An Oregon Perspective: Lowering Health Care Costs and Providing Choice

Statement

Date: July 13, 2009

By Senator Jeff Merkley

At the beginning of July, I held town hall meetings in Umatilla, Polk, Clackamas, Linn, Marion, and Multnomah Counties. At each meeting, the most prominent issue of concern was health care.

People of all walks of life are paying dramatically more for health care than they used to. These high costs are hurting our families and our small businesses. Last year, we spent 17 percent of our gross domestic product on health care; in the last nine years, costs have doubled for the average family. In May, Oregon's largest insurer announced that the average small business premium was going up 14.7 percent -- on top of a 26 percent increase last year. Health care costs are an increasing drag on our economy and the pocketbooks of working families.

In my role on the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, I've been working with my colleagues on a plan for health care reform that will lower costs, provide consumers with more choices, and increase competition.

The change would work like this: Americans who are happy with their current health plan can keep it. But if you don't like your plan and you want to look at other options, we're going to make sure you have a choice of quality, affordable health plans. This will lower costs and it will also force insurance companies to provide better services to their customers.

One of those options will be a community health insurance plan offered by the federal government. This public option will be an additional choice to increase competition, lower prices, and keep insurance companies honest, so families won't be entirely at the mercy of the insurance companies. Most Oregonians I've talked to - and about three-quarters of Americans according to the polls - like the idea of having a choice of what type of plan they want rather than having the federal government make that decision for them.

Over the next few months, we'll be engaging in a nationwide discussion about the direction of health care in our country. We'll have before us a choice between a system that gets more and more expensive every year, leaves middle class families one pink slip from losing their health coverage, and makes our businesses less competitive, or an improved model that increases health care options, expands care, and lowers costs. I don't think we can afford to do nothing.

We have a once in a generation opportunity to remake our health care system for the better. I invite you to contact my office and talk to your friends and family about your opinion because we can only enact real change if you make your voices heard.


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