Politics

Report estimates new health care bill will cause 15 million to lose coverage, possibly millions more

DENVER – A report out Friday from the Brookings Institution says it is likely the Congressional Budget Office will estimate more than 15 million people would lose health care coverage under the new House GOP bill.

The CBO is expected to release its projections Monday on how many people might lose health insurance, and how much premiums and out-of-pocket costs might amount to under the American Health Care Act – the bill House Republicans have put forth to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

The budget office provides nonpartisan analysis of the effects legislation and other orders might have on the national budget and on Americans. It has no political affiliation or motivations.

The projections released Friday by Brookings Institution are based off prior CBO analysis and was compiled as part of the Leonard D. Schaeffer Initiative in Health Policy.

The analysis finds that it’s likely CBO will determine at least 15 million people will lose coverage by 2026.

“Estimates could be higher, but it’s is [sic] unlikely they will be significantly lower,” the report says.

It says that the ACHA’s repeal of the individual mandate contained in the ACA, better known as Obamacare, would leave 15 million uninsured. Further, the report says, the parts of the new bill affecting Medicaid would lead to “significant coverage losses, likely on the order of several million.”

The main basis for the report’s judgments is a recently-released CBO report that estimated that repealing the individual mandate of the ACA would cause individual premiums to increase by 20 percent and lead to 6 million people losing insurance by 2026.

Another CBO report determined that another 2 million would lose employer coverage and that another 7 million would lose Medicaid coverage.

Many, including Colorado Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, have voiced concerns about the provision that would end Medicaid expansion allowed under the ACA in 2020, and would further penalize people who had lapses in coverage. Others still have voiced concerns over a move to use tax credits that analysts have said benefit the wealthy more than low-income people and are 36 percent lower than the tax credits available under the ACA.

The CBO report is expected to have huge ramifications on the bill’s fate in Congress. It has already received significant pushback from both Democrats and conservatives, but passed through two House committees without significant changes.

On Friday, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said that he didn’t believe that “individuals will lose coverage at all.”

But House Speaker Paul Ryan, who has led the effort to push the new bill quickly through Congress said, “We always know you’re never going to win a beauty contest when it’s free market versus government mandate,” according to a Vox report.

Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., has joined a growing list of members of Congress to say they would not vote on the new bill until they received estimates from the CBO.

“We’re not about to let the tyranny of the majority in Congress leave people vulnerable just because House GOP wants to jam this bill through,” she tweeted.

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Colorado may owe feds millions after Medicaid overpayment due to ‘human programming error’

DENVER – Colorado is trying to figure out how to set aside $25 million in case it needs to pay the federal government back after a computer programming error led to the state being overpaid by millions of dollars in Medicaid funds.

On Feb. 15, Office of State Planning and Budgeting Director Henry Sobanet sent a letter to Sen. Kent Lambert, the chair of the Joint Budget Committee, informing him of the overpayment. Continue reading

Colorado Senate passes marijuana membership clubs bill on to House, but Hickenlooper has concerns

DENVER – A bill that would authorize towns, cities and counties to allow private marijuana clubs in their jurisdiction is headed to the Colorado House after passing a full Senate vote Thursday morning.

Senate Bill 184 passed its third reading and a full Senate vote, 25-10.

The bill has undergone several changes in Senate committees and on the floor.

As it sits now, the bill would allow jurisdictions that have authorized private marijuana clubs, as Denver did in November, to operate them under a series of strict parameters:

  • The members and employees of the cub must all be at least 21 years old.
  • The club’s owner must have been a Colorado resident for at least two years before owning the club.
  • The club’s employees must all be Colorado residents.
  • The club won’t be able to sell or serve alcohol or food.
  • The club can’t sell marijuana, nor can it allow others to sell or “exchange…for remuneration” marijuana on the club’s premises.
  • Marijuana could not be consumed “openly” or “publicly.”

The bill would also require that the clubs be private and not accessible to the general public. Both medical and recreational could be used within the club.

The bill’s Senate sponsor, Sen. Bob Gardner, R-El Paso County, told Denver7 last week that the way marijuana clubs were currently operating amounted to the “Wild West.”

The 10 votes against the bill Thursday morning all came from Republicans, but the bill passed with several Republicans in favor.

The bill also has favorable chances in the Democrat-controlled House, though it has already undergone several changes since it was first introduced and could undergo more.

But should it pass the House, the bill could still face defeat at the governor’s desk.

Gov. John Hickenlooper told Denver7 he would review the bill should it reach his desk, and questioned whether such measures should be implemented amid many unknowns regarding marijuana programs and how they will be treated under the new administration and attorney general.

He also voiced concerns Wednesday to the Denver Post that allowing people to smoke marijuana indoors would allow a “crack in the door” to the law banning smoking indoors.

His concern over possible federal changes also applies to Senate Bill 192, which would allow marijuana deliveries in Colorado.

Senate Bill 184’s first House hearing has yet to be scheduled.

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Colorado House passes bill banning conversion therapy on to Senate

DENVER – A Colorado bill that would ban conversion therapy for people under age 18 and penalize licensed physicians or mental health providers that perform conversion therapy passed a full House vote Tuesday.

House Bill 1156 would prohibit any licensed psychiatrist from trying to change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity, but would not apply to psychotherapists who help people undergoing a gender transition or other identity exploration.

If passed, it also would penalize any licensee who engages in conversion therapy with someone under age 18. Those penalized would be treated the same as if they had sold or fraudulently obtained their license to practice.

The bill passed its third reading on the House floor Tuesday by a mostly-partisan 38-27 vote. The bill next heads to the Senate, where it could face opposition with Republicans in control.

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Tipton, Lamborn and Gardner all hosting telephone town halls Wednesday evening

DENVER – Three of Colorado’s Republican members of Congress are holding telephone town hall meetings Wednesday evening to talk with constituents.

Sen. Cory Gardner is holding his fourth in a series of town halls Wednesday evening at 7:10 p.m. Mountain Time. He is holding several throughout the year at different times of the day in order to connect with different groups of people, he says.

You can sign up to participate in the Gardner town hall by clicking here. You must sign up at least an hour before the start time to be able to pose a question, but anyone can listen in.

In the March 1 town hall, Gardner talked about marijuana, health care, and Russia, among other subjects.

Rep. Doug Lamborn will also host one Wednesday. His begins at 6:30 p.m. Mountain Time. Sign up for the town hall by clicking here.

And Rep. Scott Tipton will hold a town hall starting at 5:30 p.m. Mountain Time Wednesday. The town hall was originally slated for Tuesday, but was pushed back to Wednesday because of flight delays, Tipton said.

You can sign up for Tipton’s town hall here.

Many of Colorado’s congressional delegation is holding town hall meetings over at least the next month in order to hear from constituents on topics concerning them.

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Bill for illegal pot grow crackdown grants heads to House; medical plant limit bill on floor Thurs.

DENVER – A bill sponsors say is aimed at working to further cripple the black and “gray” marijuana markets in Colorado moved on to the full House Wednesday after it passed the House Appropriations Committee.

House Bill 1221, if passed, would change the rules for community recreational growing and would create a grant program aimed at helping rural law enforcement agencies and district attorneys crack down on illegal grows or black-market operations.

Under the bill, only a primary caregiver would be allowed to be in possession of and to grow marijuana for another person. Currently, people are allowed to grow recreational marijuana together so long as they stay within the six-plant limit and other regulatory grow rules.

The other facet of the bill would create a gray and black market marijuana enforcement grant program that is run by the Department of Local Affairs’ Division of Local Government.

Local law enforcement agencies and district attorney’s offices would have to apply for the grant money, and the Executive Director of the Department of Local Affairs would pick the agencies and offices who would receive the grants.

The division would prioritize the grants for rural areas of the state. The bill defines “rural areas” as counties with fewer than 200,000 people and towns or cities with less than 30,000 people that is at least 10 miles away from a town or city with more than 50,000 people.

The agencies and offices would then be expected to use the money to bolster efforts to shut down unlicensed grows, investigate and prosecute illegal large-scale grows, investigate and prosecute organized crime operations involving marijuana, and to investigate and prosecute people who grow and distribute pot illegally out of state.

The money for the grants would come from either the Marijuana Tax Cash Fund or the Proposition AA refund account. Under the bill, any money not dispersed through grants that is appropriated can be spent the next year without being re-appropriated.

The bill also mandates that beginning Nov. 1, 2019, the Division of Local Government would have to update to Senate and House committees on the program’s effectiveness. Subsequent updates would be required on or before Nov. 1 of each following year.

House Bill 1221 is one of two House bills their sponsors say aim to cut down on large-scale grows.

House Bill 1220 was referred straight to the House after Monday’s hours-long House Finance Committee hearing on the bill. It would curb the 99-plant per person state limit for medical marijuana grows at 12 – rules already in place in Denver.

1220 is set to be heard on the House floor for the first time Thursday morning.

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Colorado bill would prevent state from aiding feds in immigration roundups, registry

DENVER – The “sanctuary status” debate in Colorado could ramp up because of a bill introduced in the state Legislature this week that aims to create a distinction in state law that it won’t help federal authorities identify or track people on the basis of their race or immigration status, among other things.

House Bill 1230 is co-sponsored by two of the state’s Democratic leaders, Senate Minority Leader Lucia Guzman, D-Denver, and Rep. Daneya Esgar, the House Majority Caucus Chair. It also has co-sponsorship from Rep. Joseph Salazar, D-Adams, and Sen. Daniel Kagan, D-Arapahoe.

But 33 other Democratic House members have already signed on in support of the bill, as have eight other senators.

Reps. Tracy Kraft-Tharp, D-Jefferson, and southwestern Colorado Democrat Barbara McLachlan are the only Democratic House members not to have signed on to the bill.

Bill would change statute to prohibit helping feds in undocumented roundups, tracking

If passed, the bill would enact the “Ralph Carr Freedom Defense Act,” named after the governor of Colorado from 1939 to 1943 who famously took a stand against anti-Japanese sentiments amid the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II.

If passed through both chambers and signed by the governor, the bill would enact a series of changes to Colorado Revised Statutes that prohibits the state from helping federal authorities identify, track or detain people solely on the basis of their race, ethnicity, national origin, immigration status or religious affiliation.

The bill says that the state would have to know “the basis” for a request from federal authorities to divulge any of that information, and that the request be for “a legal and constitutional purpose.”

It would prohibit state agencies from helping federal authorities from “creating, maintaining, or updating a registry” that would track Colorado residents based on the aforementioned categories. The state would still cooperate with the U.S. Census Bureau.

The bill would also prohibit the state from helping put an electronic or physical “identifier” or tracking device on any person based on their race, ethnicity, national origin, immigration status or religious affiliation.

Finally, the bill defines “internment” as holding or imprisoning a person without probable cause or due process based on the categories for more than 48 hours, and says the state will not help federal authorities intern or arrest people on those bases.

The first part of the bill contains a legislative declaration that reads: “Colorado has been a beacon of hope against inhumane practices, such as the internment of communities. Colorado is called to lead again against the potential overreach of the federal government.”

It then goes into the history of Governor Carr’s opposition to the internment of Japanese-Americans, including the speech in which he said, “The Japanese are protected by the same Constitution that protects us. An American citizen of Japanese descent has the same rights as any other citizen…If you harm them, you must first harm me.”

“History has demonstrated that the demonization of communities leading to internment camps and the deprivation of human rights, constitutional rights, and civil rights are often rooted in the overreach of federal policies,” the declaration continues.

Sanctuary status for Colorado cities a gray area for most

So-called “sanctuary cities” have been scrutinized over the past several months after President Donald Trump promised during his campaign, and carried through with his promises in January, that he would strip federal funding from any self-professed sanctuary cities.

Denver, Aurora and Boulder have all said they won’t turn over suspected undocumented immigrants solely on the basis they are in the U.S. illegally, but Boulder is the only city with an official policy on its books.

Both Denver’s and Aurora’s mayor have maintained their cities are not sanctuary cities, however, despite Denver Mayor Michael Hancock making clear that Trump’s immigration orders targeting undocumented immigrants were out-of-line with city policy.

But other Colorado law enforcement authorities aren’t so keen on “sanctuary” policies.

Garfield County Sheriff Lou Vallario said in a news release on March 6 – the same day the new bill was introduced – that he believes people illegally in the country should be deported if they are committing crimes and that he opposes sanctuary policies. But he also added that his personal feelings “aren’t always compatible with what [he is] legally allowed to enforce under the ‘rule of law.’”

And the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution already provides protections against the detainment or arrest of people without probable cause no matter the legal status of a person.

But the bill, if passed, could protect people like Bernardo Medina, a U.S. citizen from Colorado who alleges he was unlawfully detained for three days by ICE in 2015 on the basis he was Hispanic – a time period that would violate the 48-hour internment portion of the bill.

The bill’s first hearing is set for March 16 in the House Judiciary Committee.

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How does the House GOP health care bill differ from Obamacare?

DENVER – Top Republicans in Washington began their push to promote the new health care bill drafted by the House GOP Tuesday as critics from both sides of the aisle surfaced, and as many wondered exactly what the draft bill would mean for them.

House Republicans and President Trump unveiled the American Health Care Act late Monday. Trump and other Republicans had campaigned on the premise they would repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, but the new bill has drawn plenty of criticism already. Continue reading

ICE agents illegally detained Colorado US citizen for days because he was Hispanic, lawsuit claims

DENVER – A Gunnison man born in Colorado was picked up by immigration officers after a court appearance and illegally detained in immigration detention centers across the state for days, according to two newly-filed federal lawsuits.

Bernardo Medina, 22, is Hispanic and was born in Montrose in May 1994. He and his parents moved to Mexico before his first birthday, which is where he spent much of his early life. But Medina moved back to the Western Slope when he was 18, settling in Gunnison. Continue reading

Trump’s new immigration executive order: 7 differences from first travel ban

DENVER – President Donald Trump signed a new executive order on immigration Monday that revises his initial order that banned immigrants from seven predominantly-Muslim countries.

The new order contains some differences from the initial order, which was signed in January, but was challenged by federal judges in Washington and Minnesota. The suspension of the order was upheld by a federal appeals court. Continue reading