[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 32, Number 34 (Monday, August 26, 1996)]
[Pages 1477-1480]
[Online from the Government Printing Office, www.gpo.gov]
<R04>
Remarks on Signing the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act of 1996
August 21, 1996
Thank you very much. Thank you so much. Thank you very much for that
wonderful introduction, Merit, and thank you for the courage of your
example.
I want to begin by recognizing the Members of Congress who are here
who worked on this so hard. In addition to Senators Kassebaum and
Kennedy, we have Senator John Breaux, Senator Bill Cohen, Senator Byron
Dorgan, Senator Carl Levin, Congressman Mike Bilirakis, Congressman John
Conyers, Congressman Harris Fawell and Congressman Dennis Hastert,
Congressman David Hobson, and Congressman Bill Thomas. I thank all of
them for their work on this.
I thank Secretary Shalala for her hard work; the SBA Administrator,
Phil Lader, who is here. I'd also like to recognize a gentleman in the
audience who did a lot of work with the First Lady on this and who is,
I'm sure, happy to be here today, our former Surgeon General, Dr.
Everett Koop. Thank you, sir, for being here. And Dr. Henry Foster, it's
nice to see you; thank you for being here, sir.
There are so many others I'd like to thank. I want to thank all the
consumer groups, the business groups, the labor groups, the grassroots
people, the people who were personally affected by health care problems
and prob-
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lems in our system, who are here. All of you worked so hard to make this
day a reality. I want to thank all the people who worked on the staff at
the White House, the people especially who worked with the First Lady
from 1993 on. All of you should take some great satisfaction in seeing
this day come to pass, and I want you to know that I will never forget
the work that all of you have done and the service you have rendered to
the American people, and we thank you.
But a lot of people who worked on health reform were just folks,
people that Hillary met traveling around the country, or people that I
had the good fortune to run into who told me their stories and who
helped to work to make this day a reality. People like Dan Lumley, who
is here with us today, a man we met on our bus tour, from Portland,
Oregon. And there have been many others who have helped, like Kristin
Hopper and Tensia Alvarez, who are here with their families today. We
thank you for coming here with your families. And let me again
especially thank Merit Kimball and her wonderful parents, Jack and
Rosemary, who have come here today. They have had the courage to tell
their story and to fight for their cause and on behalf of tens of
millions of other Americans. They have given us the hope that together
we can make things better for more Americans.
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act shows what
happens, as Senator Kassebaum said and Senator Kennedy said, when we
work together, when we cross party lines and put the interests of the
American people first. This bill is a clear boost to our values as
Americans. It offers opportunity by allowing people to take their health
insurance from job to job. It rewards responsibility by helping people
to work who desperately want to work. It brings us together in a common
community to do what's right by all of our people, saying that we ought
to make it possible for more and more people to succeed at work without
losing the security of knowing that when they need health care it'll be
there.
Health care reform is measured by how many lives it improves. With
this bill we take a long step toward the kind of health care reform our
Nation needs. It seals the cracks that swallow as many as 25 million
Americans who can't get insurance or who fear they'll lose it. Now
they're going to be protected.
Never has such a measure been more needed for our people. Our new
economy presents Americans with opportunities like never before to work
their way into better paying jobs. And yet our health care system has
worked to paralyze many workers who fear losing their health care
coverage if they take those better jobs and change their employers. At
the same time, millions of Americans find themselves labeled as people
with preexisting conditions, from cancer to AIDS, which disqualifies
them and their families for coverage, including the husband, the
pregnant wife who lose their insurance; the young woman who can't change
jobs because her new insurance doesn't cover diabetes; the small-
business owner who faithfully pays group health insurance premiums for
years and then finds that his coverage won't be renewed because one of
his employees has developed a heart condition.
No more. This bill changes all that. Today we declare a victory for
millions of Americans and their families. No longer will you live in
fear of losing your health insurance because of the state of your
health. No longer need you hesitate about taking a better job because
you're afraid to lose your coverage. And no longer will small businesses
be denied access to insurance for their employees. The health insurance
reform bill I sign today will protect the health care of millions of
working Americans and give them and their families something that cannot
be measured, peace of mind.
The bill also addresses other problems in getting more affordable
insurance to our workers. It makes it easier and less expensive for the
self-employed to purchase their insurance. As Senator Kassebaum said, it
phases in a tax deduction of 80 percent for the self-employed and helps
to even the playing field with bigger businesses. Second, it prevents
fraud and abuse. It toughens penalties and helps us to go after bad
apple health care providers who bilk the system of billions of dollars
from Medicare, from Medicaid, and from private insurance companies. I
especially want to thank Secretary Shalala for her work on these fraud
and abuse provisions.
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Third, it makes the health care system more simple. It will modernize,
streamline, and cut the cost of insurance paperwork by devising a
uniform electronic system for paying health care claims. It will provide
steps to protect the privacy of people in the system as it does so.
Fourth, it allows the establishment of a limited number of medical
savings accounts to allow us to study this approach and see how it
works, to determine whether this new approach can make a positive
contribution to health care coverage and to affordability. And fifth, it
helps with long-term care. It provides consumer protections and makes
long-term care insurance more affordable. This bill, in short, does a
very great deal.
I want to echo what Senator Kennedy said: Senator Kassebaum, we are
deeply in your debt. We're going to miss you, and you must be very proud
that here in the last months of your career in the Senate you have done
such a magnificent thing. We thank you so much, ma'am.
Senator Kennedy, as I told you before we came out here, when I woke
up this morning and thought about signing this bill today, I remembered
a day a very long time ago, almost 18 years ago now, when I moderated a
panel on health care reform in Memphis, Tennessee, at one of our many
conventions, in 1978. And you were there, telling the American people in
1978 that every person in America deserved the health care that your son
had when he was first taken ill. I'm proud of you for these two decades
of commitment, sir. Thank you.
And if you'll forgive me a personal note, I believe, Hillary, that
this justifies all those days on the road and all those nights you
stayed up reading the incomprehensibly complex issues of health care.
Thank you.
I wish this bill had contained the provision to eliminate the
differential treatment of mental health coverage or at least taken some
positive steps in that direction. I know this is something that is
especially important to Tipper Gore, and I know that we all know that
we're going to have to deal with that.
And we have to do more, and this is also very important. We must
find a way to provide coverage for workers and their families who are in
transition. I have proposed a plan which we put in our balanced budget
to cover 3 million workers and their families, including 700,000
children, who today have nowhere to turn for affordable health care
because the worker is changing jobs. If a person is doing the right
thing, trying to be responsible, dying to go to work, we should help
those kind of people to get back on their feet without being thrown flat
on their back without health insurance.
Our mission in pursuing health care reform from the start has been
to provide more fairness and quality for the American people. That's why
we worked to strengthen the Medicare Trust Fund, although we must do
more, and our balanced budget plan does that. That's why we've worked to
preserve and to protect Medicaid, why we focused on the problems of
health care costs, which, thanks to efforts in the private sector, to
our own efforts, and to the general direction of our economy with growth
with low inflation, inflation in health care slowed to 3.9 percent in
1995, the lowest in 23 years. And for the first half of this year, it is
down to less than 2 percent and may go lower still. We must not let this
be a temporary development.
That's also why we've worked to raise childhood immunization rates
dramatically, to increase investment in biomedical research, including
funding for breast cancer and AIDS; why we've expedited the FDA review
process in approval for new drugs, so that people who need a miracle
might be able to find it; why we fought to protect our children from the
harmful effects of tobacco advertising aimed at them.
But now we need to build on what we have achieved. I was encouraged
to see Senator Kassebaum with her coach's mentality saying that the game
is not over, and we still have another month this year. And Senator, I'm
suited up and ready to play. And I appreciate you saying that.
This is a particularly happy day for me because, like yesterday when
we signed the minimum wage bill and the bill which gave such strong
incentives to small businesses to invest in their own businesses and
made it so much easier for people to adopt children who were willing to
take on that profoundly important responsibility--these 2 days together,
and this day especially, helps ordinary Americans to benefit from the
growth and
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progress in the American economy. America is on the right track, not
only when the overall numbers look good but when every responsible
American family can participate in that.
It's good that we have 10 million new jobs, record numbers of new
businesses, that we have the lowest deficit and the highest rates of
homeownership in 15 years. That's very good. But it's even better when
every single American who is willing to be responsible for his or her
family and his or her work can participate in those trends. And with
portable health care, the minimum wage increase, additional incentives
for small business growth, more pension security, moving people from
welfare to work, that will help all Americans to be a part of our 21st
century America.
We have more to do in educational opportunity, in helping people
with their child care and childrearing obligations, in helping people to
buy their first home, in finishing the job of balancing the budget so
that we can keep interest rates down and inflation down. But we are
clearly moving on the right track.
I look forward to working with Congress when they come back in
September and to continuing this effort. I want to say again, this bill
passed almost unanimously. This is a bill that both Senators Kennedy and
Kassebaum can be proud of because they brought all their colleagues
along with them. This is a bill that people who have been working in the
House for years and years and years on health care reform can be proud
of, and so can everybody else who showed up and voted for it. And
Congressman Hastert, I want to echo what Senator Kassebaum said, we
appreciate your work and we know how much you did to get those last few
difficult issues resolved in a way that we could all live with.
We can do things when we work together and put the American people
first. And whenever we work on behalf of our families and our children,
as we do with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act,
America always wins.
So now, in the names of the families and children who will have
better lives because of it, I am honored to sign this profoundly
important piece of legislation. And I'd like to ask the Members of
Congress to come up and join me, along with the families who are here.
Thank you very much, and God bless you.
Note: The President spoke at 2:50 p.m. on the South Lawn at the White
House. In his remarks, he referred to Merit Kimball, director of
communications, Alliance for Health Reform; and Henry W. Foster, Jr.,
Senior Adviser to the President on Teen Pregnancy and Youth Issues. H.R.
3103, approved August 21, was assigned Public Law No. 104-191.