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Still, some lawmakers contend they should have to abide by the same strict requirements that health insurance companies would under the new system. Rockefeller says he is worried that some "bad actors" looking to manage their costs would end up saddling their workers with more health expenses. For example, if a worker had cancer and reached his employer's coverage limit, the company could stop paying for treatment. Insurance companies, by contrast, would be barred from establishing such limits in the new system. Employers already have been shifting more health care costs onto workers in recent years as those expenses have skyrocketed. In the current sluggish economic environment with unemployment high, some analysts expect the trend to intensify. "An employer's ability to increase deductibles and copays and basically mess around with a source of compensation depends on the strength of the labor market," said Paul Fronstin of the Employee Benefits Research Institute. "Right now, employers have it made, because unemployment is at 10 percent
-- they can do whatever they want." If companies in this category get their way in the debate over the health overhaul, employees will remain subject to such changes and reductions. "They're already vulnerable in the sense that employers decide what to cover in the benefits plan, and should somebody want something covered that's not covered, there's basically no recourse. That won't change," Fronstin said. Organizations representing the large employers -- including the Business Roundtable, the National Association of Manufacturers and the American Benefits Council
-- say their members aren't asking for special treatment.
"We're the group that's been doing the right thing year after year. If the end goal is to make sure that everyone has good insurance, we're the group that's doing that already," said Jeri Kubicki of the NAM. The Self-Insurance Institute of America Inc., which represents smaller firms that provide coverage to their workers, wrote to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid this week arguing that its members' plans should be left alone in the push to expand coverage. Doing otherwise, wrote Mike Ferguson, the group's chief, would "at best result in higher costs and reduced benefits for beneficiaries and at worst force employer-sponsors to terminate their plans altogether." Ferguson's group has poured more than $600,000 into lobbying Congress over the past two years, doubling its spending this year as it has intensified its push to resist new requirements. Large members of the National Coalition on Benefits have shelled out much more to influence Capitol Hill, including nearly $23 million by the Business Roundtable, more than $15 million by the National Association of Manufacturers and $1.6 million by the American Benefits Council.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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