“Will Wisconsin’s Scott Walker Implement Health-Care Reform?”

by Kids Forward | August 11, 2011

Home 9 Health Care 9 “Will Wisconsin’s Scott Walker Implement Health-Care Reform?” ( Page 3 )
Seems Likely He’ll Implement a Heritage Foundation Supported Exchange

This morning, the Washington Post’s article, “Will Wisconsin’s Scott Walker Implement Health-Care Reform?”, noted that of the seven early innovator state grantees, Wisconsin is the only state with a GOP Governor holding onto the money. Oklahoma returned its grant in April, and just this week Kansas Governor Sam Brownback returned $31 million. These early innovator grants are intended to help states develop the Health Insurance Exchanges, a key element of the health care law.

Some conservatives speak dismissively of Exchanges as part of “Obamacare,” and much of the recent discussions of Exchanges seems to have forgotten their original proponents, which included the conservative Heritage Foundation. As a PolitiFact article noted, “On numerous occasions, Heritage scholars wrote approvingly of the exchange system in Massachusetts, known as the Connector.” The PolitiFact article referenced the work of Edmund Haislmaier, a Heritage fellow in health care policy, who wrote in an April 2006 paper about the Massachusetts plan, of the “truly significant and transformative health system changes that the legislation would set in motion.” Haislmaier went on to say:

this concept of organizing a state’s insurance markets around a central clearinghouse represents a dramatic departure from recent state health insurance reform proposals. States have spent the past 15 years trying to expand health care coverage to small-business employees, with virtually no positive results. The Massachusetts legislation represents a bipartisan commitment to move away from the policies that have largely failed to make progress in covering the uninsured for the past 15 years.”

Though the original Exchanges supported by the Heritage Foundation, including the Massachusetts Connector model, will be implemented somewhat differently in the Affordable Care Act, Heritage and other conservative leaning policy groups have been advocating for similar ideas for years. As PolitiFact reported, Heritage scholar Robert Moffit wrote in an October 2006 paper (“The Rationale for a Statewide Health Insurance Exchange”) that “the best option is a health insurance market exchange.” He said it “would expand coverage and choice” and would represent “a revolutionary change in the health insurance market.”

It is important to note that after leaving the role of Medicaid Director under former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson, the current WI Department of Health Services Secretary, Dennis Smith, was a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation. We hope and expect that he understands the potential in Health Insurance Exchanges to create a strong market of private insurance plans for individuals and small businesses to shop for health insurance coverage, and for the Exchanges to set in motion what Edmund Haislmaier called “truly significant and transformative health system changes.”

Sara Eskrich and Jon Peacock

Join us to build a Wisconsin where
every child and family thrives.

Recent

How would federal cuts impact the Wisconsin state budget?

How would federal cuts impact the Wisconsin state budget?

From Boscobel to Burlington, Wisconsin families deserve a basic foundation that includes enough food to eat and health care.  But Congressional Republicans and the Trump Administration are trying to take away food assistance, health care, and other vital public...

New Guidance on Youth Justice Fines & Fees

New Guidance on Youth Justice Fines & Fees

Learning that your child has gotten in trouble with the law is one of the most difficult and stressful times in a parent or guardian’s life. But in Wisconsin, courts can make matters worse by charging families thousands of dollars, sometimes even garnishing tax...

Sign up for Emails

Your address helps us identify your legislators and the most relevant messages to send you.