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Great Response to Last Week's Public Events on Health Care and Social Security
I want to thank everyone who came out last week to my Social Security seminar: What Every Woman Should Know about Social Security, and my public forums on health care reform. We had a great turn-out at the Social Security seminar in St. Cloud – even more than had come out to the similar seminar I hosted in Woodbury in May. And, we heard from many women who hope that we’ll hold a third seminar on this important topic. Stay tuned for details about upcoming opportunities to learn more about how the death of a spouse or divorce might impact your Social Security and retirement benefits.
The first of our public health care meetings brought together small business owners and community leaders from all over the Sixth District and we had a great discussion. Small businesses are an important part of whatever reform we enact because so many of the people who have problems accessing quality health care are small business owners or their employees. We can help them to access affordable coverage and we can do it without costing them their jobs.
I’d particularly like to thank everyone for the spirited, but respectful discussion at the health care town hall. We’ve all seen the news footage of some of the town hall meetings across the country that have gotten out of hand and been anything but a discussion. I was so proud of my fellow Minnesotans for the demeanor and tone of our town hall meeting.
And, speaking of fellow Minnesotans, following my public town hall, I headed out to the State Fair. Health care is on everyone’s minds! And, my visit there quickly became an impromptu town hall meeting. We had another great discussion there – and while people spoke from every perspective, Minnesota Nice prevailed at all times.
Bachmann on Health Care Solutions
In case you missed my column on health care reform solutions that don’t have to break the bank, you can read here my column as published in yesterday’s St. Cloud Times:
Your turn: Bipartisan health care reforms exist
By U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann - 6th District
Health care reform is on everybody’s mind. And with good reason.
We have the highest quality health care in the world. Look no further than Minnesota’s Mayo Clinic, which is a world-class destination for care. But high costs put health care out of reach for millions of Americans, especially middle-class families that make too much for government subsidies but struggle to pay the bills. Similarly, small-business owners struggle because they cannot use big business’ economies of scale to get affordable coverage.
We must do something to contain costs and make the high-quality care we have more accessible to everyone.
While the government-run approach, also known as the public option or co-op, is getting the most notice, there are actually a number of less dramatic alternatives that can really make a big difference. Moreover, while some in Washington are talking about what’s being called the “nuclear option,” or a Democratic Congress and White House joining together to pass their reform proposals with no Republican input, many of these lesser-known alternatives individually have broad bipartisan support.
We shouldn’t get lost in the glamour of big overhauls and look past meaningful reforms, like association health plans that let small businesses bond together to reduce coverage costs or health savings accounts that let you save for care tax-free. Bigger is not necessarily better.
Changes to the tax code, for instance, would make care and coverage more affordable while preserving consumer choices.
I’ve introduced the bipartisan Health Care Freedom of Choice Act to put patients in charge of their health decisions by tweaking the tax code. Under current law, businesses are allowed to deduct the cost of employee health care from their taxes, while individuals and families cannot. This bias in favor of employer-provided coverage leads to higher costs overall and reduces accessibility to care.
My legislation would erase this bias and extend the same tax incentives to businesses and individuals alike. From co-pays and premiums to long-term care, vision and dental, your high out-of-pocket costs would no longer be a barrier to care.
I’ve also cosponsored the Empowering Patients First Act, which puts the focus of health care decisions back on the patient, where it belongs. This legislation includes a sliding scale refundable tax credit for lower income Americans. It also covers pre-existing conditions and protects employer-sponsored insurance.
The bill would increase consumer choice by allowing individuals to shop for their health insurance across state lines, similar to how we purchase auto insurance, creating competition and giving Americans the greatest value for the coverage that best fits their needs.
Allowing consumers to cross state lines to purchase insurance would apply positive pressure to end the burgeoning number of health insurance mandates. If you don’t want to pay for hair prostheses in your coverage, you shouldn’t have to, but one in five states mandates that you do.
According to a study by the Council for Affordable Health Insurance, each mandate typically increases the cost of health insurance coverage by up to 3 percent. And, they identified 1,961 mandates in 2008.
Another provision in this legislation would rein in the money wasted on frivolous lawsuits.
Malpractice awards alone drive up the annual cost of U.S. health care by $20 billion to $40 billion a year. But even worse is the cost of defensive medicine, or responses a doctor utilizes primarily to avoid liability.
One study by the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons puts the cost of defensive medicine at as much as $178 billion per year. We must have tort reform so that doctors can be doctors without fear of frivolous, career-ending lawsuits.
And we must have tort reform so that doctors don’t abandon difficult specialties because their medical malpractice insurance makes it cost prohibitive. Increasing numbers of obstetrician-gynecologists, for instance, won’t deliver babies any more; it’s just too costly. Patients — particularly in underserved areas — are the ones who lose when doctors are forced to drop these important specialties.
These are just a few of the health care proposals we can enact that won’t break the bank and can pass quickly and with broad bipartisan support.
Our nation’s deficit and debt are at all-time highs. Medicare and Medicaid are broke. Social Security is broke.
Can we really afford to trust Washington when it asks you to entrust them with your health care saying it will not only reduce costs, but increase both accessibility and efficiency for all Americans?
Bachmann Office Coming to a Town Near You
My staff regularly holds Mobile Office Hours at locations all across the district. These are opportunities for you to come meet one on one with someone from my office who is trained to be your liaison with federal agencies. Please bring copies of any paperwork that you might have with you when you visit. Particularly, if you are having a problem with a federal benefit or program and have letters or documents that might help my staff get answers for you quickly.
Should you have any questions or concerns, however, you can always stop by one of my district offices between 9:00 am and 5:00 pm to talk to my staff as well.
Woodbury Waite Park
6043 Hudson Road 110 2nd Street South
Suite 330 Suite 232
Woodbury, MN 55125 Waite Park, MN 56387
651-731-5400 320-253-5931
Beginning in February, a new schedule of Mobile Office Hours took effect. My staff will still be in many of the same locations, but the days and hours of these sessions may shift. Please take a moment to check out the new schedule here.
And, please take a moment to visit my website (www.bachmann.house.gov) and sign up for my regular telephone town halls as well. That technology allows you to speak with me from the comfort of your own home. You’ll get an update on what Congress is doing that might impact you and have the opportunity to ask me a question about what’s on your mind.
Next week, my staff will hold Mobile Office Hours in the following locations:
Tuesday, September 8th
10:00 am to noon
Washington County Library: Hardwood Creek Branch
19955 Forest Road N, Forest Lake
Tuesday, September 8th
1:00 pm to 3:00 pm
Andover City Hall
1685 Crosstown Boulevard NW
Thursday, September 10th
9:00 am to 10:30 am
Howard Lake City Hall
625 8th Avenue
Thursday, September 10th
11:30 am to 1:00 pm
Annandale City Hall
30 Cedar Street E
Thursday, September 10th
1:30 pm to 3:00 pm
Clear Lake City Hall
7684 1st Avenue W
Thursday, September 10th
4:00 pm to 5:30 pm
St. Michael City Hall
3150 Lander Avenue NE
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