Kennedy sets
sights on child health care
By
Amy Fagan
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
November 17, 2006
The
soon-to-be chairman of the Senate health panel said
yesterday his ultimate goal is to have the government
provide health care coverage for all Americans.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat, said he
knows it will take awhile to gain support for the idea, so
he will focus in the meantime on extending coverage to
different groups, starting with covering more children under
the existing Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) --
something he thinks there is "a lot of sentiment for."
But Mr. Kennedy, who yesterday laid out his agenda for
the Health Education Labor and Workforce Committee, said
universal health care is the goal.
"We want to continue the progress in terms of coverage,"
he said. "We will have to take a longer period of time ...
developing the support for that."
Mr. Kennedy argued that covering everyone is possible
because his home state did it.
"We proved that people from all parts of the political
spectrum can come together to provide health care for all,"
he said. "So this, too, is one of our top goals for the
coming year."
Also, at the top of the "to-do" list provided by his
staff is an initiative titled "Medicare for All," which
would expand federal Medicare coverage to Americans younger
than 65 years old. The expansion would be done in phases --
first to the 55- to 65-year-old age group and then to
children younger than 20. The proposal is designed to be the
starting point for discussions on universal coverage.
The rest of Mr. Kennedy's agenda for the committee
includes increasing the minimum wage, allowing Medicare to
negotiate directly with drug companies for lower drug
prices, expanding federal support for embryonic-stem-cell
research, helping college students by increasing Pell
Grants, capping college loan payments and cutting
student-loan interest rates -- goals that Rep. Nancy Pelosi,
California Democrat, has said she, too, will tackle soon
after she takes the reins as House speaker in January.
Mr. Kennedy's Medicare-for-all proposal is co-sponsored
by Rep. John D. Dingell, Michigan Democrat, and would
provide comprehensive coverage, including prescription
drugs. According to a summary from Mr. Kennedy's office,
initial estimates put the proposal in the neighborhood of
$600 billion per year in terms of cost, but it would
generate $380 billion a year in savings, and costs would be
covered by payroll taxes and general revenues.
Mr. Kennedy and others say it's past time for such a
change because skyrocketing health care costs burden society
and business.
Democrats also will focus on improving CHIP, which
covers 4 million low-income children and is administered by
the states. Many states are facing steep funding shortfalls
for the program, and incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid, Nevada Democrat, said recently "the first thing we
must do is address these shortfalls so these children do not
lose their existing coverage, and work to improve this
vitally successful program as we reauthorize it next year."