Apr 272011
 

When Barack Obama announced a few months back that he would waive the ACA for any state that could do better, many on the left thought he was caving in to the Republicans, giving them their way again.  I called that one right and credited him for putting the onus on Republicans, showing them up, because they would be unable to do better  without a public option or single payer care.  I knew that Republicans would not go there, but Vermont has done just that.

27vermontIn a historic vote on Tuesday, the Vermont Legislature created the enabling legislation for a first-in-the-nation universal health care system. The state Senate approved the visionary plan for a single-payer system in a 21-9 vote after four hours of debate. The split was largely along party lines.

Gov. Peter Shumlin, a Democrat, campaigned on a promise to create a single-payer system in Vermont that would contain health care costs and give all of the state’s residents universal access to medical care. On Tuesday, Shumlin made good on the first step toward fulfilling that promise, and just five hours after the Senate vote, he marked the legislative victory in an appearance on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show.”

The Shumlin administration was heavily involved in drafting the bill, H.202, though by the time the legislation reached final passage it had changed somewhat from its original incarnation, which was based in part on recommendations from Professor William Hsiao, the renowned Harvard economist who created a single payer system for Taiwan.

The legislation sets the state’s health care system on a new trajectory. Instead of continuing to use an insurance model for covering the cost of care, the bill moves the state toward an integrated payment system that would be controlled by a quasi judicial board and administered by a third party entity. The system would be funded through a broad-based tax.

The universal health care system would be implemented in 2014, if it clears 10 very high hurdles, including the receipt of a federal waiver. Otherwise it wouldn’t kick in until 2017… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <VT Digger>

Here’s Gov. Shumlin’s interview with Rachel Maddow.

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You come home to discover your house is on fire so you call 911.  The operator asks who carries your fire department insurance, and you tell her you have none.  She asks why, and you tell her you couldn’t afford to pay it.  She reminds you that, under the Republican plan, you could have gotten a fire department voucher.  You explain that, due to preexisting climate conditions, your voucher would cover only a small part of the cost.  She sighs, says she is sorry that there is nothing she can do to help you.  You watch your home burn to the ground.

Ridiculous, isn’t it?  What makes it ridiculous is that we have single payer fire department care.  What I just described is what would happen of the Republican approach to Medicare were applied to fire department care.  People would not stand fore that because they know fire protection is too important to privatize.  Given that truth, it makes no sense to leave health care to companies for whom profit trumps health every time.

Kudos to Vermont!

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  14 Responses to “Vermont Gets Health Care Right”

  1. What wasn’t covered and I am not bitching just curious what is the difference between this and Masshealth of MA? Although I know of at least one relative in MA who made 12 cents too much in one year and she at 82 was cut off the program for a period of time.

    • Mark, Ronmeycare in MA is like the ACA, running the program through Big Insurance, The VT plan is single payer, like Medicare for all, and Big Insurance is relegated to offering supplements.

  2. Hopefully, after the country has its inevitable schism, the Vermont plan will spread to the rest of the New England Republic.

  3. I really wish they would do this here in NY. Insurance companies practice legallized extortion on the masses.

  4. One down and forty-nine to go!

  5. It’ll be interesting to see how much population VT gains in the next census. I know I’d move there in a hot minute if I could but not just for the health care.

    • That probably won’t be a problem, because AFA coverage kicks in in 2014 at the same time. It will depend on AFA affordability.

  6. You know, this is not exactly rocket science. Successful single payer models exist and people want it. It’s just that the corporate elites do not, and they have the power and “Free Speech” money to make it difficult, if not near impossible.

    This is going to be yet another succesful model and I think it will spread.

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