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July 6, 2022
Single Payer Healthcare bill stopped in New York
Small Business Victory Against Single Payer Healthcare

“Lawmakers from across New York State heard the message loud and clear: $250 billion in new taxes and a healthcare system run by Albany bureaucrats is not the answer,” said NFIB New York State Director Ashley Ranslow. “Small businesses have endured unprecedented economic challenges over the last couple of years: from COVID-related state-mandated business closures and restrictions to rampant inflation, record high gas prices, and widespread labor shortages, Main Street is at its breaking point. Small business owners want good, affordable healthcare, but the New York Health Act would create a devastating and expensive system with the costs borne by hardworking small business owners. Many lawmakers heard the small business voice and wisely backed away from this legislation.”
NFIB launched a statewide radio and online ad campaign educating the public, elected officials, and small businesses about the pitfalls of the bill and the costs to taxpayers. Millions of New Yorkers heard and saw NFIB’s ads, and hundreds of small business owners contacted their elected leaders to let them know how bad the New York Health Act is for small businesses.

“Proponents of single payer health insurance often claim it is a pro-small business reform. Nothing could be further from the truth, and NFIB must be the voice of real small business owners on this issue,” said Manager of Federal Government Affairs Mitch Relfe. “Bad laws often start at the state level and are later imported to Washington. For that reason, stopping single payer in New York and California are critical wins for small business owners across the country.”
Small business owners continue to face the challenge of providing affordable health insurance coverage for their employees. Since the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) passage, for employers with less than 50 employees, the average employee-only premium has increased approximately 50% and the number of small businesses offering coverage has dropped to 31%. Despite these challenges, over 75% of NFIB members indicated they reject a single payer approach in a recent member ballot.
NFIB encourages Congress to consider innovative approaches to lower healthcare costs under the existing model of private health insurance. Along with protecting the health of their employees, small business owners use health insurance benefits as a tool to recruit and retain great talent. For far too many small business owners, providing health insurance is simply not affordable. But rather than focusing on private sector cost reforms, a government run system is often proposed as the only solution.
NFIB will continue to be the voice of small business by monitoring and opposing future single payer government-run healthcare bills that increase taxes and make providing health insurance more difficult, or impossible, for small businesses.
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NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.
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