Results tagged “health care checkup” from EdLabor Journal

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There was a report in CongressDaily today that the Congressional Budget Office has scored the Tri-committee's Discussion Draft on Health Care Reforms. That report was was based on fabricated information. 

The Huffington Post follows up on the CongressDaily article here - CBO: Numbers On House Health Care Bill Are Fake

The Congressional Budget Office has not scored the House health care reform discussion draft, Melissa Merson, a CBO spokeswoman, confirmed to the Huffington Post.

Additionally, the Press Offices of the House Ways and Means, Energy and Commerce and Education and Labor Committees released the following statement today in response to the inaccurate report:

“This report is premature and entirely fabricated. In fact, none of the reporters working on this piece contacted our press offices to fact check their story. The three House committees are still working to develop legislation and have not yet received a score from CBO on the discussion draft. As the three chairmen have made clear, our health care reform legislation will be paid for and we’re still considering revenue options.”
healthcare-check-up-dr-office.jpgA new study released today by the Economic Policy Institute that concludes that claims of massive jobs losses if a ‘play-or-pay” proposal was enacted as part of health care reform are vastly overstated. In fact, health care reform in general, based on the Obama principles, would produce significant job gains, the EPI wrote.

‘Play or pay’ policy as a part of health care reform would require that employers either provide health insurance to their workers or pay a penalty as a percentage of their payroll in order to assist low- or moderate-income families to obtain quality and affordable health care.

Under the House Tri-Committee discussion draft proposal, employers who choose not to provide basic health insurance to workers would have to pay an 8 percent penalty based on their overall payroll. Those workers would then be able to choose a plan that best meets their needs from a menu of insurance options in the national health care exchange, which would include both private plans and a public health insurance option.

The EPI also found that past studies that claim significant job losses as a result of ‘play-or-pay’ were based on proposals not on the table today in either the House or the Senate.

View the EPI analysis of ‘play-or-pay’.
 

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