Governor Mitch Daniels is one of 21 Republican governors who sent a letter today to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.
The Governor’s are asking her to make six changes to rules about state-run health care exchanges or risk the federal government taking full responsibility for running a national exchange.
Daniels also wrote an opinion editorial on the same topic that appeared in today’s Wall Street Journal.
In the letter, the governors said “We wish states had been given more opportunity to provide input when the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was being drafted. We believe in its current form the law will force our health care system down a path sure to lead to higher costs and the disruption or discontinuation of millions of Americans’ insurance plans.”
The governors have asked for changes such as granting states authority to choose benefits that meet the needs of their citizens and waiving provisions that discriminate against consumer-driven health plans, such as health savings accounts.
Here is a link to the governor’s op-ed: http://www.in.gov/gov/files/Press/020711op-ed.pdf
Read The letter to Secretary Sebelius below:
The Honorable Kathleen Sebelius
Secretary
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, DC 20201
Dear Secretary Sebelius;
Many of us believe the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) should be repealed by Congress if the courts do not strike it down first.
But, with no assurance of either outcome, we face the decision of whether to participate in the bill by operating state exchanges, or to let the federal government take on that task, if the bill remains in effect in 2014.
In addition to its constitutional infringements, we believe the system proposed by the PPACA is seriously flawed, favors dependency over personal responsibility, and will ultimately destroy the private insurance market.
Because of this, we do not wish to be the federal government¡¦s agents in this policy in its present form.
We wish states had been given more opportunity to provide input when the PPACA was being drafted. We believe in its current form the law will force our health care system down a path sure to lead to higher costs and the disruption or discontinuation of millions of Americans¡¦ insurance plans.
Though we still have grave concerns with other provisions of the PPACA, we suggest the following improvements:
We hope the Administration will accommodate our states’ individual circumstances and needs, as we believe the PPACA in its current form threatens to destroy our budgets and perpetuate and magnify the most costly aspects of our health care system.
While we hope for your endorsement, if you do not agree, we will move forward with our own efforts regardless and HHS should begin making plans to run exchanges under its own auspices.
Sincerely,
Governor Robert J. Bentley
Alabama
Governor Nathan Deal
Georgia
Governor C.L. “Butch” Otter
Idaho
Governor Mitch Daniels
Indiana
Governor Terry E. Branstad
Iowa
Governor Sam Brownback
Kansas
Governor Bobby Jindal
Louisiana
Governor Paul R. LePage
Maine
Governor Haley Barbour
Mississippi
Governor David Heineman
Nebraska
Governor Brian Sandoval
Nevada
Governor Susana Martinez
New Mexico
Governor John R. Kasich
Ohio
Governor Mary Fallin
Oklahoma
Governor Tom Corbett
Pennsylvania
Governor Nikki Haley
South Carolina
Governor Dennis Daugaard
South Dakota
Governor Bill Haslam
Tennessee
Governor Rick Perry
Texas
Governor Gary R. Herbert
Utah
Governor Scott Walker
Wisconsin
Topics: 2011, ACA, Affordadable Care Act, America, children, economic development, economic growth, Economy, federal health care law, Governance, government, Governor Mitch Daniels, Health and Human Services, health care, health insurance, healthcare exchange, Healthy Indiana Plan, HHS, HIP, Hoosiers, Indiana, letter, low income, Medicaid, moniter, monitor, national exchange, news, Personal Wellness Responsibility, POWER account, Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, tax credits, U.S., United States, Wall Street Journal, youth
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