CONNECTICUT: Speaker Chris Donovan, members of the Public Health and
Insurance Committees and a variety of advocates held a press
conference last week to announce the Public Health Committee has raised
the SustiNet bill based on the recent recommendations of the SustiNet
Board.
Few details were provided, but the original
report recommends that SustiNet become a licensed insurance plan. "We
don't need health insurance anymore, we need to move towards health
assurance — health care that will be there for us, and the SustiNet plan
will do that," Donovan said. Lawmakers will face a $3.7 billion budget
deficit by July 1. Rep. Betsy Ritter, D-Waterford, co-chairwoman of the
Public Health Committee, said the plan will have to go before multiple
legislative committees, with the actual bill some weeks away.
A financial analysis on upfront costs is not yet available. Aetna is
working with the Connecticut Association of Health Plans (CTAHP) and
AHIP to secure an objective fiscal analysis of SustiNet's, as a public
option, true cost to the state, and of the strong, positive impact
health insurers have on the state's economy.
DELAWARE: In his State of the State speech,
Governor Jack Markell emphasized the need for state government to spend
more efficiently. He specifically noted that the demands state employee
health insurance and pensions are putting on the state
budget are unsustainable. The Governor specifically
stated he is open to any and all good ideas for addressing this
budget issue. In other news, a joint meeting of the Senate Health
Committee and the House Economic Development, Banking, Insurance, and
Commerce Committee was convened for an update on the state's effort to
implement health care reform. Rita Landgraf, Secretary of Health and
Social Services, along with Bettina Riveros, Health Care Commission
Chair, advised legislators the commission will spend the next six
to eight weeks holding stakeholder meetings across the state seeking
input on establishing a state health insurance exchange.
GEORGIA: The
Exchange Workgroup formed by former Governor Sonny Perdue had its final
meeting last week and will submit a list of issues for Governor Deal's
administration to review before deciding how to proceed on the issue of
instituting an exchange in Georgia. As the head of
this workgroup for Governor Perdue is continuing under Governor Deal's
administration, it is likely that there will be some enabling
legislation during the 2011 session, though it is unclear what that will
be. The legislative session began January 11, 2011 and continues for 40
legislative days.
IOWA: The General Assembly
convened in Des Moines on January 10 and is expected to adjourn on April
29, 2011 In the November elections, Republicans took control of the
House and gained a few seats in the Senate, narrowing the Democrats'
majority there. Republican Terry Branstad was sworn in as governor for
the second time. Having served in the post from 1983 to 1999, Branstad
is the longest-serving governor in Iowa's history. The state's budget
deficit is projected to be more than $785 million for fiscal year 2012
and will dominate legislative discussions. House Speaker Kraig Paulsen
has vowed to remedy the deficit through spending cuts rather than tax
increases. The Governor's proposal to revise the state's annual budget
to a two-year cycle will also be debated.
Bills of interest so far include several challenging PPACA's individual mandate, a prohibition on abortion coverage, creation of mandate-lite policies, a mandate for coverage of smoking cessation programs, a rate review bill that would require a public hearing for any increase over 10 percent in the individual market, and a bill establishing $100 as the minimum required payment for state employees.
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Bills of interest so far include several challenging PPACA's individual mandate, a prohibition on abortion coverage, creation of mandate-lite policies, a mandate for coverage of smoking cessation programs, a rate review bill that would require a public hearing for any increase over 10 percent in the individual market, and a bill establishing $100 as the minimum required payment for state employees.