From Jahmal Henderson:
CHIP, a program that has existed for two decades,
is a godsend for the children who depend on it and their
families. The program offers low-cost health coverage to
families that don't have the income to afford other health care
but earn too much to qualify for Medicaid, and provides children
with everything from checkups to prescriptions to emergency
services and, in some states, covers expectant mothers. Around 2
million of the children enrolled in CHIP have asthma,
attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, mood disorders,
diabetes, epilepsy or developmental disorders. Yet, despite this
program being a lifeline for many children, it ran out of
funding on September 30 because the Republican-controlled
Congress failed to act. And now we are at the point where
states, which individually administer the program, have begun
informing parents that their children's health care is in
jeopardy. Just this past week, Virginia officials sent letters
to over a thousand pregnant women and parents to alert them that
their coverage "could lapse."
Even
more alarming is that 16 states will run out of funds by the
end of January, potentially depriving hundreds of thousands --
perhaps even millions -- of children and pregnant mothers of
the health care under CHIP. Just imagine what it would be like
if you were facing the painful reality that in a few weeks you
might not be able to afford to help your sick child get health
care?. The GOP tax bill would repeal the Affordable Care Act's
individual mandate which, according to the Congressional
Budget Office, will cause 13 million fewer Americans to be
covered by 2027 because they will opt not to get insurance.
Additionally, Americans could expect a 10% spike in premiums
in most years over the next decade. So not only are
Congressional Republicans not helping children who depend on
CHIP, they are repealing the individual mandate, and in doing
so, saving over $300 billion to help pay for their massive tax
cuts.
Trump
and the GOP's failure to act to help these children isn't
happenstance. Trump's budget proposal released earlier this
year called for significant cuts to CHIP. And just a few
weeks ago while debating funding CHIP, Republican Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah, commented: "But the reason CHIP's having
trouble is because we don't have money anymore, and to just
add more and more spending and more and more spending."
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