
By Rep. Jim Gerlach, Guest columnist
Supporters
of the health care overhaul that Speaker Nancy Pelosi muscled through
the U.S. House of Representatives argue this will be the greatest
accomplishment since Social Security and Medicare.
What
supporters of the $2.4 trillion scheme brush under the rug is that the
health care overhaul will siphon resources from Social Security and
Medicare at a time when the federal government is struggling to meet
its existing entitlement program obligations.
Recent estimates
show that Medicare could go bankrupt as early as 2017. Social Security
benefits will exceed revenues by $29 billion this year alone, and the
money could run out completely by 2037.
Those dire projections
come just as approximately 78 million Baby Boomers are about to flood
the Social Security and Medicare systems.
The Pelosi Prescription will only make matters worse by raiding Social Security and Medicare.
Specifically,
the federal government is going to have to intercept $398 billion from
Medicare Part A and $53 billion from new Social Security taxes in the
coming years to pay for the new health care entitlement program.
What
this Pelosi Prescription amounts to is buying a vacation home when you
are already behind on your mortgage and car payments.
In
addition, the Pelosi Prescription takes a hatchet to the popular
Medicare Advantage program. The U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services Web site says Medicare Advantage clients enjoy "extra benefits
and lower copayments than in the original Medicare."
Some of those extra benefits include dental and vision coverage not included in traditional Medicare programs.
In the 6th Congressional District, more than 27,000 seniors use Medicare Advantage to pay for doctor visits and other services.
There
are 687,469 Pennsylvania seniors enrolled. Under the Pelosi
Prescription, funding for Medicare Advantage will be slashed by $132
billion.
The independent Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
estimates that 1 in 5 seniors would no longer be able to enroll in
Medicare Advantage.
Meanwhile, the Pelosi Prescription calls for
higher Medicare payroll taxes and a new tax on medical products that
will hit Pennsylvania's thriving biotechnology and life sciences sector
particularly hard.
There are about 600 biotechnology and life
sciences companies that employ approximately 20,000 workers here in
Pennsylvania. In the 6th District, companies such as Fujirebio,
Orthovita and Nueronetics have predicted that the new tax on medical
products would force them to rethink hiring new workers and jeopardize
the investment that fuels life-saving research and development.
The
new law also fines individuals who do not buy or obtain
government-approved insurance. To make sure that mandate is enforced,
the law calls for hiring approximately 16,000 new IRS agents and
employees to monitor citizens.
Can you believe it has come to
that in a nation where the Founding Fathers insisted on a Bill of
Rights to protect citizens from unreasonable government intrusion into
their lives?
No wonder the majority of my constituents and our nation oppose the Pelosi Prescription.
It
is difficult to imagine an instance when Congress' decision to slash
$523.5 billion from Medicare, raise taxes by more than $400 billion in
the midst of recession and hire 12,000 new IRS agents to monitor
citizens would not be met with anything other than intense public
outrage.
Congressman Jim Gerlach is a Republican who
represents Pennsylvania's 6th Congressional District, which includes
parts of Berks, Chester, Lehigh and Montgomery counties.