,438 in 2000 to $12,680 in 2008.[2] The government health programs are not faring much better. According to recent CMS Actuary calculations, Medicare and Medicaid spent $818 billion in 2008 and are projected to reach $1.7 trillion by 2018.[3]

Americans are also facing fewer choices. Today, 85 percent of all employers offer only one health plan for their employees.[4] Similar restrictions on personal choice face enrollees in government programs. In Medicaid, 23 percent are not accepting new Medicaid patients, and 18 percent are accepting only some.[5] In Medicare, serious legislative efforts are underway that will likely chip away at seniors’ access to the private plans they want in Medicare.[6]

Finally, Americans feel less secure about the future of their health care coverage. With the economic recession, Americans recognize they are one paycheck away from losing their health care coverage. Fifteen percent of Americans are without coverage. The uninsured are not a homogeneous group, but they tend to be disproportionately young, a member of a minority group, and working for small firms.

Most important, while the percentage of those without coverage remains constant, the individuals are not the same. As a matter of fact, 45 percent of uninsured are uninsured for less than four months; only 16 percent are uninsured for more than 18 months.[7] This churning in the health insurance markets, and the lack of portability, is almost entirely the result of outdated government policies.

Two Competing Health Care Visions

There is also general agreement on the outcomes Americans are looking for in any health care reform proposal: affordability, accessibility, portability, and quality. But there is less agreement on policy path for reform.

On one side, there are those who believe that centralizing power in Washington is the best approach to achieve serious and long-lasting health care reform. Their policy prescriptions call for federalizing and heavily regulating health insurance. Proposals for a new public health plan and a federal health insurance exchange, as well as an individual mandate to purchase a government-approved package of benefits, clarify their intent: Washington control over health care financing and delivery.

The result, regardless of stated intentions to the contrary, is that the Congress would ultimately be in charge of health care decisions. It would result in a massive one-size-fits-all government system, and it would depend on flawed financing schemes, new mandates, and higher taxes to pay for it.

On the other side, there are those who believe that individuals and families should be the key decision-makers in health care and that they should control the flow of health care dollars in a reformed system. They are concerned that a centralized system of federal decision-making would:

-Diminish individuals’ control over their personal health care decisions;
-Directly undermine state autonomy and authority in health policy, undercutting both innovation and experimentation to expand coverage and deliver quality care, especially for the poorest and most vulnerable of our citizens;
-Generate and perpetuate unsustainable federal spending; and
-Ultimately, in the face of serious budget crises, lead to government rationing of care and services.

Key Elements for a Workable Solution

Members of Congress serious about improving the health care system must find a way to bridge the gap between these two competing visions. There are three critical elements that could bring about a workable solution for lasting health care reform.

1. Tax Equity. The cornerstone of any serious health care reform proposal must address the tax treatment of health insurance. Today, individuals who purchase coverage through their place of work receive an unlimited tax break on the value of their health care benefits. However, those who purchase coverage on their own receive no comparable tax break.

There is broad bipartisan agreement, especially among health care economists and experts, that the current tax treatment of employer-based coverage is inequitable and regressive. Ideally, Congress should replace the current tax exclusion with a system of universal tax credits. Moreover, as a general principle, Congress should provide tax relief for those who purchase coverage on their own and redirect other health care spending to help low-income individuals and families purchase private health insurance coverage.

2. State-Based Reform. The health care challenges vary greatly across the country. Some states face high health care costs, while others face high rates of uninsurance. And, rural states face different challenges than urban states.

Instead of depending on a federal one-size-fits-all solution, Congress should embrace a federal-state partnership that would preserve diversity in the states. The states’ role would be to devise the best ways to achieve common national goals–for example, to establish a mechanism for portability. This is in sharp contrast to other state-based approaches where the federal government sets explicit requirements and imposes on the states the onerous task of administering its federal reform. These types of partnerships are little more than a backdoor way to a one-size-fits-all federal plan.

3. Sound Financing. The U.S. spends over $2.4 trillion on health care. Instead of spending an additional $1.6 trillion on a plan financed by tax increases and unproven savings from Medicare and Medicaid that may never materialize, Congress should restructure and redirect existing health care spending to make it more effective. To address long-term health care costs, Congress must focus on fundamental reform of the tax treatment of health insurance and entitlements. At the very least, Congress should require that savings be realized before appropriating them to any expansions.

Creating a Lasting Health Care Reform

Members of Congress have a choice: Either they can support efforts that expand Washington’s control of the health care system, or they can allow the states to develop solutions that will transfer direct control of health care dollars and personal health care decisions back to individuals and families. The choice should not be that hard.

Nina Owcharenko is Deputy Director of the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.

https://www.heritage.org/Research/HealthCare/wm2448.cfm

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>Reader feels ,"the fix is in for shutting it down and/or bonding for money to physically "improve" or "remodel" the facility."

>Graydon%2520Pool%2520Photo%25201

“How do we get the VC to consider this idea for getting someone in place to market Graydon so that it can be placed on better financial footing? I get the feeling that the fix is in for shutting it down and/or bonding for money to physically “improve” or “remodel” the facility. It seems that getting a CEO is a financially prudent option. But how are we to get them to even consider this? They are not prone to small scale solutions. Look at the remodeling of Village Hall, or the purchase of the Hillcrest farm”

show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=178853

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>Vacationing Graydonites, write to the Village Council

>Dear supporter of the Preserve Graydon Coalition:

Numerous Coalition supporters have told us that they wish they could attend this Wednesday’s Village Council meeting (7:30 PM, courtroom, 4th floor, Village Hall), but will be on vacation. Ah, summer!

If you’d have come to the meeting but will be out of town, about to leave town, or otherwise unavailable, please consider writing the Council a short note expressing this (in addition to any other Graydon-related letters you have written or plan to write).

Here’s an example that you may use or adapt, if desired:

To the Ridgewood Village Council:

I am unable to attend the Council’s work session on Wednesday, August 5. Please consider this note to represent my presence in support of the Preserve Graydon Coalition.

Sincerely,

Your Graydon-Loving Name
Ridgewood (or other town)

You can find all five Council members’ names, photos, and email addresses on the Council page of the Village website.

Swimmingly,

Suzanne Kelly and Marcia Ringel
Co-Chairs, The Preserve Graydon Coalition
“It’s clear—we love Graydon!”
[email protected]
www.preservegraydon.org

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>Graydon Pool Schedule – August & September

>Hours of Operation:

August 1 through 16 – Daily 10AM to 7:30PM

August 17 through 30 – Weekdays, 12 Noon to 7:30PM; Weekends, 10 AM to 7:30PM

September 5, 6, 7 – Holiday Weekend, 10AM to 7:30PM

For any questions, please call Recreation Office at 201/670-5560

Graydon offers reduced membership rates for the rest of the season,

Resident Late Season Membership (August 1 through Labor Day)
Adult (16 to 61 years old) $ 47.00 ——-
Child (2 to 15 years old) $ 42.00 ——-
Sponsored Non-Residents
Adult (16 and up) $ 100.00 ——-
Child (2 to 15 years old) $ 80.00 ——-

Hybrid 240x160

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>Ridgewood Orpheus Club at Kasschau Shell on TV August 5,6,7,8

>Ridgewood Orpheus Club at Kasschau Shell on TV August 5,6,7,8

“Arts in the Park” is produced by Cablevision and showcases local summer outdoor music performances. The Orpheus Club Men’s Choir perfomance at the Kasschau Shell on July 23 was taped and will be aired on Public Access Channel 78 on August 5 at 12pm; Aug 6 at 8pm; Aug 7 at 8pm, Aug 8 at 12pm.

Martha Stewart for 1-800-Flowers.comshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=149837

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>Village divided

>Village divided
Friday, July 31, 2009
BY MICHAEL SEDON
The Ridgewood News
STAFF WRITER

https://www.northjersey.com/recreation/news/52133992.html

The debate on what should be done with Graydon Pool is heating up this summer, with some residents supporting the push for renovations while others have formed a new group opposing any major changes at the facility.

The discussion is taking place while village officials are touting the clarity and cleanliness of the pool’s water this year, and the village engineer is in the midst of preparing a request for proposals (RFP) to get architectural designs and cost estimates for a redesigned Graydon complex.

Jane Morales and Melinda Cronk, co-chairs of the village-sanctioned Ridgewood Pool Project (RPP), have been conducting research and focus groups for nearly three years. Based on surveys and research it has conducted in the community, the RPP hopes to see Graydon redesigned to include concrete-bottom pools with improved water clarity.

Meanwhile, a group of residents calling itself The Preserve Graydon Coalition (PGC), headed by residents Suzanne Kelly and Marcia Ringel, has organized to try to prevent the transformation of the facility’s current “plake” (pool and lake) setting into a smaller concrete-bottom pool.

“There is an active effort to keep it [Graydon] clean and safe that people may not understand,” Kelly said poolside at Graydon this week. “There are full-time, highly experienced professionals working on this. It’s not just a pond.”

The stated goals of the PGC include: bringing residents into the pool for tours to see the improvements (see sidebar); preserving the open space of the current configuration; and retaining the beach-like setting with sand going right up to the water’s edge.

A concrete-bottom pool would require the sand beach and the main swimming area to be seperated, because sand negatively affects the filtration system of a traditional cement-bottom pool, Ringel said. The PGC also cited the loss of water space in the RPP’s new concept design; the danger of head and spinal-cord injuries in cement-bottom pools; and chlorine’s effect on asthma.

Bolger backs RPP

The RPP’s cause recently received the support of local philanthropist David F. Bolger. In a recent letter from Bolger to the Village Council, he wrote that he became interested in the project in mid-June and has since spent two to three weeks working to assess the financial plan with LAN Associates, an engineering firm. LAN Associates conducted the study at no cost, according to Bolger.

“I think it’s a great community service,” Bolger said during a phone conversation about the importance of renovating Graydon Pool.

The PGC’s initial e-mail circulation and comments made on Facebook, a social-networking Web site, apparently also caught the attention of Bolger. The e-mail referenced Bolger’s June 30 letter to the mayor and Village Council and asked whether he envisions a Graydon that would feature “Martinis by the pool under the lights” and “High-priced gazebo rentals for catered affairs” as ways to boost revenue for the village.

Bolger’s attorney, Thomas M. Wells, sent a notice Wednesday to Kelly, Ringel and fellow residents Neil Munroe and James Borghoff, requesting that they “cease and desist with the circulation of this memorandum,” threatening legal action if the group refuses. The PGC declined to comment on Bolger’s letter.

New estimates

The last cost estimate for the project from the RPP came in at $13.9 million, but the revised estimate that Bolger received from LAN Associates was $10 million, which includes the new pool and the surrounding amenities.

Cronk explained that the initial $13.9 million estimate, prepared by Wisconsin-based Water Technologies, included a lazy river and other amenities that are not part of the current design by Ridgewood resident Nicole Walla, who drew a more natural-looking depiction that did not include many of the perceived “theme park” amenities in the first design.

The RPP and Bolger suggested that the renovations could be funded through pool memberships. Regardless of the final cost, both financial models base the self-sustaining success of a renovated pool on a rate of 6,000 memberships at $150 per person and $750 per family.

Current membership prices are $77 for new memberships; $67 for children under 15 years old; and seasonal renewals of $72 and $100 for sponsored, non-resident members, according to information from the village Parks and Recreation Department.

Membership has dipped in the last 10 years, from a high of 6,000 in 1999 to a low this year of 2,161, according to figures from the parks and recreation office. Nancy Bigos, deputy director of Parks and Recreation, said she feels that the excessive rain and cooler-than-normal weather have kept some people away this year. Kelly said she believes that “negative publicity” is another reason that people have not purchased membership badges this summer.

But RPP co-chair Cronk said the numbers speak for themselves.

“The village charged us with finding out what would bring people back [to Graydon],” Cronk said. “We understand and we empathize with people who don’t want to see Graydon change in physical appearance, but there’s that fine line … Does ‘preserving’ mean keeping it exactly as it looks, or does ‘preserving’ mean preserving the intent of the facility, which is to be a community gathering place? We believe it’s the latter, and unfortunately the community isn’t gathering there anymore.”

E-mail: [email protected]

https://www.northjersey.com/recreation/news/52133992.html

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>As one of the better school systems in NJ, Ridgewood has more to lose than most.

>Most people agree that, as with any profession, teachers should be fairly compensated and the best teachers and those, who do more work/have more responsibility, should be paid the most. However, union policies are not necessary to accomplish these objectives and fail to do so…”.

The NJEA is killing public education in NJ. Its negotiated approach to teacher compensation limits pay for superior teachers, over compensates inferior teachers and continually raises the cost of public education, with increasingly inferior comparative results. While isolated communities may buck the trend from time to time, the trend across the state and country is clear. As one of the better school systems in NJ, Ridgewood has more to loose than most. This is not a condemnation of our teachers or their fair compensation. It is a condemnation of an unnecessary union that puts teachers’ benefits and compensation ahead of ensuring the highest performing educational system possible for our children.

https://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204619004574318393190278188.html#articleTabs%3Dcomments

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>Ridgewood Parking Problems: oh those new fangled meters will never work here

>”Wondering if you could post up something about this as it supposedly went into effect on Saturday. I saw an updated sign reflecting the new 10-6 enforcement hours on Broad St. but the meters were still labelled as 25c/hr and were operating as such. Curious to see if the changes have taken effect anywhere else in town? My concern going forward isn’t so much the cost of the increase, just the logistics of all the coin management. Do you know if a card type system is in the works?

Thanks.

Jim”

This has come up several times and despite wide acceptance there seems to be a lot of resistance to using better parking machines in Ridgewood and given the comments we received we suspect there is some ulterior motive for keeping them out.

the comments seem to be more than just ignorance lies and stupidity

https://theridgewoodblog.blogspot.com/2007/06/blog-readers-to-to-answers-on-downtown.html

*from the Ridgewood blog 6/17/2007

parking

From my understanding Ridgewood has some parking issues. Well I propose instead of placing ugly parking meters on residential blocks close to downtown that we place a ticket machine
at the ends of each block.

Why build a parking deck when you have space already?

https://theridgewoodblog.blogspot.com/2007/06/blog-readers-to-to-answers-on-downtown.html

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>Obama IN HIS OWN WORDS saying His Health Care Plan will ELIMINATE private insurance

>Nationalised Medicine here we come….

Obama Health Care Plan Details

HR 3200 currently under consideration in the House of Representatives

Pg 22 of the HC Bill MANDATES the Government will audit the books of ALL EMPLOYERS that self insure!!

Pg 30 Sec 123 of HC Bill – THERE WILL BE A GOVERNMENT COMMITTEE that decides what treatments/benefits you get

Pg 42 of HC Bill – The Health Choices Commissioner will choose your benefits for you. You have no choice!

Pg 58 HC Bill – Government will have real-time access to individual’s finances and a National ID Health Care Card will be issued!

Pg 59 HC Bill lines 21-24 Government will have direct access to your banks accounts for electronic funds transfer.

Pg 124 lines 24-25 HC No company can sue the government on price fixing. No “judicial review” against government monopoly.

Pg 127 Lines 1-16 HC Bill – Doctors/ #AMA – The government will tell YOU what you can make.

Pg 145 Line 15-17 An employer MUST auto enroll employees into public opt plan. NO CHOICE

Pg 195 Officers & employees of HC Admin (GOVT) will have access to ALL Americans’ financial and personal records.

Pg 241 Line 6-8 HC Bill – Doctors, it does not matter what specialty you have, you’ll all be paid the same.

Pg 317 L 13-20 PROHIBITION on ownership/investment. Government tells Doctors what/how much they can own.

Pg 425 Lines 4-12 Government mandates Advance [Death] Care Planning Consult. Think Senior Citizens end of life.

Pg 425 Lines 17-19 Government will instruct and consult regarding living wills, durable powers of attorney. Mandatory!

Pg 425 Lines 22-25, 426 Lines 1-3 Government provides approved list of end of life resources, guiding you in death.

Pg 427 Lines 15-24 Government mandates program for orders for end of life. The government has a say in how your life ends.

Pg 429 Lines 1-9 An “adv. care planning consult” will be used frequently as patient’s health deteriorates.

Pg 429 Lines 10-12 “adv. care consultation” may include an ORDER for end of life plans. AN ORDER from Government.

Pg 429 Lines 13-25 – The government will specify which doctors can write an end of life order.

PG 430 Lines 11-15 The government will decide what level of treatment you will have at end of life.

Pg 503 Lines 13-19 Government will build registries and data networks from YOUR electronic medical records.

Pg 503 lines 21-25 Government may secure data directly from any department or agency of the U.S., including your data.

Pg 632 Lines 14-25 The Government may implement any “Quality measure” of health care services as they see fit.

Pg 635 to 653 Physicians Payments Sunshine Provision – Government wants to shine sunlight on doctor but not government.

Pg 686-700 Increased Funding to Fight Waste, Fraud, and Abuse. You mean like the government with an $18 million website?

Pg 769 3-5 Nurse Home Visit Services – “increasing birth intervals between pregnancies.” Government ABORTIONS anyone?

Pg 770 SEC 1714 Federal Government mandates eligibility for State Family Planning Services. Abortion and State Sovereign.

PG 801 Sec 1751 The government will decide which health care conditions will be paid. Say RATION!

Pg 838-840 Government will design and implement Home Visitation Program for families with young kids and families expecting kids.

PG 844-845 This Home Visitation Program includes government coming into your house and telling you how to parent!!!

PG 935 21-22 Government will identify specific goals & objectives for prevention & wellness activities. Control YOU!!

PG 936 Government will develop “Healthy People and National Public Health Performance Standards” Tell me what to eat?

PG 1001 The government will establish a National Medical Device Registry. Will you be tracked?

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>Ridgewood Emergency Services

>12
These people do a great job year in and year out check out their website and show your support

https://ridgewood911.ridgewoodnj.net/EMS.php

The Emergency Services Department

Each year millions of Americans require immediate medical attention for sudden illness and injuries. Responding to the needs of Ridgewood are the members of the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) system. Pre-hospital team members consist of dispatches, first responders, emergency medical technicians (EMT’s) and paramedics.

In order to provide the needed emergency services 24 hours a day our members work on a mix of volunteer and paid time. Monday – Saturday between the hours of 6am and 7pm is covered by a paid EMT working side by side with firefighter EMTs from the fire department. Nights and weekends are covered by fully volunteer crews.

Often working under difficult and hazardous conditions, our EMS personnel respond to over 1400 calls per year in Ridgewood, providing swift, specialized care for seriously ill and injured persons.

The Ridgewood Volunteer Ambulance Corps is comprised of over 50 members between the ages of 18 and ‘aging gracefully’. All are New Jersey State certified Emergency Medical Technicians and all are certified by the Valley Hospital in cardiac defibrillation.

Each member attends annual in-service training in emergency first aid techniques, defibrillation, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, emergency childbirth, and traumatic emergency techniques to keep their skills up to date with the latest medical technology.

For More information about Ridgewood’s Emgerency Services Ambulance Corps. contact one of our officers or call 201-670-5570.

Capt. Kyle Finch [email protected]

Lt. John Epperlein [email protected]

Lt. Max Auerbach [email protected]

Lt. Evan Curtiss [email protected]

Lt. Pete Gonzalves [email protected]

https://ridgewood911.ridgewoodnj.net/EMS.php

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>Stay in Touch ………………..

>If you looking to run ads or get in touch with the Ridgewood Blog please send all correspondence to [email protected]

thank you for your support!!!!

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thanks again

PJ Blogger
the Ridgewood Blog

also now on twitter : www.twitter.com/ridgewoodblog

Speak Your Mind ……………………..

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>Ridgewood Native Anne Donovan will be the Interm Coach of the New York Liberty

>medium donovan

NEW YORK — Anne Donovan has moved to the head of the Liberty bench after Friday’s shakeup of the WNBA team’s coaching staff.

https://www.northjersey.com/sports/pro_sports/basketball/liberty/52234722.html

In announcing the firing of head coach Pat Coyle, Liberty president and general manager Carol Blazejowski said Donovan, a Ridgewood native , will serve as interim coach for the remainder of the season, beginning with tonight’s game in Atlanta.

The moves came fewer than 24 hours after the Liberty’s home loss to Washington, its third in a row. The Liberty are 6-11 and in last place in the Eastern Conference after reaching the conference final last season.

“We thank Patty for her contributions to the New York Liberty over the past 11 seasons; I have great personal and professional respect for her,” Blazejowski said in a statement. “However, at this time, I decided that a change was in the best interests of the team.”

Coyle had an 81-90 record, including two conference finals appearances, since taking over as interim coach midway through the 2004 season. She joined the Liberty as an assistant coach in 1998.

Donovan, who began her playing career at Paramus Catholic, was a Naismith Award winner and three-time All-American at Old Dominion and won gold medals with the 1984 and 1988 Olympic teams. She was the head coach when the U.S. won gold in 2008.

https://www.northjersey.com/sports/pro_sports/basketball/liberty/52234722.html

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>Graydon: Is that a problem we should spend $10 million on to solve?

>I am sorry I was unable to attend the meeting. Please organize some way for those of us who don’t support changing Graydon at this time to show our alliance with your efforts.

Now is not the time to be spending money on “wants”, we must concentrate our dollars on “needs”. Do you as an individuals spend your money on “wants” before your needs are met? Do you sign up for credit cards to finance your projects and purchases? If so I can understand why you think it is ok to float a bond to pay for something that is a nice to have, not a need to have.

Ridgewood would be spending money on an improvement to an existing facilty that is only used 2 months a year by a small group of residents. How does this make sense?

Ridgewood residents can swim in town during the summer, that is what Graydon is for, an “improved” Graydon wouldn’t change that, it would only make it more expensive.

Finally, who cares if people go to other towns to use their pools. I use the libraries in other towns, I shop and eat in other towns, I even attend cultural events in other towns. Is that a problem we should spend $10 million on to solve?

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>Scott Garrett on Health Care

>As you may know, Congressional Representatives in Washington, D.C. are currently working with the Obama Administration on legislation that would completely reshape our country’s health care system. I wanted to take the opportunity to update you on this important legislation and share with you three areas of concern I have about the current legislation under consideration in the House of Representatives, H.R. 3200, the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act: innovation, spending, and taxes. Additionally, I would like to take the time to introduce you to my health care principles.

Along with my colleagues in the House of Representatives, I firmly believe that our health care system is in need of reform. But I also acknowledge that, in many respects, our health care system is the envy of the world. As we consider legislation to reform health care, it is important that we build on what works, and try to fix what is not working.

Innovation
One of the hallmarks of American medicine is its innovation. Our nation’s doctors and hospitals have access to the most advanced, cutting edge research, medical devices, and pharmaceutical products in the world. The medical achievements of the last sixty years have been amazing: polio is confined to the history books; death by cardiovascular disease has fallen by two-thirds; childhood leukemia, once a death sentence, is now treatable. Furthermore, American medicine has been uniquely innovative when compared with the rest of the world: according to a survey of physicians, four of the six most important medical innovations of the past 25 years were developed in the United States. Unfortunately, I fear that current the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act would seriously dampen medical innovation in the United States.

I believe the central tenet of H.R. 3200 is the creation of a new government-run insurance plan that would pay health care providers at Medicare’s reimbursements rates. A well-respected, independent research firm, the Lewin Group, estimates that within 10 years, 114 million individuals would lose their current health care coverage and be placed on the government-run plan. Because this plan would account for over one-third of the entire health care system and pay at Medicare’s rates, it would also, unfortunately, exacerbate many of the problems Medicare has had in stifling innovation.

Over the years many observers, including President Obama, have noted that “accountable care organizations,” such as the Mayo Clinic or the Geisinger Health System, provide high quality health care at significantly less cost. Unfortunately though, medical innovators such as these, who find ways to treat diseases at less cost, are punished by a perverse government reimbursement system. As the CEO of the Mayo Clinic, Denis Cortese, recently wrote in the Chicago Tribune:
“Many doctors and hostpials that offer [high-value] care are reaching the point where we cannot afford to provide it to patients with government-sponsored insurance such as Medicare and Medicaid. We worry that the same could hold true for patients in a new government-run public insurance plan.

Despite the fact that we strive to give patients the right level of care…we consistently suffer huge financial losses due to the government price-controlled Medicare payment system, which financially punishes providers who offer higher quality care at a lower cost.

“Last year alone, Mayo Clinic lost hundreds of millions of dollars caring for Medicare beneficiaries…Because of this shortfall, our other patients pay more to make up the difference. Someday soon, neither Mayo Clinic nor those other payers will be able to afford this situation.”

Additionally, H.R. 3200 contains a section regarding so-called comparative effectiveness research. Comparative effectiveness research is a government analysis to determine which treatments are more “effective” than others in terms of medical application. Many have expressed concern that comparative effectiveness will lead to government-run health care programs refusing to provide certain prescriptions or other treatments if they deem them not effective enough. This could have a profound chilling effect on researchers attempting to discover new ways to treat patients through innovative new treatments or drug therapies.

This is the case in other countries, where entities such as the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) in England, which has infamously denied expensive cancer drugs to its citizens because of cost considerations. I recently learned from a former colleague in the House of Representatives who survived abdominal cancer in 2005 that the drug used to treat his cancer at the time was not available at all in England at the time. In other words, he survived because of access to innovative treatments that could be stifled under H.R. 3200.

Spending
One of the biggest issues facing our health care system is its high cost. In 2007, an estimated $2.26 trillion was spent on health care in the United States, or $7,439 per person. Health care costs have risen faster than wages or inflation for decades, and this is expected to continue into the future. In as soon as 2017, almost one-fifth of the entire U.S. economy is expected to be expenses and spending related to health care.

But if this is a problem for the private sector, the situation is much worse for the federal government’s public health care plans: Medicare and Medicaid. In Congress, I have the pleasure of serving on the Budget Committee. Ever since I first arrived in Congress, witness after witness–Republican or Democrat, liberal or conservative–who have appeared before the Committee have all noted the serious long-term funding issues that these programs face. As the 2009 Medicare Trustees Report noted:
“The financial outlook for the Medicare program continues to raise serious concerns. Total Medicare expenditures were $468 billion in 2008 and are expected to increase in future years at a faster pace than either workers’ earnings or the economy overall. As a percentage of GDP, expenditures are projected to increase from 3.2% in 2008 to 11.4% by 2083…Growth of this magnitude, if realized, would substantially increase the strain on the nation’s workers, Medicare beneficiaries, and the Federal Budget.”

If anything, these estimates might actually understate the problem. According to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, America’s three biggest entitlement programs, Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security, are projected to consume over 80% of the federal budget within a generation. The single biggest driver of this increased cost is health care inflation. Medicare alone has a $36.3 trillion unfunded liability, which means that every baby born in America in 2009 has a health care debt of $121,000 as soon as it takes its first breath.

Unbelievably, in my opinion, the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act, would actually make this problem significantly worse. In its early estimate of the cost of H.R. 3200, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that enactment of H.R. 3200 would result in $1.042 trillion of new federal spending. Additionally, the bill would raise taxes by $583 billion. And despite a desire expressed by many to see that the bill is “paid for,” H.R. 3200 would result in a net increase in the federal budget deficit of $239 billion from 2010-2019.

Over the long-term, though H.R. 3200 could potentially drive health care costs even higher. In testimony before the Senate Budget Committee this month, CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf said: “In the legislation that has been reported we do not see the sort of fundamental changes that would be necessary to reduce the trajectory of federal health spending by a significant amount. And on the contrary, the legislation significantly expands the federal responsibility for health care costs.”
In other words, the CBO says H.R. 3200 would create trillions of dollars in new unfunded obligations on top of the already unsustainable federal health care programs without doing anything to slow the rate of growth of Medicare and Medicaid. I believe this is, to put it mildly, a recipe for fiscal disaster of the first order, and is not worthy support. I hope in the coming weeks to work with my colleagues to try to correct these problems, but please rest assured that I will not support any legislation would worsen our nation’s fiscal health.

Taxes
While I have many objections to this legislation, I feel one of its worst components is the inclusion of a $544 billion surtax on people earning more than $280,000. Aside from the fact that almost nobody believes it is a good idea to raise taxes in the middle of a recession, I have serious concerns that these tax increases would unfortunately fall disproportionately on small businesses.
According to the Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) 2002 Statistics of Income, 64% of households filing individual tax forms with Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) above $250,000 filed as an S-Corporation or partnership or filed a Schedule C sole proprietor tax form. Further, of all small businesses 75% are S-Corporations where the business income is passed through to the business owners’ individual tax return, increasing the chances that it will be impacted by the proposed surtax.
According to the Small Business Administration (SBA), small businesses generate 60-80% of net new jobs annually and employ approximately half of all private sector employees. Numerous economic studies show that higher marginal tax rates discourage small businesses from expanding and hiring more workers. Especially in a recession, it is important not to levy a new tax against the job creators who will sow the seeds of our recovery.

These tax increases will be particularly devastating to American manufacturing. According to IRS Statistics from 2006, there were 196,000 manufacturers who paid taxes at the individual rate. The average net income per return for these small manufacturers was $570,000, a full 300% higher than the average small business income. It is clear that these tax increases would be felt disproportionately in the U.S. manufacturing sector.

Even Bill Gale, the Vice President and Director of Economic Studies at the progressive Brookings Institution, notes, “Choosing to finance health care reform by taxing the rich is bad economic policy, bad health policy, bad budget policy and poor leadership.”

Furthermore, under President Obama’s budget submitted earlier this year, the tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 are scheduled to expire in 2011. When theses expiring tax cuts are combined with the new surtax proposed in H.R. 3200, the top marginal tax rates in 39 states would exceed 50%, with a 52% national average. According to the non-partisan Tax Foundation, this would be higher than just three of the 30 most economically developed countries in the world.

Finally, H.R. 3200 contains an “employer mandate” for the purchase of health insurance. To me, this means that any business not currently offering health insurance must either offer a government approved plan, or pay a penalty equal to 8% of an employee’s payroll tax. For small businesses not currently offering health insurance, this would be a massive new cost per employee. A 2007 study by Harvard Professor Kate Baicker found that “33% of uninsured workers”—5.5 million total—“earn within $3 [per hour] of the minimum wage, putting them at substantial risk of unemployment if their employers were required to offer insurance.” The study also found that “among the uninsured, those with the least education face the highest risk of losing their jobs under employer mandates.”

Health care reform should be good for individuals, families, and small businesses. Unfortunately, my reading of this legislation is that it would have a tremendously adverse impact on job creators, families, and our medical professionals. For these reasons, I do not think H.R. 3200, as it is currently written, merits support.

Garrett’s Health Care Principles
I do not support the rationing of care, and I do no support the creation of a plan that will allow bureaucrats and special interests to stand between patients and the care they need. Our current health care system is unsustainable, and the prohibitive costs leave far too many without adequate health insurance. Reform to this system is necessary if we want to remain competitive in the global market place. I’d like to introduce to you my prescription for health care reform that I will be telling you about over the next couple of weeks:

• Portability: Allowing individuals to keep their health care coverage while between jobs would provide a safety net for those who become uninsured because of unemployment or disability.

• Affordability: Health care costs have become unmanageable, both for families and for governments, and has left many uninsured or under-insured. Removing burdensome state coverage mandates and opening up the health care marketplace to competition across state lines could dramatically reduce health care costs in New Jersey and across the country.

• Sustainability: We should not add to the government health care programs until we are able to fix the existing government programs – Medicare and Medicaid. Unless we are able to fix these entitlement programs, as well as Social Security, the cost of the entire federal government will double within three decades due to entitlement growth alone. Tax hikes to fix this problem is not the solution, nor is adding a new government-run health care bureaucracy.

• Effectiveness: The current health care system reimburses the number of procedures rather than the quality and efficacy of the care. While doctors are compensated for extra tests and hospitals visits, they are not paid for offering telephone consultations or implementing health care IT. By encouraging quality over quantity of care, we can down on over testing and strengthen the doctor-patient relationship. Moreover, protecting doctors from frivolous tort lawsuits will significantly reduce the cost of primary care and remove a significant burden from doctors’ shoulders.

• Innovation: The United States has been home to more life-saving drugs, ground-breaking research, and innovative medical procedures than anywhere else in the world. Any health care reform must continue to encourage medical and pharmaceutical research and not enforce price controls, which would destroy the American pharmaceutical market.

The American people deserve the freedom to choose the health care that is best for their families. I believe we need meaningful health care reform that would increase accessibility, decrease costs, and improve on what is already the best health care system in the world. In the coming weeks I will continue to work with my colleagues in the House of Representatives to try to improve the bill. In the meantime, I welcome your comments. I have set up a special email account so that you can share your thoughts and concerns about health care reform at: [email protected].

Should you have any further questions or comments about this or any legislative issue, please do not hesitate to contact me in my Washington, D.C. office at (202) 225-4465. Also, please visit my website at www.house.gov/garrett to sign up for my e-newsletter with the latest updates.

Sincerely,
Scott Garrett
Member of Congress