logo
Ambulance caravan drives home opposition to House rate setting move

Ambulance caravan drives home opposition to House rate setting move

Yahoo16-04-2025

Ambulance caravan drives home opposition to House rate setting
This shows only a small leg of the much larger caravan of ambulance vehicles that slowly surrounded the Legislative Office Building Wednesday during a hearing where their executives spoke out strongly against a House-approved rate setting bill.
A caravan of slow-moving ambulances surrounded the Legislative Office Building Wednesday morning as executives inside warned that a House-passed rate for commercial insurance reimbursement could drive more companies out of business.
Ambulance service providers, fire chiefs and other first responders packed the small room of the Senate Health Care Committee to protest the House proposal that would set commercial insurance rates for services at 202% of the federal Medicare rate.
'This bill falls short and puts our entire EMS system at significant risk,' said Chris Stawasz, regional director for American Medical Response and someone who has fought over this issue with insurers for four decades.
'It doesn't fix the crisis; it actually makes it worse.'
Rep. John Hunt, R-Rindge, pushed back promoting his bill (HB 316) that cleared the House of Representatives on a voice vote last month.
The rate in the bill was along the lines of an actuarial study the Legislature in 2024 had called upon the Insurance Department to commission and came up with right rate, he said.
The state Senate has already gone on record with its own bill (SB 425) with the backing of ambulance carriers that would reimburse 325% of the Medicare rate.
Hunt said it's not fair to jack up the price tag for small businesses with commercial insurance since Medicare for seniors and Medicaid for low income residents makes up at least 80% of all ambulance calls.
Large businesses come under the federal ERISA program and would be exempt from the higher rate, Hunt noted.
'Let's let all the suckers who happen to have insurance from their employers … let's screw them. No, that's not what we were going to do in the House Commerce Committee,' Hunt said.
'To simply say this will relieve the pressure on fire departments and EMS and let's just go after small businesses and individuals and make them pay for it, it's just not fair, it's just not right. This bill is well thought out; it's the right answer.'
Less than 50 cents on the dollar
Studies confirm Medicare pays about 46% of the actual cost to transport by ambulance, Medicaid about 42%.
State Sen. Sue Prentiss, D-Lebanon, a paramedic and executive director of the American Trauma Society, pointed out Berlin EMS — which held the ambulance contract with that North Country city since 1985 — is shutting its doors next week, forcing the local fire agency to pick up emergency calls.
'How can these rural carriers hang on if they don't get relief?' Prentiss asked.
State Rep. Mark Proulx, R-Manchester, a retired city firefighter, urged the Senate to kill this bill.
'We have already had a couple of companies go out or running on skeletal crews,' said Proulx, who has also served as deputy chief of Epping Fire Rescue and a call member of the Auburn Fire Department.
'We'd rather go back to the old system and have the insurance company pay the bill they send them and if not then, we will balance bill.'
House sponsor defends his proposed rate for ground ambulance transport
House Commerce and Consumer Affairs Committee Chairman John Hunt, R-Rindge and lower right inset, defended his proposed commercial rate for ambulance services at 202% of the Medicare that ambulance company executives said could drive many of them out of business.
The campaign to set a 'ground ambulance' rate looks to eliminate balanced billing, in which the insurance company gives the ambulance firm less than its cost and the ambulance company then sends a 'surprise' balanced bill statement to the consumer to try and collect the rest.
'We want to see a prohibition on balanced billing. We believe that is a pro-consumer protection measure if we can do that. This has been a problem in this state for a very long time,' said Insurance Commissioner D.J. Bettencourt.
'Additionally, we want to do what we can to support our EMS providers.'
Bettencourt urged the stakeholders on both sides to reopen talks to settle on a compromise rate structure.
Former Insurance Commissioner Paula Rogers now lobbies for the America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), a trade organization that includes the largest carriers including Anthem, Harvard Pilgrim and Cigna.
'Something is going to happen this session; it's gotten to the point where something has to be done,' Rogers said. 'The study came in at 202% and the Prentiss bill is at 325%.'
As usual, legislative leaders from both parties have already identified a potential fallback position if an agreement can't be reached.
Sen. David Rochefort, R-Littleton, is chairman of Senate Health Care and authored a separate, Senate-passed bill (SB 130) to name a 12-person commission to study delivery models for EMS and report back to lawmakers with recommendations by Nov. 1.
Hunt floated a possible compromise by convincing his committee to retain until next year a fourth bill (HB 725) from Rep. Jerry Stringham, D-Lincoln, that would have set the same 325% rate as in Prentiss's bill.
What's Next: The Senate Health Care Committee is likely to recommend killing this bill or amending it with the Senate's higher, 325% rate standard.
Prospects: Not 50-50 are the odds for a deal. Rochefort's play may look like the smartest one because if the House and Senate cannot agree, the commission idea suddenly will surge to the front of the line.
klandrigan@unionleader.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Johnson brushes off Musk campaign spending threats: ‘It doesn't concern me'
Johnson brushes off Musk campaign spending threats: ‘It doesn't concern me'

The Hill

time12 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Johnson brushes off Musk campaign spending threats: ‘It doesn't concern me'

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) in an interview Friday brushed off Elon Musk's campaign spending threats in light of the tech billionaire's public fallout with President Trump, suggesting he isn't worried. The spat between Trump and Musk began with the latter's criticism of the president's legislative agenda making its way through Congress. Johnson said he built a closer relationship with the then-special government employee and that the tech mogul has been led astray regarding the 'big beautiful' spending package. 'Look, it doesn't concern me. We're going to win either way because we're going to win on our policies we're delivering for hardworking Americans and fulfilling those promises,' Johnson told Fox News's 'Jesse Watters Primetime.' 'But look, I like Elon and respect him. I mean, we became friends in all this process,' he continued. 'I've been texting with him even this week … in trying to make sure that he has accurate information about the bill. I think he has been misled about it.' Musk, who contributed hundreds of millions of dollars to assist in Trump's win in the 2024 presidential election, was the biggest donor during the White House race. Amid his recent spat with Trump, which broke out in public as the two traded insults and threats, Musk argued that without his political expenditures, Trump would have lost to former Vice President Harris, Republicans would lose the majority in the House and the GOP would have failed to flip the majority in the Senate. Trump then threatened to have all federal contracts associated with the billionaire's companies to be cut off. As the fight between the two intensified, the tech executive floated the idea of forming a third party and accused the president of being named in the late Jeffrey Epstein's files. Trump has denied close ties to the disgraced financier. Musk's opposition to the GOP megabill — which he called a 'disgusting abomination' — is largely tied to deficit spending. The billionaire argued the legislation would balloon the national debt and fails to slash enough spending. The package faces an uphill battle in the Senate. While Musk, who recently left his position as the top adviser to Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), seemed open to repairing ties on Friday, the president appeared to be OK with moving on. Johnson in the interview Friday defended the spending bill and commended Trump for his handling of the squabble. 'We're going to make good on this… I like the president's attitude. You know, he is moving on. He has to,' he told the host. 'He's laser-focused on delivering for the people. And House and Senate Republicans are as well. So, we've got our hand at the wheel.' 'We're going to get this done just like we told the people,' the Speaker continued. 'And if you are a hardworking American that is struggling to take care of your family, you are going to love this legislation.' The Louisiana Republican added, 'I'm telling you, all boats are going to rise and everybody's going to be in a much better mood before we go into that midterm election in 2026.'

Trump's big bill also seeks to undo the big bills of Biden and Obama
Trump's big bill also seeks to undo the big bills of Biden and Obama

San Francisco Chronicle​

time15 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Trump's big bill also seeks to undo the big bills of Biden and Obama

WASHINGTON (AP) — Chiseling away at President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act. Rolling back the green energy tax breaks from President Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act. At its core, the Republican 'big, beautiful bill' is more than just an extension of tax breaks approved during President Donald Trump's first term at the White House. The package is an attempt by Republicans to undo, little by little, the signature domestic achievements of the past two Democratic presidents. 'We're going to do what we said we were going to do,' Speaker Mike Johnson said after House passage last month. While the aim of the sprawling 1,000-page plus bill is to preserve an estimated $4.5 trillion in tax cuts that would otherwise expire at year's end if Congress fails to act — and add some new ones, including no taxes on tips — the spending cuts pointed at the Democratic-led programs are causing the most political turmoil. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said this week that 10.9 million fewer people would have health insurance under the GOP bill, including 1.4 million immigrants in the U.S. without legal status who are in state-funded programs. At the same time, lawmakers are being hounded by businesses in states across the nation who rely on the green energy tax breaks for their projects. As the package moves from the House to the Senate, the simmering unrest over curbing the Obama and Biden policies shows just how politically difficult it can be to slash government programs once they become part of civic life. "When he asked me, what do you think the prospects are for passage in the Senate? I said, good — if we don't cut Medicaid," said Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., recounting his conversation last week with Trump. 'And he said, I'm 100% supportive of that.' Health care worries Not a single Republican in Congress voted for the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, in 2010, or Biden's inflation act in 2022. Both were approved using the same budget reconciliation process now being employed by Republicans to steamroll Trump's bill past the opposition. Even still, sizable coalitions of GOP lawmakers are forming to protect aspects of both of those programs as they ripple into the lives of millions of Americans. Hawley, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and others are wary of changes to Medicaid and other provisions in the bill that would result in fewer people being able to access health care programs. At the same time, crossover groupings of House and Senate Republicans have launched an aggressive campaign to preserve, at least for some time, the green energy tax breaks that business interests in their states are relying on to develop solar, wind and other types of energy production. Murkowski said one area she's "worried about' is the House bill's provision that any project not under construction within 60 days of the bill becoming law may no longer be eligible for those credits. 'These are some of the things we're working on,' she said. The concerns are running in sometimes opposite directions and complicating the work of GOP leaders who have almost no votes to spare in the House and Senate as they try to hoist the package over Democratic opposition and onto the president's desk by the Fourth of July. While some Republicans are working to preserve the programs from cuts, the budget hawks want steeper reductions to stem the nation's debt load. The CBO said the package would add $2.4 trillion to deficits over the decade. After a robust private meeting with Trump at the White House this week, Republican senators said they were working to keep the bill on track as they amend it for their own priorities. Senate Majority Leader John Thune said the president 'made the pitch and the argument for why we need to get the bill done." The disconnect is reminiscent of Trump's first term, when Republicans promised to repeal and replace Obamacare, only to see their effort collapse in dramatic fashion when the late Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz, voted thumbs down for the bill on the House floor. Battle over Medicaid In the 15 years since Obamacare became law, access to health care has grown substantially. Some 80 million people are now enrolled in Medicaid, and the Kaiser Family Foundation reports 41 states have opted to expand their coverage. The Affordable Care Act expanded Medicaid to all adults with incomes up to about $21,500 for an individual, or almost $29,000 for a two-person household. While Republicans no longer campaign on ending Obamacare, advocates warn that the changes proposed in the big bill will trim back at access to health care. The bill proposes new 80 hours of monthly work or community service requirements for able-bodied Medicaid recipients, age 18 to 64, with some exceptions. It also imposes twice-a-year eligibility verification checks and other changes. Republicans argue that they want to right-size Medicaid to root out waste, fraud and abuse and ensure it's there for those who need it most, often citing women and children. 'Medicaid was built to be a temporary safety net for people who genuinely need it — young, pregnant women, single mothers, the disabled, the elderly,' Johnson told The Associated Press. 'But when when they expanded under Obamacare, it not only thwarted the purpose of the program, it started draining resources.' Initially, the House bill proposed starting the work requirements in January 2029, as Trump's term in the White House would be coming to a close. But conservatives from the House Freedom Caucus negotiated for a quicker start date, in December 2026, to start the spending reductions sooner. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer has said the changes are an Obamacare rollback by another name. 'It decimates our health care system, decimates our clean energy system,' Schumer of New York said in an interview with the AP. The green energy tax breaks involve not only those used by buyers of electric vehicles, like Elon Musk's Tesla line, but also the production and investment tax credits for developers of renewables and other energy sources. The House bill had initially proposed a phaseout of those credits over the next several years. But again the conservative Freedom Caucus engineered the faster wind-down — within 60 days of the bill's passage. 'Not a single Republican voted for the Green New Scam subsidies,' wrote Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, on social media. 'Not a single Republican should vote to keep them.'

6 Ways To Rethink Retirement in an Ongoing DOGE Economy
6 Ways To Rethink Retirement in an Ongoing DOGE Economy

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

6 Ways To Rethink Retirement in an Ongoing DOGE Economy

Elon Musk may have left his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) behind, but the DOGE office and the intentions to cut government spending remain. It will likely have a lingering effect on many aspects of Americans' lives, particularly regarding the agencies where staffing or budgets were slashed or may be in the future. Find Out: Read Next: One of the areas DOGE did a lot of cutting was the Social Security Administration. For anyone retiring in this DOGE environment, in which security nets like Social Security and Medicare may not be so secure, it may be time to rethink some aspects of retirement. Christopher Stroup, a CFP and owner of Silicon Beach Financial, explained some ways to prepare for this new policy landscape. Retirees relying on timely Social Security or Medicare have faced longer processing times and inconsistent access to benefits. 'The cuts didn't just trim fat, they disrupted core services, forcing many to navigate a fragmented system at a life stage when stability matters most,' Stroup said. This volatility adds a new layer of risk to traditional retirement planning that requires more strategy. Be Aware: Simply put, if government support continues to shrink, which is likely, retirees may need to assume greater out-of-pocket costs for healthcare and essentials, Stroup warned. 'Financial plans must now stress-test for reduced safety nets, inflation uncertainty and delayed services,' he said. The assumption that Medicare and Social Security will 'just work' is no longer a safe bet. Stroup suggested soon-to-be-retirees now think of retirement less as a finish line and more as a transition that demands flexibility. 'You'll want to build contingency funds, diversify your income sources, and plan for potential lags in public benefits,' he said. Just as important, don't delay filing paperwork since bureaucratic backlogs can derail even well-funded retirements if you're not proactive. It's also a time to focus on liquidity, not just longevity, Stroup said. This means maintaining a strong emergency fund for benefit delays or policy changes. It's a great time to reevaluate withdrawal rates and healthcare coverage with the help of a financial advisor, and to consider supplemental insurance or annuities to hedge against 'service erosion.' 'Above all, revisit your financial plan annually as this environment demands regular recalibration,' Stroup said. To get down to the essentials and focus your energy, Stroup recommended prioritizing the following three things: Healthcare planning: Confirm coverage and estimate out-of-pocket costs. Guaranteed income: Layer Social Security with annuities or conservative income streams. Tax strategy: Optimize withdrawals to minimize tax drag. A well-sequenced drawdown strategy can preserve capital longer, especially if public benefits falter. Lastly, Stroup feels that 'policy disruption is the new normal.' This means you can't count on yesterday's assumptions. 'Whether it's delayed Social Security checks, Medicare limits or staff shortages, retirees need personal resiliency baked into their plan,' he said. Work with a fiduciary who understands the tech-policy overlap and can help you adapt as systems shift beneath your feet. More From GOBankingRates 3 Luxury SUVs That Will Have Massive Price Drops in Summer 2025 These 10 Used Cars Will Last Longer Than an Average New Vehicle 10 Genius Things Warren Buffett Says To Do With Your Money This article originally appeared on 6 Ways To Rethink Retirement in an Ongoing DOGE Economy

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store