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Opinion: New York’s COVID Recovery Must Include a Universal, People-First Healthcare System

6 Comments

  • Sharon
    Posted June 1, 2021 at 9:22 pm

    Thank you for supporting the NYHA. We need to pass this all important bill this legislative session!!
    I will gladly share this article.

  • You know democrats are insane right?
    Posted June 3, 2021 at 11:09 pm

    More irrational lunacy. How much will it cost? How pays for it? Unions created this mess. Now they will use union greed to hoist their free loader expense on taxpayers.

  • Brian Napoli
    Posted June 4, 2021 at 8:06 am

    This should not include illegal aliens. They have no rights here. What part of “illegal” don’t you understand.
    Also, socialized medicine is a farce.

  • Mike
    Posted June 4, 2021 at 11:42 am

    Executing a single-payer health care system on a state level would be a catastrophic financial move. This bill proposes no restrictions to prevent adverse selection. There are no checks and balances on critically ill people establishing residency in NY while actually living elsewhere. With unlimited long term care, anybody can be covered just by establishing residency having never contributed a dime to the system. This proposal fails to take in to account the mobility of the population in the US. The number of jobs that will be lost is in the hundreds of thousands.

    NYHA would create a bankrupting situation for small businesses that can not afford to pay for medical coverage today as they will essentially need to pay for this plan with payroll taxes. Imagine trying to start up a business in NY, take huge risks and massive investment knowing your path to being in the black may take years longer. I’d move out of state if this was me.

    Physicians would be less likely to set up their practice in NY after accumulating massive debt in school. Rural hospital networks that are already struggling risk being crushed by reduced reimbursement rates

    What about people whom have invested a lifetime in this state that now want to retire elsewhere. Are they covered on NY taxpayers dime?

    How about rationing? During the pandemic, the tax revenue of NY took a major hit. This plan is supposed to cover EVERYTHING. If tax revenue drops where does all this care get paid from? We don’t have some giant lock box of cash ready to cover claims when the revenue runs dry. The only solution is to ration care. Who will be the advocates for the patients to help them navigate when the resources are scarce. The wealthy will do just fine, the poor will again suffer.

    Also, if only a small proportion of the most well off NY’s relocate to avoid these massive taxes, this will be a huge deficit for the middle class to make up. Businesses can establish in NJ, PA or CT and avoid the taxes.

    Lastly, this proposal if passed is nearly impossible to implement. It’ll just create a black cloud over NY making this the least attractive place in NY to establish a new business. We can’t run a transportation system and stay solvent. No way do we want the same type of system controlling our health care.

    The NYHA is pure insanity being pushed by ideologues, who I believe have their hearts in the right place, but there is no consideration for the impracticality and total disregard for fiscal responsibility. A private public partnership is the best solution. Lets find a solution that can actually improve care and reduce cost. Do better Albany.

  • Dan
    Posted June 4, 2021 at 3:31 pm

    When the roof has a leak, you don’t tear down the house.

    Rather than engaging with all of the stakeholders and seeking a solution that would actually bend the cost curve and improve access to care, the ideologues pursing this legislation refuse to consider anything short of a massive upset of the system and more than doubling the entire state budget!

    Unions, who have bargained for benefits for decades, would lose what they have AND have to pay more. Plus, with a massive (and unlimited) payroll tax split between employers and employees, negotiating raises and cost of living increases would become increasingly difficult.

    Rather than proving the need for the New York Health Act, COVID-19 actually proved how easy it would be for businesses to leave New York, between neighboring states and remote workforces. How does this get offset? By increasing the tax burden on the business and residents that remain. Our experience with COVID-19 has also further demonstrated the success of public-private partnerships. Employers, insurance companies, drug companies, hospitals, labs, medical groups, and government agencies worked together. Was it perfect? Of course not. Would it have been better if the government was managing every aspect of the response? Absolutely not!

    As Mike indicated, the state cannot even manage to maintain a solvent public transportation system – how can they manage a massive healthcare bureaucracy that would dwarf the current bureaucracy of the entire state.

    It is time to bring together all of the stakeholders – employers, unions, hospitals/medical groups, insurers – to work together toward common sense solutions.

  • Mike
    Posted June 4, 2021 at 5:23 pm

    This is ridiculous, and it’s misleading. NYSNA keeps telling its members to support “Universal Healthcare,” but they are really fooling their members into supporting a single payer plan that is funded by taxes. It would demolish the healthcare system in NYS. Imagine NYS running the healthcare for all citizens. This is a complete joke. Taxes through the roof, and if you leave NYS after you retire you relinquish all of your benefits. How a labor union could possibly support and deceive their members into supporting this is unconscionable. I have nurses in my family, and NOT ONE of them supports government run single payer healthcare. Insanity. If you need to lie to your members and call it something it’s not, then there is something funny going on.

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