Vermont Committees Release Funding For Program That Would Subsidize Private Employer Health Plans For Some Public Insurance Beneficiaries

The Vermont Legislature’s joint Fiscal and Health Access Oversight committees on Tuesday voted to release $750,000 in funding for a program that would shift an estimated 1,068 state residents from public health insurance programs to employer-sponsored health coverage, the Burlington Free Press reports. Under Vermont’s Health Care Affordability Act, which lawmakers approved last spring, some state residents enrolled in public health programs would be required to enroll in their employer-sponsored health plans if the coverage was comparable and the change resulted in savings for the state. The state government would subsidize additional costs the employee would incur from a private health plan. Lawmakers had requested additional research on the possible effects of the program before they would release $750,000 of the $1 million allocated under the law. The research, presented to the committee in November, estimated that the program could save Vermont $6.1 million annually and cost employers of the workers an additional $5.8 million per year if 1,068 workers switch to employer-sponsored coverage. The funding released Tuesday will allow the administration of Gov. Jim Douglas (R) to contract for information technology and prepare to launch the program on Oct. 1, 2007, the Free Press reports (Remsen, Burlington Free Press, 12/13).

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