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Factbox: States and U.S. healthcare reform

WASHINGTON | Fri Mar 19, 2010 6:28pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Many states are worried that the healthcare reform plan currently winding through the U.S. Congress will usurp their sovereignty and impose more spending to their already stretched budgets.

The plan provides funding to help states through the overhaul of the healthcare industry, which would include requiring Americans to have health insurance and push more people into the Medicaid system for the poor that states and the U.S. government administer.

Some states may sue if the healthcare plan passes, while others are attempting to pass their own laws and constitutional amendments to keep health insurance optional. Below are some of the steps they are taking:

* At least 36 state legislatures are weighing legislation to limit, alter or oppose the federal healthcare reform, and 26 of those are considering amending their state constitutions by ballot. Arizonans will vote on an amendment in November.

* Virginia was the first state to react legislatively, by enacting a statute entitled "health insurance coverage not required."

* Idaho Governor C.L. "Butch" Otter signed a bill on Wednesday allowing the state's attorney general to file a lawsuit opposing federal healthcare legislation requiring individuals to buy medical insurance.

* Texas Governor Rick Perry says the plan will cost the Lone Star state $24.3 billion over 10 years, but it is currently not planning to sue. "The goal right now is to keep the bill from passing in the first place," said spokeswoman Allison Castle.

- Nevada Governor Jim Gibbons has written a member of the House of Representatives from Las Vegas asking her to oppose the plan. Governors from Arizona, Minnesota and Utah have also written letters to Congress.

* Utah's two legislative chambers have passed a bill opposing parts of the healthcare plan that now awaits the governor's signature.

- Florida, Georgia and Missouri have begun embarking on constitutional resolutions.

- Massachusetts and Vermont are both in the unique positions of having their own healthcare plans already in place.

- The New Hampshire legislature has passed a bill prohibiting any expansion of Medicaid, the healthcare system for the poor, unless it is paid for by the federal government. The current version of the U.S. plan requires the federal government to cover 100 percent of all new Medicaid enrollees through 2016.

- States not considering legislative responses include Illinois, North Carolina, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, Maine and Massachusetts. Also, there are no measures in Montana, Nevada, Oregon and Texas as there are no regular legislative sessions in these states in 2010.

SOURCES: National Conference of State Legislatures, governors' offices (Reporting by Lisa Lambert, Jim Christie in San Francisco, Joan Gralla in New York, Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

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Comments (23)
Story_Burn wrote:
I am now starting to like this bill for small business…

Mar 19, 2010 6:12pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
MACV wrote:
Our country has a lot of issues, but the inability to read and interpret a simple paragraph is one of the most frightening. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, the American population, on average, as a whole, reads, writes and comprehends at an 8th Grade Level. The Republicans know that they are dealing with a bunch of 14 year old’s and so do the Insurance Companies. Now having “set the stage”, can anyone explain to me why the nation’s HMOs earned $6.7 billion in the first nine months of 2003, a 52 percent increase over the $4.4 billion reported in 2002 (according to Weiss Ratings, Inc)? HMO profits in California rose 46 percent in 2008, with nonprofit Blue Shield leading the pack, almost doubling its profit margin from the prior year. Most people are right in there assesment that these “Teabaggers” marched merrily to the Bush Administrations’ tune. He started two “unfunded” wars and gave his “Rich & Corporate Base” humongus tax cuts, with a few pennies thrown in for the masses, the CBO stated many times that the upper 6% would benefit most yet these “Teabaggers” went along with the program (Oh, and the tax cut was passed through “Reconciliation”). Americans need to get a clue and quit being buffoons ( you’re not even ‘human’ anymore you’re just’ consumers’ and that’s all you’re good for … consuming and making little consumers ( that’s why no abortions, it’s bad for the economy ). I just love it, here we Americans are, ranked 37th in the world on Health Care coverage yet we spend far more per person than many other countries including Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Iceland, Italy, Japan, and Singapore. They cover everyone while we cover fewer citizens. We rank 52nd in the number of doctors per thousand people,behind Italy, France, Sweden, Norway, Cuba, Uzbekistan, Moldova and Mongolia? 45,000 Americans die each year as a result of unafordable health insurance and/or denial of claims. Yet we have “tea parties” and townhalls where racism has to compete with claims of facism, socialism and the general drop in IQs over the last 10 years.

As for paying for this health plan, nothing provided by the Government is free. You and I pay for it with our tax dollars. Our tax dollars pay for Farm Subsidies to ADM, Cotton Growers, Corn Growers, big Tobacco and for the wars in Iraq & Afghanistan. Our tax dollars also pay for the “Billions & Billions” of dollars in aid to Israel each year but I don’t see people jumping up and down and carrying loaded AR-15s and/or Glocks and screaming about “THAT MONEY”. If we Americans don’t increase our IQ levels post haste, we are on our way to becoming a third-world nation.

Mar 19, 2010 8:39pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
jac6mag wrote:
Health care has a element of compassion
in it, so in the time of tough going for
everyone, wouldn’t it be nice to have
something to depend on without the cost
of an arm or leg. Move the bill along
and give those without hope a breather

Mar 19, 2010 8:58pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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