Bill of Health?
New legislation may cure your health insurance pains.
The senate may finally be ready to provide what many
entrepreneurs believe will be an Rx for their health insurance
woes. As has happened in Congresses since 1996, the House will
undoubtedly pass legislation allowing small businesses to join
trade associations called Association Health Plans. AHPs would
purchase the kinds of group health plans only big businesses can
buy now. The House Education and Workforce Committee took the first
step in March when it passed the Small Business Health Fairness Act
(H.R. 525/S.406).
In past years, similar bills have passed the House, only to
languish in the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
Committee. But this year, the committee has a new chair, Sen. Mike
Enzi (R-WY), who appears more receptive to the bill, and a number
of first-year GOP senators are co-sponsoring the bill with Olympia
Snowe (R-ME), increasing its chances. Democratic support is still
sparse.
The legislation changes the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 to allow AHPs. Under ERISA, employers and unions
offering health insurance products to their employees must comply
with state regulation for these health policies. As part of their
regulations, states impose specific coverages on ERISA plans, which
increases the cost of insurance beyond the means of most small
businesses. Big companies can self-insure, but most small companies
cannot, so they miss out on plans with much lower premiums than
those offered by insurance companies. With AHPs, small companies
could join together to self-insure.
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There are no guarantees, but given the climbing number of
uninsured Americans--27 million working Americans at last
count--exigency may finally lead to action.
Stephen Barlas is a freelance business reporter who covers
the Washington beat for 15 magazines.