Starry, Starry Skies
California desert town takes back the night, wins rare "Dark Sky" award
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker talks with voters in Concord, New Hampshire, in March 2015. (Photo: Andrew Cline/Shutterstock)
In early 2013, I quit a full-benefits staff job to freelance. Some months after that, I signed up for Obamacare.
The insurance plan I bought through New York state's marketplace exchange was all right. The coverage was about the same as I'd had with my employer-provided insurance, but it cost about 30 percent more. It's difficult to know why. Was the marketplace a less competitive bargainer than my old company had been? Or had the Affordable Care Act raised my former co-workers' premiums too? Either way, I felt that, without the act, a similar plan would have cost even more for me as a freelancer. I was grateful.
So when Republican presidential hopeful Scott Walker released his plan for replacing the Affordable Care Act on Tuesday, I was interested to read what my fate would have been under his plan. Would Walkercare have been better or worse?
Keep in mind my experience with Obamacare was probably common, but not the majority experience. According to a recent Gallup poll, Americans of my age and income level are among the most likely to tell surveyors that indeed the Affordable Care Act helped them. The majority of Americans overall, however, said the act had no effect on their families. And folks who are 30 or older, make $24,000 or more, and are white were more likely to say the Affordable Care Act hurt them than to say it helped.
My thoughts on Walkercare, as I read through the short document:
So what's the score? Without a detailed budget, it's hard to know whether Walkercare would cost me more or less. It's pretty clear, though, that many provisions in Obamacare are made to benefit me and those like me. Coverage for birth control and the elimination of gender-based pricing are great for young women like me. Because of my income and the high cost of living in my area, I also got a heftier Obamacare subsidy than my age-based Walkercare tax credit would be. What will others see when they read through the plan? That I can't answer.
California desert town takes back the night, wins rare "Dark Sky" award
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