Barkley Insurance Agents & Brokers

Industry News & Articles

   

HEALTHCARE OVERHAUL AND MANDATORY COVERAGE STIR STATES' RIGHTS CLAIMS

September 29, 2009

New York Times -

In more than a dozen statehouses across the country, a small but growing group of lawmakers is pressing for state constitutional amendments that would outlaw a crucial element of the health care plans under discussion in Washington: the requirement that nearly everyone buy insurance or pay a penalty.

Approval of the measures, the lawmakers suggest, would set off a legal battle over the rights of states versus the reach of federal power an issue that is, for some, central to the current health care debate but also one that has tentacles stretching into many other matters, including education and drug policy.

Opponents of the measures and some constitutional scholars say the proposals are mostly symbolic, intended to send a message of political protest, and have little chance of succeeding in court over the long run. But they acknowledge that the measures could create legal collisions that would be both expensive and cause delays to health care changes, and could be a rallying point for opponents in the increasingly tense debate.

'This does head us for a legal showdown,' said Christie Herrera, an official at the American Legislative Exchange Council, a group in Washington that advocates limited government and free markets, and that earlier this month offered guidance to lawmakers in more than a dozen states in a conference call on the state amendments.

So far, the notion has been presented in at least 10 states (though it has already been rejected or left behind in committees in some of them), and lawmakers in four other states have said they will soon offer similar measures in what has grown into a coordinated effort at resistance. (Arizona, which has placed the amendment on its ballot in 2010, seems the furthest along.)

Here in Minnesota, as in many of the other states, the move to amend the State Constitution is being driven by a handful of Republican lawmakers. The proposed amendment itself does not advocate some particular alternative plan, but sets what its authors see as ground rules for what any future health care system should and should not include.

'All I'm trying to do is protect the individual's right to make health care decisions,' said State Representative Tom Emmer, a Republican. 'I just don't want the government getting between my decisions with my doctors.'

Many who favor a federal overhaul of health care say it can be affordable only if nearly everyone is required to carry insurance, but the efforts by these state lawmakers actually predate the Obama administration and the current federal health care debate.

Proposed constitutional amendments began cropping up after 2006, when Massachusetts enacted a sweeping state measure meant to create nearly universal health coverage for residents. Elsewhere, some leaders opposed to the possibility of insurance mandates or government-run systems began suggesting constitutional amendments to block such measures from their own states.

In Arizona, with help from Dr. Eric Novack -- an orthopedic surgeon who says his intent was not 'some grand secessionist plot' but merely a health care overhaul with protections for individuals' rights an amendment first went before voters in 2008. It was defeated, but by fewer than 9,000 votes among more than two million cast.

This year, Arizona's Legislature, controlled by Republicans in both chambers, voted to put the question back on the ballot in 2010. Few in the public seemed focused on health care a year ago, those involved in Arizona's ballot question said, but the recent debate over a federal overhaul has changed all that, and proponents of the amendment believe that will improve its chances both in Arizona and in other states, where similar efforts have taken root.

The federal proposals, though, have also changed the potential fallout if such amendments were to pass. Clint Bolick, litigation director at the Goldwater Institute, a conservative research group based in Arizona that favors free enterprise, and who has helped lead Arizona's efforts, said he believed the inevitable 'legal clash' if the federal government adopts a health care law and if states change their constitutions was winnable for the states.

Although the United States Constitution's supremacy clause ordinarily allows federal law to, in essence, trump a state law that conflicts with it, Mr. Bolick said that was not always the case, depending on 'the strength of the state interest.' Mr. Bolick said he viewed two recent Supreme Court cases, related to an education question in Arizona and a utility district in Texas as indications that the current court might be open to such a state claim.

But several other legal experts said they saw little room for such a challenge. 'States can no more nullify a federal law like this than they could nullify the civil rights laws by adopting constitutional amendments,' said Timothy Stoltzfus Jost, a health law expert at Washington & Lee University School of Law.

Mark A. Hall, a law professor at Wake Forest University who has studied the constitutionality of mandates that people buy health insurance, said, 'There is no way this challenge will succeed in court,' adding that the state measures seemed more 'sort of an act of defiance, a form of civil disobedience if you will.'

Even Randy E. Barnett, a Georgetown law school professor who has written about what he views as legitimate constitutional questions about health insurance mandates, seemed doubtful.

'While using federal power to force individuals to buy private insurance raises serious constitutional questions,' Professor Barnett said, 'I just don't see what these state resolutions add to the constitutional objections to this expansion of federal power.

 

2010 Calendar of Events

Academy of Risk Management
March 25th -
Tony Strauss of Strauss Law Group will be speaking about Preparing Your Employees for the Ecominic Recovery.
May 27th -
Dan Leiner of the OSHA Van Nuys office will discuss OSHA initiatives for 2010.
Location: Heritage Square Hall in downtown Oxnard (8:00 AM)

Industry News & Articles

OSHA Notifies 15,000 Workplaces of High Injury and Illness Rates -
Mar. 10, 2010
OSHA surveys employers to collect workplace injury and illness data it uses to identify.....
Read More
Vulnerable Workers Face Higher Risk, Research Reveals -
Feb. 17, 2010
Low-wage, low skilled, and immigrant workers face disproportionately high risks for job-related injuries and illnesses compared with other U.S. workers.....
Read More
Employee’s Perceived Sexual Orientation Claim Survives -
Feb. 16, 2010
An employee living in California was fired by e-mail by his employer from its New York office......
Read More
Industry News & Articles Page -
View all current and archived industry news & articles.....
View More


Barkley Insurance Newsletter

NEWSLETTER SUBSCRIBE:

Risk Management Services

Does your broker provide free...

  • Supervisory Training
  • Fraud Prevention
  • Accident Investigation
  • Employee Training Programs

Barkley Insurance Does!

Learn More

Clinicas Medical Plan

Low cost medical benefits for your employees.

  • Medical
  • Dental
  • Vision
  • Life
  • Mexico Coverage

Learn More

Travel Medical Insurance

  • International
  • Inbound
  • Round Trip
  • Annual
  • Student
  • World Wide

Receive a Quote

Office Location

Barkley Insurance Agents & Brokers
721 South A Street
Oxnard CA, 93030
Phone: 805-483-1995
Fax: 805-483-0703