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House leaders pass revised legislation on children’s health insurance plan

Oct 26, 2007 12:00 AM (346 days ago) by Susan Ferrechio, The Examiner
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Related Topics: WASHINGTON
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other House leaders passed a revised SCHIP bill Thursday.
(AP)
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other House leaders passed a revised SCHIP bill Thursday.

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - Three weeks after President Bush vetoed a bipartisan bill to expand a federal children’s health insurance program, the House on Thursday passed a similar measure that included a few minor changes aimed at attracting enough Republicans to override another veto.

The House did not alter the $60 billion price tag or the goal of the bill to expand coverage of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program to 10 million children. President Bush, who believes the proposal is too costly and too expansive, said if the new legislation ends up on his desk, he will veto it as he did the previous bill.

The legislation “has not addressed in a meaningful way the objections that caused the president to veto” the first SCHIP bill, administration officials said in a statement.

The Senate will take up the new SCHIP bill next week and is expected to pass it by a veto-proof margin. The House, however, still lacks the two-thirds majority needed to force the bill into law over Bush’s objections.

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Like the earlier version, the bill passed by the House would increase the current $25 billion SCHIP program by $35 million over the next five years.

Bush has proposed a $5 billion increase over five years but has indicated he is willing to spend more money — up to $20 billion over five years — in an effort to strike a compromise with Congress.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Thursday the president “has not made any overtures to us” about a compromise, though Bush administration officials Wednesday tried to persuade Congress to accept the $20 billion increase. Democrats rejected the offer, saying the money would not cover enough children.

The new bill includes a provision that would largely prohibit participation by families with incomes of more than 300 percent above the poverty level. The earlier version did not expressly block states from including families above that level.

The new bill also adds incentives for states to enroll children from the poorest families and adds language aimed at requiring states to verify that SCHIP participants are American citizens. Another added provision would phase out childless adults from the program within two years.

Pelosi said the new bill addresses the concerns of some of the Republicans who voted against the earlier version of the bill.

sferrechio@dcexaminer.com

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Comments from Examiner Readers

6:09 AM MST on Thu., Oct. 4, 2007 re: "Democrats move to override veto of children’s health care measure"

Art B said:
Bush is right. The social security entitlement is broke. The medicare entitlement is broke. So lets create another one, which will soon be broke. We never hear anything about how much this will cost (clue -- lots). There arent enough smokers to pay for it and even if there were, what did they do to deserve this kind of punishment? How many non-payers will get "equal" benefits (I suppose they consider "parents" income to decide who pays, since ALL children are not able to pay by definition). The principal of all govt aid is that the more you "have", the less you "get". So to "get" the most, you need to appear to "have" nothing. What incentive is there for folks to get an education, work hard, and save their money for a better life if its just going to be taken from them and given to folks who have not done these things? Communism 101.

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