Washington –
U.S.
Senators
Tim
Scott
(R-SC)
and
Jeanne
Shaheen
(D-NH),
both
members
of
the
Senate
Committee
on
Small
Business
and
Entrepreneurship,
today
introduced
legislation
designed
to
protect
America’s
small
businesses
from
potential
healthcare
premium
increases
under
the
Affordable
Care
Act.
The
Protecting
Affordable
Coverage
for
Employees
(PACE)
Act,
S.1099,
would
allow
states
to
maintain
the
current
small
group
market
definition,
which
applies
to
businesses
with
up
to
50
employees,
in
order
to
prevent
premium
increases
and
disruption
for
small
and
mid-sized
businesses.
“The
PACE
Act
will
ensure
that
small
and
mid-sized
businesses
in
South
Carolina
and
across
America
are
not
faced
with
drastic
premium
increases
as
a
result
of
the
Affordable
Care
Act,”
said
Scott,
who
was
a
small
business
owner
prior
to
his
election
to
Congress.
“Working
together,
we
can
find
common
sense
solutions
to
stop
this
major
disruption
for
many
mid-sized
businesses,
their
employees
and
their
families.
I
would
like
to
thank
Senator
Shaheen
for
working
with
me
on
this
important
effort
to
support
small
businesses
on
Main
Street.”
“Small
businesses
are
the
backbone
of
New
Hampshire’s
economy,”
said
Shaheen.
“The
PACE
Act
would
make
a
helpful
adjustment
to
the
Affordable
Care
Act
for
small
and
mid-size
businesses
in
the
Granite
State
by
maintaining
the
health
care
status-quo
for
employee
coverage.
I
appreciate
Senator
Scott’s
willingness
to
work
on
a
bipartisan
modification
to
current
law
that
addresses
the
needs
of
businesses
in
New
Hampshire
and
across
the
country.”
Under
the
Affordable
Care
Act,
on
January
1,
2016,
the
definition
of
the
state
based
small
group
markets
is
scheduled
to
change
from
50
to
include
employers
with
up
to
100
employees.
This
change
would
require
many
small
and
mid-sized
businesses
to
be
subject
to
different
rating
rules
and
requirements,
with
the
potential
of
increasing
the
health
insurance
premiums
for
small
businesses,
their
employees
and
their
families.
According
to
an
Oliver
Wyman
report,
if
the
small
group
definition
moves
to
100,
premiums
could
increase
by
approximately
18
percent
for
a
majority
of
the
mid-sized
employers.
As
a
result,
many
employers
may
choose
to
self-insure
instead
of
remain
in
the
small
group
market
because
those
employers
will
no
longer
be
subject
to
the
various
requirements
of
the
small
group
market.
This
could
further
increase
the
premiums
for
those
left
in
the
newly
expanded
risk
pool.
The
PACE
Act is
backed
by
nearly
twenty
groups
representing
small and
mid-sized
businesses,
including
the
U.S.
Chamber
of
Commerce,
the
National
Retail
Federation
and
the
National
Federation
of
Independent
Business,
and
has
bipartisan
support
from
right-
and
left-leaning
thought
leaders,
state
regulators,
and
health
policy
experts.
Last
month,
Congressmen
Brett
Guthrie
(R-KY)
and
Tony
Cárdenas
(D-CA)
led
a
bipartisan
group
of
lawmakers
in
introducing
the
PACE
Act
in
the
U.S.
House
of
Representatives.
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