INSIDE
AND OUTSIDE
President Obama
talks health care in Maine
By Rebekah Metzler
McClatchy News Service
Published:
Friday, April 02, 2010
PORTLAND, Maine — To the
thousands of Mainers gathered inside the Portland Expo who endured the yearlong
debate leading up to the passage of national health care reform, President
Barack Obama was just what the doctor ordered.
ÒJust seeing the president in
person, getting the chance to be part of this, is historic,Ó said Leah
Bartley of Lewiston, a volunteer who
helped organize the event. ÒIÕm for health care because I care a lot about
small businesses and there are so many people in Maine that just donÕt have
access to good health care, so IÕm happy that some changes are being made.Ó
In town to tout the recently
enacted federal health care reform legislation, Obama used humor and facts to
connect people to the policy.
ÒLeaders of the Republican
Party have actually been calling the passage of this bill ÕArmageddon,ÕÓ Obama
said. ÒThey say itÕs the end of freedom as we know it. So after I signed the
bill, I looked up to see if there were any asteroids headed our way. I checked
to see if any cracks had opened up in the ground. But you know what? It turned
out to be a pretty nice day. Birds were chirping. Folks were strolling down the
street. Nobody lost their doctor or was forced into some government plan.Ó
ÒWhat this reform represents
is basically a middle-of-the-road solution to our health care problems,Ó Obama
said. ÒItÕs not the single-payer, government-run system that some on the left
have supported in the past. And itÕs not what many on the right wanted, which
was even fewer rules and regulations for insurance companies. Instead, this
reform incorporates ideas from Democrats and Republicans, including those of
your senator, who I consider a friend, Olympia Snowe, who spent many hours
meeting with me about this bill.Ó
Obama stressed the short- and
long-term changes provided by the controversial measure, highlighting impacts
on small businesses and senior citizens.
ÒThis year, seniors who fall
in the coverage gap known as the doughnut hole will receive $250 to help pay
for prescriptions, which will be the first step toward closing that gap
completely,Ó he said. ÒAnd I want seniors to know, despite what some have said,
these reforms will not cut your guaranteed benefits. What they will do is
eliminate co-payments and deductibles for preventive care, like checkups and
mammograms.Ó
Also, beginning in 2010,
businesses with fewer than 50 employees that offer health insurance will be
eligible for tax credits to help offset their costs, Obama said.
ÒThen, by 2014, each state will
set up a health insurance exchange, a competitive marketplace where uninsured
people and small businesses will finally be able to purchase affordable,
quality insurance,Ó he said. ÒIn other words, theyÕll be part of a pool, and
get the same good deal that members of Congress get for themselves.Ó
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