| 
						
						
							
							
							Lincoln Daily News 
							welcomes letters of appreciation, information and 
							opinion on matters pertaining to the community. 
							 
							  
							
							
							Controversial issues: 
							
							
							As a 
							community we need to be able to talk openly about 
							matters that affect the quality of our lives. The 
							most effective and least offensive manner to get 
							your point across is to stick to the issue 
							and refrain from commenting on another person's 
							opinion. Letters that deviate from focusing on the 
							issue may be rejected or edited and marked as such. 
              
              Submit a letter to the editor online | 
                    You may also send your letters by email to  
                    ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 
                    or by U.S. postal mail:
                     
              Letters to the EditorLincoln Daily News
 601 Keokuk St.
 Lincoln, IL  62656
 
              Letters must include the writer's 
              name, telephone number, and postal address or email address (we 
              will not publish address or phone number information). 
              Lincoln Daily News reserves the right to edit letters to 
              reduce their size or to correct obvious errors.
              Lincoln Daily News reserves the right to reject any letter for 
              any reason. Lincoln Daily News will publish as 
              many acceptable letters as space allows. | 
        
            |  To the Editor: 
 There is good news after all. George Petrilli will run for Congress 
			from our 18th District in Illinois. George Petrilli understands the 
			people of our district. For example, in Logan County we need 
			comprehensive health insurance at a reasonable cost. We do not need 
			inferior insurance plans that fail to cover our particular 
			conditions. We had good health care options under the Affordable 
			Care Act but early in the Trump presidency, a Republican Congress 
			gave some insurance companies the power to offer cheap, inferior 
			health insurance policies, policies that fail to cover pre-existing 
			conditions. This has caused many of us with pre-existing conditions 
			either (1) to "run bare" and not insure against a claim involving 
			their pre-existing conditions, or 2 ) to purchase a more expensive 
			"high risk pool" policy.
 
			
			 Our current congressman, Rep. Darin LaHood, has consistently voted 
			to deny those of us with pre-existing conditions an opportunity to 
			buy health insurance at the same rate as those without such 
			conditions. In Mr. LaHood’s world, if I have ever suffered from a 
			given disease, e.g., diabetes, I now should expect to be charged a 
			higher premium if I want health insurance that covers problems 
			associated with my medical history. The idea is simple: charge 
			sicker people more.
 In the wake of President Trump’s and Darin LaHood’s attack on the 
			Affordable Care Act, it is not surprising to find that many 
			Americans have chosen to forego coverage on their pre-existing 
			conditions. Neither is it a surprise that many of those who are 
			"running bare" will end up facing huge medical bills resulting in 
			personal bankruptcy.
 
 Darin LaHood voted for the "American Health Care Act.” Had the 
			proposal not been blocked in the Senate by the late Sen. John 
			McCain, our problems would have multiplied. Health care experts from 
			across the political spectrum – liberal, moderate, and conservative 
			– agreed that the bill was unworkable and suffered from fatal flaws.
 
            [to top of second column in this letter] | 
             
            Wikipedia says that the proposal that LaHood 
			supported was "almost certain" to reduce overall health care 
			coverage and increase deductibles. It included language to phase out 
			Medicaid expansion. 
            The tax credits in the American Health Care Act would 
			have been insufficient to pay for individual insurance, and could 
			have led to Americans dropping out of the health care market. The 
			American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) noted that the bill's 
			elimination of the community rating provision (barring insurance 
			companies from charging older people more than three times what they 
			charge younger people) would have increased cost disparities between 
			age groups and would have increased premiums for Americans more 
			prone to illness. The dropping of healthy people from the health 
			insurance market could have led to insurer "death spirals" that 
			would have decreased choice. Moreover, the phaseout of the Medicaid 
			expansion would have been likely to result in a loss of healthcare 
			for millions of poorer Americans. Most importantly, the bill that 
			Darin LaHood supported would have denied us in Logan County 
			affordable and comprehensive health care.
 Darin LaHood does not seem to recognize the goal of our current 
			Affordable Care Act: reasonably priced health insurance for all. 
			Instead Rep. LaHood advocates cheap, inferior insurance products 
			that fail to cover illnesses related to pre-existing conditions. 
			Candidate for Congress George Petrilli will explain all this when he 
			joins the Logan County Democrats in the Big Shelter, which is 
			located almost a mile inside Lincoln’s Kickapoo Creek Park at 6:30 
			p.m. on Thursday, July 16. All are welcome to attend.
 
 Gary Davis
 Lincoln, IL
 [Posted 
            
			July 11, 
			2020]
             
            
            Click here to send a note to the editor about this letter.
			 |