Governor talks about
California health care
SACRAMENTO (AP) — Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger says he will
attempt another ambitious reform of health care in California despite a budget
deficit he is now estimating could climb as high as $20 billion.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Schwarzenegger
said he has an obligation to try to make health care available to some 5.1
million Californians who lack health care insurance. And he said he won’t scale
back the plan simply to cut a deal.
“I think that we have put together a good package where we
could have done it but, you know, fell short in the Senate, so now we’ll try
again. We will continue on, keeping the stakeholders together, fine-tuning it
and seeing if we can improve on it,” Schwarzenegger told the AP during a
30-minute interview in his Capitol office.
His previous compromise, a $14.7 billion health care
package with Democratic leaders, failed earlier this year in a state Senate
committee after an analysis raised concerns about its financing.
Schwarzenegger said he was buoyed by a Field Poll out this
week that found nearly three-quarters of Californians supported the basic
principles of his health plan.
“I think that will inspire everyone here that we were on
the right track, that those that had doubts, that those that used the budget as
an excuse for not passing it ... that we were doing the right thing and they
were wrong,” he said.
He said he is not willing to break apart the plan, as some
have suggested, to tackle only children’s health care or address problems with Medi-Cal. He said the health care market is too complicated
for that and he’s not interested in aiming for less than is possible.
“In life, you go out and you give it the best shot and you
have to be daring. You have to be courageous and not worry about failure,
because the more you worry about failure, the more restrictive you are and the
more afraid you are of shooting for the stars,” he said.
The compromise Schwarzenegger struck previously with
legislative Democrats, led by Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez, would have covered
about 70 percent of the state’s uninsured residents through a combination of
subsidies and mandates.
It would have required most Californians to have an
insurance policy and every employer to contribute something toward their
workers’ health care.
A report by the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office,
requested by Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata,
raised concerns about the plan’s cost. It said the state could be on the hook
for an additional $500 million to $1.5 billion annually within five years.
Perata and
other senators said it would be irresponsible for California to take on such a
costly program in the midst of a budget crisis.
On Monday, Schwarzenegger and a leading Democratic
lawmaker said the state’s budget deficit through June 2009 is projected to be
between $15 billion and $20 billion. In the Tuesday interview, the governor
said revenue and spending projections are fluctuating daily, making it hard to
pin down the size of the gap before he releases his revised budget proposal for
the 2008-09 fiscal year on May 14.
The deficit already has forced cuts to the state’s health
care program for the poor and elderly. At Schwarzenegger’s urging, state
lawmakers in February approved a $600 million reduction in Medi-Cal
payments to doctors.
Nunez, who is termed out of office this year and will give
up the speaker’s post next month, also cited the Field Poll as proof that
Californians are eager for a health care fix.
“Hopefully, the patient advocates, labor unions and
responsible businesses who backed our plan can leverage this public support and
help keep the pressure on for realistic reform that will make health care more
affordable for millions of Californians,” he said in a statement.
Schwarzenegger has insisted that financing for the health
care plan would be separate from the state general fund and would not worsen
the budget deficit.
On Tuesday, he reiterated his opposition to raising taxes
but also said he would consider closing tax loopholes. At the same time, he
discounted the suggestion that his position on taxes has been ambiguous.
Schwarzenegger said he simply does not want to close the
door on good ideas.
“I believe when you go into negotiations you should never
say, ‘Well, all of this is off the table,’ because then what I’m saying is,
‘It’s just my way or the highway.’ I want to listen to the reasoning behind all
of these proposals,” he told the AP.
But Schwarzenegger warned that he would want proof such
plans would really save the state money. He said some recommendations by the
legislative analyst to end tax incentives could have the unintended effect of
reducing state revenue, which would only add to the budget problems.
Still, the governor told the AP he has no illusions about
the difficulty of reaching compromises on the budget or health care this year.He said no one in particular is to blame for the
failure of the original health care proposal, but said failure is no reason to
give up on that or any of his other ambitions.
Those plans include reforming the budget process to avoid
the financial roller coaster that has seen the state flip between large
surpluses and massive deficits in recent years, providing stable funding for
education and addressing California’s public works needs.
“One has the responsibility to use all your energy, and in
my case all the other things I bring, to get it done,” he said. “That’s my
commitment I made to the people, and I will work until as long as I sit here on
those things. I think we have a good shot of getting all those things done.
It’s just not on the first attempt.”