Rep. Betty McCollum is spearheading an effort to get nonprofit employees included in the health reform benefits being planned for small businesses. She has penned a letter to congressional leaders urging them to consider nonprofits on a level playing field with small businesses.
A letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Majority Leader Steny Hoyer reads, “Nearly all nonprofit organizations are struggling to provide health insurance coverage for their employees. These mainly small employers experience the same higher costs and limited options as their for-profit, small business counterparts.”
The letter has been signed by 22 House members including Minnesota Reps. James Oberstar, Keith Ellison and Tim Walz.
Minnesota’s nonprofits employ nearly 300,000 people, or about 10 percent of Minnesota’s workforce.
Current health care reform plans include tax breaks, subsidies and access to a health insurance exchange for small businesses. If McCollum is successful, those benefits will be extended to nonprofits.
“The millions of Americans who work in the nonprofit sector must be included in health care reform,” McCollum said in a statement. “It’s only fair that nonprofit organizations receive comparable treatment to the small business sector in health care reform legislation. I am encouraged that so many of my colleagues from across the country have joined me in this effort to ensure the benefits of health care reform reach the men and women working for nonprofit organizations.”














3 Comments »
Pingback posted October 23, 2009 @ 2:41 pm
[...] McCollum: Nonprofit workers should get health reform benefits, too … [...]
Comment posted October 23, 2009 @ 4:42 pm
Betty…you have got to be kidding, right?
The only health care reform that will be successful is a single payer system. Everything else will be a disaster.
Health care is a right and no one should have to pay money to stay alive.
We have talked about this before, and you agreed on this topic. Why are you stating something else now?
Comment posted October 25, 2009 @ 2:46 pm
I agree that single payer system is the best system. However, we need to start somewhere, and I do not agree that “everything else will be a disaster”. Thank you, Betty, for thinking of persons who work in non-profits. I used to work in a non-profit a number of years ago, and we had health insurance. It was a small United Way supported agency. However, that was in the 1970’s, and things have changed since then. Persons’s in non-profits too often do not get great pay anyway, but they do great and needed work. So, they need health care that is affordable, or better yet, that is free.
Thank you,
Jean
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