Phone
Calls, Faxes & E-mails Needed NOW to all House Members
Opposing the Small Business Health Fairness Act (H.R. 660)
May 7, 2003
THE ISSUE AT HAND
Within the next
week or two, the full House Committee on Education and
the Workforce is expected to approve the Small Business
Health Fairness Act, H.R. 660, largely along a party-line
vote. The bill is scheduled to go rapidly to the House
floor for consideration, likely within a week of Committee
passage. H.R. 660 aims to provide small businesses, including
associations, with a better opportunity to purchase health
insurance for their employees through association health
plans (AHPs). NASW is highly supportive of increasing access
to health care coverage for working people. We oppose H.R.
660, however, because it would exempt AHPs from state laws
and regulations, eviscerating existing consumer protections,
and increasing health insurance costs for many individuals
left out of the new plans.
ACTION NEEDED
All members of
the House must be contacted immediately to hear opposition
to this bill. Please call, fax, or e-mail your U.S. Representative
and ask him or her to oppose the Small Business Health
Fairness Act HR 660, which is expected to be approved by
the House Committee on Education and the Workforce on May
7, and be on the House floor by mid-May.
A sample letter
opposing the bill has been posted on NASW's Congress Web
to e-mail or fax to Members of Congress. A sample phone
message follows. All Members can be reached through the
Capitol switchboard at 202-225-3121. Individual telephone
numbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses are available
through NASW's Congress Web: www.socialworkers.org/advocacy/grassroots/congressweb.asp If
you make a phone call, please let us know via e-mail at advocacy@naswdc.org
Sample Phone Message
My name is ________________
from _________________ (city, state). As a constituent,
professional social worker, and member of the National
Association of Social Workers, I am calling to ask Representative
____________ (last name) to oppose the Small Business Health
Fairness Act, H. 660, awaiting final action by the full
House following expected approval by the Committee on Education
and the Workforce on May 7. H.R. 660 would exempt association
health plans from state laws and regulations, thereby eviscerating
existing consumer protections and coverage requirements
and increasing insurance premiums for those left behind.
I would appreciate the Representative’s strong opposition.
Thank you.
TIMING
It is critical
for opposition to be heard by May 9, since H.R. 660 is
scheduled for rapid floor consideration and has strong
support from small business advocates and the House Republican
majority.
BACKGROUND
AHPs aim to provide
small businesses the opportunity to join together through
trade and professional associations to collectively purchase
health benefits at more reasonable rates than they are
typically offered individually. Current law requires AHPs
to be regulated under both federal and state law. The Small
Business Fairness Act would exempt AHPs from state laws,
consumer protections, mandated benefit laws, and other
safeguards significantly increasing the risk for fraud
and abuse. Recently, failures of association-type health
plans have left more than 100,000 participants nationwide
with over $30 million in unpaid medical bills.
The National Governors'
Association, the National Conference of State Legislatures,
many large health insurers, the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners, and NASW have strongly opposed
AHPs before Congress. Our reasoning is that, although AHPs
could reduce insurance costs for some companies with young,
healthy workers, many small businesses with older and sicker
employees would be left behind in the regular insurance
market, facing significantly higher rates. The Congressional
Budget Office estimates that AHPs would result in higher
premiums for 80 percent of small businesses and their workers,
ultimately resulting in more uninsured Americans. The
National Association of Attorneys General warns that a
mid-1970s experiment with a similar type of plan left at
least 398,000 consumers stuck with a total of more than
$123 million in unpaid claims. "Elimination of the
state role and replacement with weak federal oversight
is a bad deal for small businesses and for consumers," they
warn.
TAKE ACTION
NOW!
THANKS FOR
YOUR ADVOCACY!
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