RutlandHerald.com - We Are Vermont

Welch defends health-care legislation



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By Susan Smallheer Staff Writer - Published: November 9, 2009

HARTLAND — Rep. Peter F. Welch, said Sunday that the historic health care reform bill passed by the U.S. House late Saturday night was far from perfect, but was "a solid step."

"It's historic, but this is not the perfect bill," said Welch, a Democrat, in a telephone interview from his home. "It was ferociously difficult to get this passed. It passed by an eyelash. "

Welch said the bill passed by an effective two-vote margin – if two representatives had changed their votes, the five-vote margin of success would have vanished. The final vote was 220-215.

"Health care reform has eluded us for generations," he said.

Welch said he wanted to see a stronger public option, something he said he had fought for.

"Consumers get one more solid choice and insurance companies get competition," he said.

According to Welch, the biggest concern he heard was that people can't afford health care.

"There's a lot of support of single-payer," in Vermont, he said, largely because the state is ahead of most other states debating the issue of health care reform.

The bill, the Affordable Health Care for America Act, now goes to the Senate and is expected to pass in some form, according to President Barack Obama.

The bill does include the so-called public option, which was one of the more controversial aspects of the bill.

The public health insurance option creates a voluntary insurance program that will compete with private insurance, Welch said, "adding choice and reducing costs."

A single-payer system, which was strongly supported by most of the people who contacted his office, was out of the realm of political possibility, he said.

"The votes just weren't there," said Welch, who had been one of 87 sponsors of a single-payer bill.

The great accomplishment of the bill is that it extends health insurance to 37 million people currently uninsured, he said. And gone is the insurance industry's practices of denying covering to people with pre-existing conditions and dropping coverage of people who become sick.

Also gone is the go-called "doughnut hole" for Medicare patients, who find themselves paying for their prescriptions after payments for their prescriptions to a certain amount. That provision affects 7,600 Vermonters.

Welch said another improvement was extended coverage for young people, which allows them to remain on their parent's health insurance plans until they are 26 years old.

According to House estimates provided by Welch's office, the bill will improve employer-based coverage for 381,000 Vermonters and provide credits to help 156,000 Vermont households pay for coverage.

Welch said that several Vermont health care innovations were incorporated into the House bill, including the Blueprint for Health, the Vermont program that compensates primary care providers for managing and coordinating patient's care, as well as the accountable care organization, which grew out of research by the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy.

susan.smallheer@rutlandherald.com








READER COMMENTS


Mr. Welch said that the bill was "not the perfect bill" but he signed it anyway. Did he even READ it?
As I recall, Mr. Welch said the same thing about the bailout bill last year...but did he READ it? The bailout bill was signed well before the November elections were completed, yet his reason for supporting it was that then Presidential Candidate Obama assured him that, as president, he would not place the entire burden of paying for it on the American taxpayer. At that point in the process, the presidential election was still anybody's game yet he supported it by a foregone conclusion that Mr. Obama would win the election. Pretty irresponsible as I see it. He's gotta go!
-- Posted by Marek Brzyckzy on Tue, Nov 10, 2009, 11:22 am EST

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I voted for P.W. and I am glad that he is doing something worthwhile. What is so terrible about people getting health care?
And this middle of the night nonsense is, well nonsense! If the vote went your way you would say that they worked deep into the night and even on the weekend to complete this important task. I don't know how to tell y'all this without shocking you, but lots of people are still up at 11:15 p.m. and even later than that!
And the secrecy nonsense? This bill has been publicly discussed, debated and picked apart for months now. The debate took place in public television for all to see as did the vote. Real secretive...
-- Posted by Comfy Anon on Tue, Nov 10, 2009, 8:53 am EST

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If the bill was so great and wonderful why did the vote take place in the middle of the night on a weekend? Welch did nothing more then welch on his responsibility to represent Vermont and her citizens. Instead he bowed to the party I will remember in November.
-- Posted by Richard King on Tue, Nov 10, 2009, 6:53 am EST

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Remember this is the same Big Government that has messed up the H1N1 flu shots, Social Security, Medicare, The VA, and on and on. All our members of congress get right is their pay raises.
-- Posted by No More on Mon, Nov 9, 2009, 6:30 pm EST

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I would like to know how much (if any) of that 1990-page bill Mr. Welch read before he voted for it. Further, doesn't anyone else wonder how many of the 220 "aye" voters actually read the thing? It only passed by a 5-vote margin (220-215). The entire VT delegation needs to be fired.
-- Posted by Marek Brzyckzy on Mon, Nov 9, 2009, 1:19 pm EST

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Welch can now get on the back porch with leahy as far as I concerned. Remember in November--2010.
-- Posted by jerry coleman on Mon, Nov 9, 2009, 8:10 am EST

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Welch did as he was told. Not by his Vermont constituency but by nancy pelosi and his party bosses. Next year let's hire someone who speaks for us and not a political party.
-- Posted by northstar62 on Mon, Nov 9, 2009, 6:52 am EST

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