Healthcare Finance NewsHealthcare Finance News
  • Home
  • Sections
    • Industry News
    • Community Care
    • Hospitals & IDNs
    • Payers
    • Solutions and Services
  • Issues
    • March 2010
    • Jan/Feb 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • Sept. 2009
  • Resource Central
    • All Resources
    • Research
    • White Papers
    • Web Seminars
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Newsletters
  • RSS
  • Twitter feed
  • LinkedIn group
Select Your Homepage
Search eConnect
Login | Register
Home » News » Industry News

E-mail to a FriendPrint
Social Bookmarking
  • Delicious Delicious
  • Digg Digg
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  • Reddit Reddit
  • Newsvine Newsvine
  • Furl Furl
  • Facebook Facebook
  • Google Google
  • Yahoo Yahoo
Idaho governor threatens to sue nation over healthcare reform mandates

Idaho governor threatens to sue nation over healthcare reform mandates

January 06, 2010 | Diana Manos, Senior Editor

Suggested Content

  • Premier offers Congress its ideas for healthcare reform
  • ICD-10 and HITECH compliance key issues for medical billers
  • Biosimilar makers eye potential $45M U.S. market
  • Congressional Leaders Can Look to Indiana for Innovative Approach to Health IT in Economic Stimulus Package
  • Senate votes to delay doc pay cut until Oct. 1
  • Obama urges Congress to vote on healthcare
  • Blog: Health Reform Could Harm Medicaid Patients
  • Obama keeps focus on healthcare reform
  • American College of Physicians urges Medicare payment reform
  • AARP opposes Idaho bill to opt out of federal healthcare legislation

BOISE, ID – As Congress readies to merge the Senate and House healthcare reform bills, some states, including Idaho, are stepping up to serve as the latest roadblock.

Idaho's Republican governor, Clement L. "Butch" Otter, recently announced he would fight reform efforts and possibly sue the United States over the constitutionality of the issue.

Otter sent letters on Dec, 20 to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), arguing that healthcare reform legislation being considered by Congress sacrifices "fiscal responsibility, sound judgment and constitutionality for political expediency."

"I question the wisdom as well as the constitutionality and legality of these bills and will explore all my options, including legal action, to protect Idaho and the U.S. Constitution should Congress adopt and the president sign compromise healthcare legislation," he wrote. "Given the bills now before the conference committee, all that truly will be 'compromised' is our American system of government in exchange for a multi-generational legacy of debt."

Otter said both bills represent "a fundamental disconnect with the real challenges and priorities of ordinary Americans."

He argued that the Constitution does not empower Congress to mandate compulsory healthcare coverage or to create what he calls "a nationalized healthcare system."

AARP officials say Otter's fight is the wrong direction to take in tackling the state's growing healthcare crisis and called the constitutional challenge a scare tactic and unfounded.

"Governor Otter's announcement to rail against healthcare reform is premature, unnecessary and, if successful, would do much more harm than good for hundreds of thousands of Idahoans struggling with high healthcare costs," said Jim Wordelman, the state's director for the AARP. "This move puts the interests and profits of insurance and drug companies before the needs of Idaho families, businesses and retirees buckling under insurance premiums and rising prescription drug prices."

In Idaho, 222,000 people are uninsured, 80 percent of which are employed, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

"To simply say 'no' to healthcare reform can only serve to make Idaho's healthcare crisis worse; the cost of inaction on this issue is too high," Wordelman said. "We're calling on Idaho's elected officials to set partisan politics aside and work to make the final healthcare reform bill the best it can be – that's what Idaho deserves."

Both the Senate and House healthcare reform bills would aim to lower drug costs, help the uninsured and businesses have more affordable access to health insurance, ensure people with pre-existing conditions have access to health insurance, hold insurers more accountable to consumers, protect choice of doctors and hold down the costs of coverage.

AARP leaders say they are committed to making the final healthcare reform package stronger by working to permanently close the so-called Medicare Part D "doughnut hole" once the Senate bill is merged with the House bill. Both bills have moved forward without support from Idaho's Congressional delegation.

Related Topics:
  • Boise
  • Clement L. "Butch" Otter
  • Congress
  • Harry Reid
  • Idaho
  • Jim Wordelman
  • Senate
  • U.S.
  • United States

Reader Comments (0)Login to Post a Comment

receive news by email

Most Popular

Latest Headlines
Most Popular
  • Creative payment reform initiatives abound nationwide
  • Analysis: Medical malpractice payments continue to fall
  • Recession hurts, but pharmacists are still in demand
  • Senate votes to delay doc pay cut until Oct. 1
  • Online auction nets Maryland health system $1.25M in energy savings
  • Vendor Notebook: Craneware, Inc., signs contract to deploy new toolkit
  • Mayo Clinic’s debt rating improves
  • Community pharmacies tout "smaller" health reform bill
  • Number of uninsured Americans could grow by 10M in five years
  • USDA funds construction of North Carolina hospital
Syndicate content

HEALTHCARE FINANCE JOB SPOT

  • Director of Patient Financial Services - Vista Health System - Waukegan, Illinois
  • Epic Business Systems Analyst Ambulatory Practice Management Revenue Cycle - Lee Memorial Health System - Fort Myers, FL
  • Healthcare Consulting Partner/Leader Performance Improvement, Healthcare Finance and Operations - Tatum - Chicago and Dallas
  • Chargemaster - Cheshire Medical Center - NH
  • System Coding Auditor - Saint Joseph Health System - Lexington, KY
more jobs
  • EHRWatch.com

    EHRWatch.com offers news, commentary and community participation on the developments in electronic health records.

  • Priming the Pump

    Priming the Pump provides practical news on the stimulus package and the incentives that it offers to healthcare providers.

  • NHINWatch

    Visit NHINWatch.com for coverage of the Nationwide Health Information Network.

  • Mobile Health Watch

    Stay up to date on the latest mobility news at Mobile Health Watch.

  • MedTech Publishing

    Visit our company Web page to learn more about MedTech Publishing.

  • LinkedIn

    Join our LinkedIn group to connect with other Healthcare Finance News readers.

  • Healthcare Finance Job Spot

    Check out the latest open positions at Healthcare Finance Job Spot.

  • Healthcare IT News

    Visit Healthcare IT News for the latest health information technology news.

  • Facebook

    Join Healthcare Finance News on Facebook to connect with other readers!

Marketplace

  • Home
  • Issues
  • Resource Central
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Site Map
  • Privacy Policy
Healthcare Finance News is a publication of MedTech Publishing Company LLC.
For more information about MedTech Publishing Company and its publications, please visit medtechpublishing.com.
©2009 MedTech Publishing
Powered by Phase2 Technology.