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Here’s how eliminating government funds could impact Northeast Ohioans who rely on the Affordable Care Act

How eliminating government funds could impact Northeast Ohioans who rely on ACA
ACA Premiums and their effects on real people in NEO
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CLEVELAND — You may have heard reports yesterday hinting that President Trump was open to extending subsidies for people on Affordable Care Act health insurance plans. He hasn’t announced anything yet.

News 5 Investigators are taking a deeper look into how eliminating government funds for the ACA will affect real people in our area.

Around dining room tables across Ohio, people like Anne Griffith from University Heights are trying to figure out health insurance for next year.

“All right…let me get into the website,” she said while looking at her laptop screen.

FROM $240 TO NEARLY $1700

We first heard from Griffith about a month ago, when she thought her ACA premiums would go from $240/month to $1,200/month. However, after looking into it further, she said it’s closer to $1,700/month.

RELATED: Democrats defend position on government shutdown as they sound the alarm on cuts

“Healthcare should never be a political issue,” said Griffith. “It should be affordable. People in this country need healthcare. If you don’t have it, you go bankrupt.”

Griffith told us she retired a bit early to take care of her mom. She said that if the proposed ACA government subsidies are cut, they’ll have to find the money somewhere else.

“We’ll have to go into savings. We’ll have to look at retirement accounts,” said Griffith.

REPUBLICANS SAY ACA IS NOT WORKING

Republicans have said the ACA isn’t working, it’s not affordable, and taking away the subsidies proves that. They’ve said the added government money doesn’t bring down the overall increasing costs of healthcare.

Kaiser Family Foundation reports ACA premiums were already going up 26% on average next year, but if there are no subsidies, it’s more like 114%.

DEMOCRATS FILED 'DISCHARGE PETITION

This month, Democrats filed what’s called a “discharge petition,” which, if they get enough representatives’ signatures, would force a vote on the House floor to extend the subsidies for the ACA.

“We do need to find ways to make it more efficient and more affordable but what’s happening with the end of these tax credits does neither one,” said Representative Emilia Sykes.

“Too many people are seeing their gas, groceries, goods, housing, rent, utilities are all going up and now we’re going to add healthcare on top of that?” questioned Representative Shontel Brown.

We reached out to several Republican U.S. House reps from Northeast Ohio, only Representative Dave Joyce replied, saying, in part, ”We need a model that actually delivers affordable, high-quality care…not one that allows insurance companies to keep driving premiums higher.” (Full statement is below)

For Griffith, she said the lower-cost ACA plan has been a lifeline for her and so many others that Congress has to figure out soon.

“They can’t just rip stuff away from people and…toss ‘em out,” she told us.

WHAT WILL THE PRESIDENT DO?

Reports claimed the president had been open to extending the ACA subsidies for two years while capping income requirements and adding policies to address fraud.

Another idea has been to create health savings accounts, and government funds would be placed into those accounts for people to pay down on their premiums.

Statement from U.S. Representative Dave Joyce:

“The Affordable Care Act premium tax credits were created during the pandemic with a Democrat-controlled White House and Congress and were enacted with no plan in place for how to manage their expiration. The result: many Americans now have to figure out how to afford skyrocketing premiums with their upcoming expiration. We are operating a failed system where healthcare remains unaffordable for too many people. We need a model that actually delivers affordable, high-quality care to the American people, not one that allows insurance companies to keep driving premiums higher. I look forward to working with my colleagues in Congress to address this issue.”

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