Sep 17 2009
Following today's introduction of a health care reform plan by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT), Joe Jackson, chairman of Save Flexible Spending Plans and CEO of WageWorks, a benefits company based in San Mateo, California, issued the following statement:
"It's disappointing and unreasonable for health care reform to be financed by restricting access to FSAs, a valuable benefit used by millions of Americans to manage and hold down their health care costs."
"Imposing a $2,000 cap on contributions to FSAs, as proposed by Chairman Baucus, would reduce the value of the benefit and force plan participants to pay more in taxes and health care costs at a time when many can least afford it - an outcome inconsistent with the goals of health care reform."
"Those who stand to lose the most with a $2,000 cap on FSA contributions are those that have the greatest health care costs - individuals and families battling chronic conditions that average $4,398 per year in out-of-pocket costs, according to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation."
"Without a cap higher than $2,000 on FSA contributions, Congress could force plan participants, including many fighting chronic illnesses, to forgo necessary medical treatment, prescriptions and supplies for financial reasons, resulting in a deterioration of health and an increase in hospitalizations and overall health care system costs."
"A major flaw of the proposed cap is that it isn't crafted to adjust over time to inflation, which is unreasonable and provides an even larger tax increase on the middle class."
"Lastly, Chairman Baucus has proposed to limit the use of FSAs for over-the-counter medications unless you get a doctor's prescription. Although this provision does not make good health policy sense since many over-the-counters are used to manage chronic health conditions, it at least allows FSAs to be used for some over-the-counters, unlike the House provision that would eliminate them from FSA reimbursement entirely."