
What does the new health care law mean for letter
carriers and their families this year?
The comprehensive health care legislation signed into law by
President Obama on March 23, 2010, will be phased in over the next few years,
which will allow the state governments to set up health exchanges similar to the
FEHBP program that will let workers and small businesses choose among competing
private insurance plans as well as one or two non-profit health plans. It will
eventually help reduce postal employee health premiums, which are inflated by
the need to pay for car given to the uninsured, by requiring many employers and
all individual Americans to purchase health insurance if their employers don’t
provide coverage. But many of the most important
progressive reforms will take effect this year. These include:
- This year, this bill
starts to close the Medicare Part D "donut hole" by providing a
$250 rebate to Medicare beneficiaries who hit the gap in prescription drug
coverage. And beginning in 2011, the bill institutes a 50 percent discount
on prescription drugs in the "donut hole."
- This year, children
with pre-existing conditions can no longer be denied health insurance
coverage. Once the new health insurance exchanges begin in the coming years,
pre-existing condition discrimination will become a thing of the past for
everyone.
- This year, health care
plans will allow young people to remain on their parents' insurance policy
up until their 26th birthday.
- This year, insurance
companies will be banned from dropping people from coverage when they get
sick, and they will be banned from implementing lifetime caps on coverage.
- This year, restrictive
annual limits on coverage will be banned for certain plans. Under health
insurance reform, Americans will be ensured access to the care they need.
- This year, adults who
are uninsured because of pre-existing conditions will have access to
affordable insurance through a temporary subsidized high-risk pool.
- This year, this bill
creates a new, independent appeals process that ensures consumers in new
private plans have access to an effective process to appeal decisions made
by their insurer.
- This year,
discrimination based on salary will be outlawed. New group health plans will
be prohibited from establishing any eligibility rules for health care
coverage that discriminate in favor of higher-wage employees.
- This year, small
businesses that choose to offer coverage will begin to receive tax credits
of up to 35 percent of premiums to help make employee coverage more
affordable.
- This year, new private
plans will be required to provide free preventive care: no co-payments and
no deductibles for preventive services. And beginning January 1, 2011,
Medicare will do the same.
- This year, this bill
will provide help for early retirees by creating a temporary re-insurance
program to help offset the costs of expensive premiums for employers and
retirees age 55-64.
- In the next fiscal year, the bill increases funding for
community health centers, so they can treat nearly double the number of
patients over the next five years.
- Starting January 1, 2011, insurers in the individual and
small group market will be required to spend 80 percent of their premium
dollars on medical services. Insurers in the large group market will be
required to spend 85 percent of their premium dollars on medical services.
Any insurers who don't meet those thresholds will be required to provide
rebates to their policyholders.
- Starting in 2011, this bill helps states require insurance
companies to submit justification for requested premium increases. Any
company with excessive or unjustified premium increases may not be able to
participate in the new health insurance exchanges.
The legislation signed by the president was the bill passed
by the Senate, which contained many serious flaws, including an onerous excise
tax on high-cost plans that could adversely affect FEHBP plans in the future.
However, the House passed on March 21 and the Senate is now debating a package
of improvements to the Senate bill that will dramatically strengthen the new
health care law. The so-called “fix-it” bill is being handled though
the commonly used reconciliation process (that was used for welfare reform and
the Bush tax cuts) and will not be subject to a filibuster in the Senate.
An up or down, majority rules vote is expected soon.
2010 National Association of Letter Carriers - Branch 451,
Johnstown PA - For informmation on this site contact the webmaster Rodney Hiner
- RHiner@nalc451.org