Oklahoma
State Legislature
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: February 22, 2012
Joint Committee on Federal Health Care Law delivers
final report
The Joint Committee on Federal Health Care Law delivered
its final report to legislative leadership today after spending the
legislative interim studying the federal Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act and the effect it will have on Oklahoma.
“Our committee did a lot of tough work digging into the Oklahoma-specific
implications of this law. Whether we like it or not, this flawed federal
law is going to have a very real impact on Oklahoma’s health care
system,” said Sen. Gary
Stanislawski, a Tulsa Republican and co-chairman of the committee.
“While we didn’t like everything we found, we were encouraged
that we do have options as a state to head off some of this law’s
harmful mandates so we can keep as much of our health care system as
possible under the market’s control.”
“The only true way to overturn this law is through the courts,
which Oklahoma and other states are already pursuing, and at the ballot
box, where we hope Republicans are victorious in the presidential election
in November. Since neither of those options are guarantees, we must
be proactive in the event that those outcomes don’t materialize,”
said Rep. Glen
Mulready, a Tulsa Republican and co-chairman of the committee. “As
the elected leaders of this state, we must protect Oklahoma’s
best interests rather than burying our heads in the sand. That’s
why our committee has worked diligently to find proactive, protective
ways for Oklahoma to address this law.”
Senate President Pro Tempore Brian Bingman, R-Sapulpa, and House Speaker
Kris Steele, R-Shawnee, formed the Joint Committee on Federal Health
Care Law near the conclusion of the 2011 legislative session. Beginning
in September, the committee held five public meetings and received testimony
from dozens of experts from the public and private sectors. The report
includes a synopsis of information presented at those meetings and resulting
recommendations from the committee.
“We hope our report proves useful to the Legislature and that
our colleagues give these issues the careful attention our committee
did,” Mulready said.
The committee has established a clearinghouse website, www.okhealthcare.info,
for convenient public access to video and audio recorded committee meetings
as well as an electronic copy of the final committee report.
Stanislawski added: “I would like to commend my fellow committee
members for taking on a complex topic and working toward solutions that
are in Oklahoma’s best interest. We brought the public and private
sectors together to develop fact-based options for Oklahoma to consider
as we tackle this new federal law.”
The committee’s final report (attached) recommends that Oklahoma:
Continue to fight the federal health care law in court; better educate
the public about ways to improve their health; prepare for a dramatic
expansion of Medicaid eligibility due to PPACA; begin developing a market-based
state health insurance exchange in order to prevent imposition of a
federal exchange in Oklahoma; form a permanent legislative committee
to monitor issues related to the federal health care law; and increase
medical residency programs in order to address current and future doctor
shortages – particularly in rural areas.
Regarding health insurance exchanges, the report recommends Oklahoma
begin taking steps to implement a state-based, free market health insurance
exchange. The recommended exchange is similar to the one in development
by the state of Utah since before PPACA’s existence. Utah’s
exchange model was recommended to the committee by U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn.
The recommended Oklahoma exchange would be housed in Insure Oklahoma,
which would be spun off from the Oklahoma Health Care Authority and
turned into a public trust.
“Beginning development of our own state-based, free market exchange
is clearly the best way to stop the federal government from barging
into Oklahoma to build a highly-regulated, anti-free market federal
exchange we don’t want or need. The last thing any state needs
is a government health care takeover,” Stanislawski said.
Under PPACA, states must have a framework for an exchange in place by
Jan. 1, 2013 or the federal government will begin setting up a federal
exchange in the state to be operational by January 2014. Health insurance
exchanges are online marketplaces where businesses and consumers can
shop for health insurance.
“Working toward a state exchange is the most realistic step Oklahoma
can take to prevent an unwanted federal takeover in our health care
system and insurance markets,” Mulready said. “This would
be an Oklahoma exchange run by Oklahomans the way Oklahomans want it
run. It would have no federal hands on it whatsoever. If you’re
opposed to the federal health care law, you should be for this state-based
exchange because it is the most defensive position we can take to prevent
Barack Obama’s team from coming in and imposing their own exchange
upon Oklahoma. We know Oklahomans can serve Oklahomans far better than
Barack Obama.”
For more information contact:
Sen. Gary Stanislawski
405.521.5624
stanislawski@oksenate.gov
Rep. Glen Mulready
405.557.7340
glen.mulready@okhouse.gov