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January 15, 2010
We Did It! Improvements
Negotiated to the Excise Tax
CWA leadership, locals and our members have led the
opposition to the excise tax. From the start, CWA leaders
made it clear that a tax on workers' health care was the wrong
way to finance health care reform. We fought against this
plan in the Senate and supported our friends in the House of
Representatives who outlined better ways to finance health care
reform. We supported Connecticut House Representative Joe
Courtney in obtaining 190 signatures on a letter opposing the
excise tax.
Because of this work, organized labor has been "at the table"
and President Cohen and other labor union leaders have spent
many hours talking with President Obama and White House
officials to work out ways to ease the negative impact of this
tax on our members. At the same time these discussions
were taking place, you were keeping the pressure on: first
the House, then the Senate, and then back to the House.
All of this work set the stage for several days of continuous
tri‑party bargaining and through these negotiations we
made significant strides, not only in protecting our
members, but in protecting all middle-class families who have
health insurance coverage.
CWA members will be protected through 2017. That gives
us at least one and in some cases more than one round of
bargaining to address the impact on our members' plans from the
changes.
This is not the plan we would have written if we were the
sole author, but just like contract negotiations there is
another side at the table. And, in this case there are
three other sides: the House, the Senate and the White
House. We are proud that the improvements we negotiated
protect both union members and members of the
public. Labor unions have a long history of
protecting all workers and this is another great example.
Following is the list of improvements we made:
- Delays Effect of Tax Until 2018: Provides a
five‑year transition window for all plans negotiated
through collective bargaining and for state and local employee
plans before they are potentially subject to the tax. This
is what is typically done under federal laws to allow parties to
collective bargaining agreements time to renegotiate the
plans.
- Raises Thresholds for Active Workers: Raises the
threshold at which family plans are taxed from $23,000 to
$24,000 in 2013 for all working families and from $8,500 to
$8,900 for singles. Annual increases are tied to the
Consumer Price Index plus one percentage
point.
- Increases Thresholds for Excessive Inflation: Raises
the thresholds higher if health care costs grow faster than
expected from 2010‑2013.
- Exempts Dental and Vision Plans from Threshold Calculations:
This will begin in 2015, which could raise the thresholds
as much as $1,500 for families.
- Adds Demographic Factors to Determine Plan Thresholds:
Thresholds for plans that have a higher average of older
workers and female workers will be modified to reflect the
higher plan costs for those workers.
- Maintains Protections for Pre‑Medicare Retirees and
for High‑risk Workers: Preserves the original Senate
proposal that would raise the thresholds for plans covering
pre‑Medicare retirees and for plans that include workers
in high‑risk professions (affecting more than nine million
workers). The thresholds are $26,000/family and
$9,850/single.
- Blending of Pre‑Medicare and Medicare Premiums is
Maintained: This averaging significantly reduces the
affect of the tax on plans.
- Maintains Thresholds for High‑cost States:
Preserves the original Senate proposal that would raise the
threshold for high‑cost states, affecting more than 38
million workers.
- Health Plans Get Access to the Insurance Exchange:
Allows any collective bargaining unit into the health
insurance exchange in 2017, subject to collective
bargaining.
- Significantly Reduces Taxes on the Middle Class: These
changes are estimated to reduce the amount of revenue raised by
$60 billion, decreasing the hit from the excise tax to $90
billion, from the original $150 billion over 10 years.
In addition, in the final bill there will be many other
protections for our sons and daughters who do not have insurance
today. For instance, pre‑existing conditions cannot
be used to exclude coverage.
President Cohen and CWA have been leading the fight
against the proposed excise tax on health care plans,
working with Members of Congress, employers, organizations,
coalitions, and other groups that understand that the proposed
tax would increase costs and cut benefits for working and
middle‑income Americans.
More than any other union, CWA's leadership has really pushed
this issue in the mainstream and online media, on Capitol Hill,
and in building coalitions. Tens of thousands of phone calls and
personal letters from CWA members, plus visits with their
Members of Congress and staff in both Washington, D.C., and
District Offices have made our message heard loud and
clear. This work was made possible through the Health Care
Strategic Industry Fund, which enabled CWA to train field
activists who carried out our critical mobilization program.
This week alone, more than 2,000 calls were made to Members of
Congress by CWA members urging them to stand strong for fair
health care reform.
As tough as these negotiations were, this was just one of the
many tough issues the House, Senate and White House
leadership are working to resolve. So, while this has the
support of the leadership, it now has to be sold to both the
House and the Senate and all of the other differences have to be
resolved.
Once the leadership has worked through their differences, we
expect they will submit a package to the Congressional Budget
Office for scoring. That will likely take 10 days to two
weeks. Then a bill will be provided to the House where a
majority of 218 votes are needed to pass it and to the Senate
where a supermajority of 60 votes will be necessary.
So, let us savor the success of these efforts, but recognize
we still have work to do in the fight to protect our members'
interests in this historic debate. With our unity and
solidarity, we will turn the debate into a reality.
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