Republican Bill For Preexisting Conditions Fails In House Committee

A committee in the West Virginia House of Delegates narrowly voted against passing a Republican bill to protect West Virginians with preexisting conditions, should a federal law currently providing these rights be repealed. 

Senate Bill 284 was contingent on the federal government declaring a significant portion of the Affordable Care Act, known commonly as “Obamacare,” unconstitutional. 

The ACA prohibits insurance companies from excluding or discriminating against consumers based on their preexisting health conditions, including cancer, diabetes, depression and epilepsy, among other diagnoses. 

A federal appeals court panel ruled in favor of a Texas lawsuit last year, agreeing that the ACA violates the U.S. Constitution based on a different section of the law requiring individuals to purchase health insurance. The Supreme Court is not expected to weigh in anytime before the 2020 election.

The House Health and Human Resources Committee on Saturday voted 12-11 against sending the bill to the full House of Delegates for consideration. 

Although lawmakers spent a fair amount of time asking committee staff and a representative from the attorney general’s office about the bill, there was no debate before their vote. 

Delegates on both sides of the aisle raised questions about the bill’s unclear cost. The legislation called on the state Insurance Commissioner to create a reinsurance program that would assist health insurance companies covering individuals with serious and costly health care needs, but the bill didn’t specify how the state would pay for this program.

Democrats focused several of their questions on state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and his role in the Texas lawsuit threatening the ACA’s existence. 

Morrisey was one of several other Republican attorneys general in 2018 to he join a lawsuit challenging the ACA in a U.S. District Court in Texas. West Virginia Deputy Solicitor General Thomas Johnson — who works in Morrisey’s office — told delegates on Saturday that was due to reportedly increasing cost of premiums. 

Health experts paint changes in health care spending as more complicated than just increasing premiums

Del. Mick Bates, D-Raleigh, voted against the bill on Saturday, saying the bill did nothing to protect West Virginians with preexisting conditions. 

“The only one it protected was the attorney general, who filed the lawsuit against Obamacare for political reasons and had the Republican leadership run this bill so he had political cover,” Bates said in a text message to West Virginia Public Broadcasting. 

The Health committee made its decision less than a week after the bill cleared the full Senate on Tuesday, Feb. 25, after passing two Senate committee references. 

A second bill — a proposal from Senate Democrats — seeking to protect West Virginians with preexisting conditions was never acted upon and missed a key legislative deadline. 

Both bills are unlikely to return, after delegates rejected a motion to reconsider the Republican sponsored Senate Bill 284 toward the end of the Health committee meeting. 

A spokesman for Morrisey’s office did not respond to a request for comment Saturday evening. 

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

W.Va. Senate Passes Bill To Cover Preexisting Conditions, Should Obamacare be Repealed

The West Virginia Senate passed a bill on Tuesday that seeks to protect West Virginians with preexisting health conditions, in the event the federal law that currently provides those protections is repealed. 

Senate Bill 284 is on its way to the state’s House of Delegates after passing the Senate 20 to 14 Tuesday afternoon, along party lines. The legislation would only go into effect if the federal Affordable Care Act, also known as “Obamacare,” was repealed. 

The bill’s lead sponsor is Sen. President Mitch Carmichael, R-Jackson, and it has support from West Virginia’s Attorney General Patrick Morrisey. Morrisey joined a lawsuit with other Republican attorneys general in 2018 to repeal the ACA’s individual mandate to purchase health insurance.

The bill would require the state’s insurance commissioner, currently James Dodrill, to issue a public notice when the federal government has determined “all or a significant portion” of the ACA in unconstitutional.

Dodrill and other West Virginia health officials will then work on creating a reinsurance program, to support health insurance companies caring for individuals who, due to a serious health condition, have high health care costs. 

The bill doesn’t specify a method for funding that reinsurance program, but it allows the state to study the implementation of a high-risk pool. 

West Virginia was one of several states operating a high-risk pool before the ACA began. Some experts have said these pools were more expensive to the people who benefited from them than they were helpful. 

Morrisey has said in numerous interviews and press conferences he joined the ACA lawsuit in 2018 due to “skyrocketing” premiums and concerns over constitutional rights. 

Several groups advocating for affordable health care have said a repeal of the ACA would affect people with preexisting conditions, if there’s not a backup plan in place. 

One of the bill’s opponents  —  Sen. Richard Lindsay, D-Kanawha  —  said in a Feb. 13 interview with West Virginia Public Broadcasting the reinsurance program, depending on how its funded, could lead to higher premiums across the state. 

Lindsay spoke against the bill on Tuesday in his remarks to the full Senate, saying the Morrisey-supported bill was unfair to people with preexisting conditions who benefit from the ACA. 

“It would be analogous to having a three floor house with six bedrooms and four bathrooms,” Lindsay said, “and an individual burning it down to the ground, and forcing you to buy a house from him that’s half the size with very little space.”

He also opposed the bill because the Senate didn’t take up a Democrat-led bill, a shorter proposal which was introduced to protect people with preexisting conditions. That bill also didn’t address funding mechanisms.

A federal appeals court in New Orleans in December decided the individual coverage mandate in the ACA was unconstitutional. The federal court returned the case to a lower court in Texas who ruled the same thing months earlier, to determine how much of the ACA contradicts the U.S. Constitution, and what —  in the court’s opinion —  should be repealed.  

If the law is repealed, West Virginians also risk losing ACA-provided subsidies to pay for personal insurance. 

A report from West Virginia MetroNews in October said 22,600 West Virginians were enrolled in the state’s health insurance exchange last year. Eighty-eight percent of this population received subsidies in some amount, to pay for these plans. 

Senate Bill 284’s provisions for people with preexisting conditions only applies to West Virginians under the state’s jurisdiction, who purchase their insurance independently. The bill doesn’t do anything for West Virginians covered by Medicare, Medicaid, or private employment-based health benefits for companies which self insure. 

The legislation has been assigned to the House Health and Human Resources Committee for consideration. 

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.
 

Affordable Care Act in Enrollment in W.Va. Down this Year

Enrollment plans in West Virginia through the federal online health insurance marketplace has declined again this year.

Citing the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Charleston Gazette-Mail reports about 22,600 West Virginia residents signed up for a 2019 plan on healthcare.gov. Individuals can buy Affordable Care Act-compliant health insurance plans through the website.

Last year, around 27,400 West Virginians signed up for plans. In 2017, the enrollment number for the state was around 34,040.

West Virginians for Affordable Health Care Executive Director Chantal Fields says one reason for the decline may be residents moving from ACA plans onto Medicaid and Medicare rolls.

Beginning with 2019 plans, individuals will no longer pay a penalty on their income taxes if they don’t have health insurance.

Capito Votes for Partial Health Law Repeal; Manchin Votes No

West Virginia’s Republican U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito has voted to repeal parts of the Affordable Care Act in legislation defeated in a 51-49 floor vote early Friday.

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin voted against the latest amendment proposed by the Senate’s majority Republican leadership.

It would have repealed a mandate in President Barack Obama’s law that most people get health insurance, suspended a requirement that larger companies offer employee coverage, suspended a tax on medical devices and denied federal payments to Planned Parenthood for a year.

Manchin and Capito both said afterward they’re ready to work on bipartisan fixes.

About 525,000 of West Virginians are enrolled in Medicaid. About 175,000 joined under the act’s expansion.

About 35,000 others got coverage through the act’s insurance exchange, where premiums have risen sharply.

Are There Too Many Plea Deals?

Here’s what happens 97 percent of the time in federal court: a plea deal. The defendant agrees to plead guilty to a lesser offense, and the prosecution gets a guaranteed conviction.

But earlier this month, Judge Joseph Goodwin rejected a plea deal for a drug dealer, saying the defendant should face the “bright light” of a jury trial. He said this is especially important in West Virginia, which has the highest drug overdose rate in the country.

“A court should consider the cultural context surrounding the subject’s criminal conduct,” he wrote. “Here, that cultural context is a rural state deeply wounded by and suffering from a plague of heroin and opioid addiction.”

On this week’s Front Porch, lawyer Laurie Lin explains what makes Goodwin’s statement so extraordinary.

Also, we discuss President Trump’s address to Scouts in West Virginia, Sen. Capito’s big Obamacare decision, and why Pluto doesn’t wear pants, and what it says about what makes us human.

Welcome to “The Front Porch,” where we tackle the tough issues facing Appalachia the same way you talk with your friends on the porch.

Hosts include WVPB Executive Director and recovering reporter Scott Finn; conservative lawyer, columnist and rabid “Sherlock” fan Laurie Lin; and liberal columnist and avid goat herder Rick Wilson, who works for the American Friends Service Committee.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available at wvpublic.org and as a podcast as well.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by the Pulitzer Prize-winning Charleston Gazette-Mail. Find the latest news, traffic and weather on its CGM App. Download it in your app store, and check out its website: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

Is Trumpcare Dead? What It Means for West Virginia

“I did not come to Washington to hurt people.”

That is how Sen. Shelley Moore Capito announced, on Twitter, she would not support the GOP effort to repeal Obamacare without a replacement plan that addresses her concerns “and the needs of West Virginians.”

Capito was one of a handful of GOP Senators who dealt the Obamacare repeal a serious blow this week.

Is “Trumpcare” dead? And if so, what does that mean for heathcare in West Virginia, and for Capito’s political future. Listen to the Front Porch podcast to find out.

Also, we talk about West Virginia’s upper-middle class (the top 20 percent of household income – about $82,000 a year and up.) Are they hoarding the American Dream for themselves and their children?

Welcome to “The Front Porch,” where we tackle the tough issues facing Appalachia the same way you talk with your friends on the porch.

Hosts include WVPB Executive Director and recovering reporter Scott Finn; conservative lawyer, columnist and rabid “Sherlock” fan Laurie Lin; and liberal columnist and avid goat herder Rick Wilson, who works for the American Friends Service Committee.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available at wvpublic.org and as a podcast as well.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by the Pulitzer Prize-winning Charleston Gazette-Mail. Find the latest news, traffic and weather on its CGM App. Download it in your app store, and check out its website: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

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