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H.R. 3962
H.R. 3962 - Affordable Health Care for America Act

To provide affordable, quality health care for all Americans and reduce the growth in health care spending, and for other purposes.


 
Background
  Further Information
Majority Meeting Notice
CBO cost estimate
 
Bill Text
  H.R. 3962 (as introduced)
 
Amendments
  Note: The list of amendments and their disposition are not the official record of the Committee on Rules.
For the official list, see the Committee on Rules Majority's Web Site.
 
#SponsorsSummaryStatusNotes
1 Orig Fleming (LA)
Gingrey (GA)
Herger (CA)
Walden (OR)
Wilson (SC)
Scalise (LA)
Would automatically enroll all Members of Congress and all Senators in the public option.Submitted 
2 Orig Jackson-Lee (TX)
Would exempt from restrictions on physician-owned hospitals a general acute care hospital that (1) meets the criteria for a disproportionate share hospital or (2) maintains state licensure, is participating under a state plan under title XIX, does not discriminate against beneficiaries of Federal health care programs, delivers services in at least 13 of the 25 major diagnostic categories, accepts the transfer of patients from other hospitals, has an emergency department, and has an average number of emergency department visits that is higher than the statewide average.Submitted 
3 Orig Jackson-Lee (TX)
Would amend the requirement to qualify for provider and hospital ownership exceptions to self-referral prohibition to apply to a hospital with physician investment on January 1, 2011, and with a provider agreement in effect as of such date as evidenced by complete architectural plans, a loan commitment, and compliance with local zoning requirements.Submitted 
4 Orig Souder (IN)
Would eliminate section 552, which imposes a 2.5 percent excise tax on sales of medical devices.Submitted 
5 Orig Hastings (FL)
Would direct the HHS Secretary to establish a National Commission for Improving Long-Term Care and Community Services. It requires the Commission to issue a report to the President, Congress, and the general public on how to improve long-term care and community services in the United States and U.S. territories.Withdrawn 
6 Orig Hastings (FL)
Would prohibit the federal government from stripping individuals of their Medicare, Medicaid, and SSI benefits before being convicted of a crime.Withdrawn 
7 Orig Hastings (FL)
Would allow generic drug companies that win patent challenges against brand name companies to share the 180-day generic exclusivity period with the generic company that was the first to submit a brand name patent challenge to the Food and Drug Administration.Withdrawn 
8 Orig
Modifications of Manager's Amendment
Dingell (MI)
It lets the Secretary work with states that have alternative programs to state high risk pools as a part of the new temporary insurance program. It provides that if the premiums of a retiree increase by an excessive amount, as determined by the Secretary, on or before the bill’s introduction date (October 29, 2009), then such retiree is eligible for the high-risk pool. It prohibits undocumented individuals from accessing assistance from the national high risk pool program with requirements for verification of citizenship or lawful presence. It establishes a process for the review and public disclosure of health insurance premium increases and justifications by the Secretary of Health and Human Services and states. It permits the Commissioner to take into consideration excessive and unjustified premium increases in making decisions regarding which insurance companies will be permitted into the exchange and how quickly to open the exchange to employers for the purchase of insurance for their employees and provides funding for states to for this process. It clarifies that the consumer collaborative provided for in the early access health grants is a nonprofit business collaborative. It provides that the new Commissioner may permit a qualified health benefits plan to provide coverage through a qualified direct primary care medical home plan. The FTC may investigate insurance companies that are registered as not-for-profit companies. It clarifies that nothing in the Act overrides a state law governing medical malpractice cases. It repeals the McCarran-Ferguson Act insurance antitrust exemption with respect to health insurers and medical malpractice insurance. It imposes performance assessment and accountability measures on the Health Choices Administration. It provides that those women receiving Medicaid assistance only for family planning services would be eligible for the Health Insurance Exchange. It ensures that the interstate insurance compacts do not override state laws governing rate review and fraud and that compacting states determine which of the compacting state’s laws serve as primary for the insurance company. It extends the Maryland all-payor cost containment waiver to the public option. It delays by 2 years a provision of the bill that eliminates the deductibility of expenses that relate to retiree prescription drug benefits that are subsidized by the federal government. It replaces a provision in the bill that delays the application of worldwide allocation of interest with a provision that deletes the allocation rule. It closes a biofuel tax credit loophole. It changes from January 1, 2010, to April 1, 2010, the effective date for Skilled Nursing Facilities classification changes. It permits approval for expansion of certain hospitals that have a high percentage of Medicaid admissions. States may agree to reimburse long-term care facilities for costs incurred in conducting background checks. It imposes quality indicators for Alzheimer’s care. It imposes a 90-day wait period for new durable medical equipment suppliers to be paid if the Secretary believes there is a risk for fraud. It requires that the Medicare fraud and abuse phone number be prominently displayed on Explanation of Benefits forms. It provides for Medicaid coverage of Compact of Free Association migrants. It includes a sense of Congress regarding Medicaid coverage of community-based attendant services and supports. It includes technical appropriations provisions. It provides that the medical malpractice demonstration projects do not preempt or modify state laws on attorneys’ fee limits or damage caps. It provides for a new program on mental health and substance abuse screening, intervention, referral, and recovery services. It codifies the Office of Minority Health. It requires HHS to study and eliminate any duplicative programs. It provides for diabetes screening collaboration and outreach. It also includes changes to the Indian health provisions.Self-Executed 
9 Orig Boehner (OH)
Substitute. The Republican alternative creates Universal Access Programs that expand and reform high-risk pools and reinsurance programs to guarantee that all Americans, regardless of pre-existing conditions or past illnesses, have access to affordable care — while lowering costs for all Americans. It prevents insurers from unjustly cancelling a policy or instituting annual or lifetime spending caps. The amendment puts in place medical liability reforms and gives small businesses the power to pool together and offer health care at lower prices. In addition, the legislation provides incentive payments to states that reduce premiums and the number of uninsured. The bill allows Americans living in one state to shop for coverage and purchase insurance in another. The legislation explicitly prohibits all Federal funds, whether they are authorized funds or appropriated funds, from being used to pay for abortion. The amendment creates new incentives to save for future and long-term care needs by allowing qualified participants to use HSAs to pay premiums. Made in Order 
10 Orig McKeon (CA)
Would enroll Members of Congress and their dependents in the public option.Submitted 
11 Orig McKeon (CA)
Would impose verification requirements to prevent illegal aliens from receiving Medicare and Medicaid benefits and from obtaining coverage through the Health Insurance Exchange.Submitted 
12 Orig Walden (OR)
Would help ensure that the new Health Benefits Advisory Committee established in H.R. 3962 accurately represents the interests of rural Americans. Currently 21 percent of the total U.S. population lives in rural areas, so this amendment would require that at least one quarter of the Committee's members be practitioners who have legitimate experience practicing in a rural area for at least a five-year period preceding their appointment.Submitted 
13 Orig Walden (OR)
Would help ensure that the demographics of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) more accurately represent the demographics of Medicare recipients. Since 26% of Medicare recipients reside in rural areas, this amendment would require that at least 26% (approximately 5 commissioners) of MedPAC's commissioners have significant experience practicing in a rural area be in order to more appropriately represent the Medicare population and its needs.Submitted 
14 Orig Hunter (CA)
Prohibits organizations that perform and support abortions from being identified as school-based health clinics (SBHC) and from receiving federal money under concurrent grant programs, with an exception for pregnancies that are the result of rape or incest, or threaten the life of the pregnant woman.Submitted 
15 Orig Forbes (VA)
The amendment would amend the Public Health Service Act to require reinstatement upon payment of all premiums due of group or individual health insurance coverage terminated by reason of nonpayment of premiums. This amendment preserves the ability for consumers to reinstate their canceled benefits once they pay any back premiums. To guard against fraud, companies can impose a fee to prevent repeated non-payment and reinstatement.Submitted 
16 Orig Forbes (VA)
The amendment would require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to conduct and support basic and applied research to develop techniques for the isolation, derivation, production, testing, and human clinical use of stem cells that may result in improved understanding of, or treatments for, diseases and other adverse health conditions, including pluripotent stem cells that have the flexibility of embryonic stem cells, provided that such techniques will not involve: (1) the creation of a human embryo for research purposes; (2) the destruction or discarding of, or risk of injury to, a living human embryo; or (3) the use of any stem cell the derivation or provision of which would be inconsistent with this amendment.Submitted 
17 Orig Forbes (VA)
The amendment would require the Director of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality to conduct and support research, evaluations, initiatives, and demonstration projects, and provide grants or enter into contracts or cooperative agreements, to enhance the deployment of medical simulation technologies and the incorporation of such technologies and equipment into medical, nursing, allied health, podiatric, osteopathic, and dental education and training protocols. This amendment would also create nationwide centers for training, education and research.Submitted 
18 Orig Thornberry (TX)
Establishes a Commission on Billing Codes and Forms Simplification that is tasked with working with Medicare and the medical community to standardize, and simplify, billing practices while protecting patient privacy. The Commission would also study electronic forms and billing practices with the same goals in mind. Submitted 
19 Orig Kirk (IL)
The amendment ensures that an individual purchasing insurance coverage after January 1, 2013 is exempt from the individual mandate if an insurance plan 6 months prior to implementation of the bill was less expensive than the basic health care plans under the Affordable Health Care for America Act. Submitted 
20 Orig Kirk (IL)
The amendment prohibits the federal government from regulating privately supported medicine, legally protecting the doctor-patient relationship against federal controls or rationing for care not paid for by the federal government. It prevents the federal government from regulating the hiring practices of organizations that provide health care, but exceptions are provided to enable the federal government to manage its own operations. It protects the right of patients to obtain health care services themselves and enables the Congress to protect the right of each American to obtain their own health care, free of government interference. It also protects the rights of patients to buy health insurance, or make any other arrangements to pay for their own health care. It also repeals the two-year Medicare kick-out of physicians in the Medicare program if they privately contract for their patients.Submitted 
21 Orig Weiner (NY)
Baldwin (WI)
Conyers (MI)
Doyle (PA)
Engel (NY)
Rush (IL)
Schakowsky (IL)
Welch (VT)
Edwards (MD)
Substitute The amendment in the nature of a substitute would replace the current health care bill with a single payer system.Submitted 
22 Orig Burgess (TX)
To have a qualified state plan under the Medicaid program states must pay providers at least 75% of the payment rate paid to a provider under the state employees plan or the Federal Employees Health Benefit Plan (FEHBP) most chosen by families. For dental & vision services, in the case where such services are covered under a state employee plan, providers must be paid at 75% of the rate paid under the plan. In the case where supplemental dental and vision services are not offered to a state employee providers must be paid at a rate of 75 % of the rate paid by the supplemental (vision & dental) FEHBP plan most often chosen by families.Submitted 
23 Orig Burgess (TX)
Under statute, Medicaid is the payer of last resort, meaning that all other parties (private insurance, Medicare, etc.) must pay first. Under the amendment states have one year to submit to the Secretary of Health and Human Services a plan to bring their state plan into compliance with statute - those that do receive a $1,000,000 bonus, those that can demonstrate they are already in compliance receive another $1,000,000 bonus. Those states that do not submit or are found to be in non-compliance with statute would see their Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) reduced.Submitted 
24 Orig Burgess (TX)
The bill's expansion of Medicaid would be contingent within a state on the state certifying to the Secretary of Health & Human Services that there is access to an adequate level of pediatricians, pediatric specialists (including pediatric mental health specialists), and pediatric sub-specialists for targeted low-income children covered under the State plan.Submitted 
25 Orig Boustany (LA)
To prevent the end-of-life planning provisions in H.R. 3962 (sections 240 and 1233) from compelling federal taxpayers to facilitate assisted suicide, the amendment would define “suicide,” “assisted suicide,” “euthanasia,” and “mercy killing” to model the Assisted Suicide Funding Restriction Act of 1997 (Public Law 105-12), regardless of the definition of these terms under state law.Submitted 
27 Orig Burgess (TX)
The amendment directs the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to yearly calculate the coverage levels achieved under the bill as well as project out the cost of the legislation for the following 100 years.Submitted 
29 Orig Burgess (TX)
The amendment would allow insurance carriers to “rate” or charge more for an insurance policy to those who engage in tobacco use. However, insurance carriers can only vary premiums for such use by a ratio of 1.5 to 1.Submitted 
28 Orig Burgess (TX)
The public insurance option created under the bill is prohibited from using the U.S. treasury as a means for a Capitol Reserve Fund. Submitted 
30 Orig Burgess (TX)
The amendment would enact a national approach to medical liability reform that includes a trifurcated cap non-economic damages against healthcare practitioners and institutions, require expert reports for Civil Actions, ensure expert opinions relating to physicians may only be provided by actively practicing physicians and places limitations on liability for Good Samaritans providing Emergency Health Care - among other reforms.Submitted 
31 Orig Inglis (SC)
Would subject all Members of Congress, Senators and the Vice President to the public option.Submitted 
26 Orig Burgess (TX)
Members of Congress are made a mandatory covered population under Title XIX of the Social Security Act (Medicaid) without consideration of any other asset or qualification test. Family members of Members of Congress are not impacted and remain eligible for the Federal Employees Health Benefit Plan (FEHBP).Submitted 
32 Orig Grijalva (AZ)
To amend section 323 (relating to payment rates for items and services), reinstating the provider payment language to link the rates to Medicare plus five percent (the robust public option). Submitted 
33 Orig LaTourette (OH)
Substitute This amendment is in the nature of a substitute. It inserts H.R. 956, the Health Coverage, Affordability, Responsibility, and Equity (HealthCARE) Act, which aims to expand the number of individuals and families with health insurance coverage by allowing small businesses and Americans with incomes up to 200% of the federal poverty level to have the opportunity to buy coverage through a purchasing pool arrangement modeled after the Federal Employees Health Benefit Program. It also allows States to provide coverage to eligible children under the SCHIP program without being subject to federal funding caps, and States that expand Medicaid coverage to all individuals up to 100% of the federal poverty level would have their increased costs fully subsidized through an increase in the federal matching rate (FMAP). In addition, it provides for health insurance parity for individuals with autism spectrum disorders. Lastly, the amendment makes clear that not withstanding any other provision of law, nothing in this Act requires changing health insurance plans, none of the funds contained in this Act shall be used to perform abortions, and none of the funds contained in this Act shall be used to provide eligibility to unauthorized aliens.Submitted 
34 Orig Hastings (WA)
This amendment would strike Section 1156 of the bill, which prohibits the expansion of physician-owned hospitals.Submitted 
35 Orig Paulsen (MN)
Gerlach (PA)
Lance (NJ)
Removes the medical innovation tax and replaces it with unobligated stimulus funds.Submitted 
36 Orig Paulsen (MN)
Requires a study on the effect the medical innovation tax would have on medical innovation.Submitted 
37 Orig Klein (FL)
Amendment would grandfather all current Medicare Advantage beneficiaries for one year by starting reductions to benchmarks in 2012—not 2011. It would also provide a hold harmless provision for Medicare Advantage plans with benchmarks at 106% of Medicare fee for service and below at the time of enactment to further grandfather roughly 2/3 of all Medicare Advantage beneficiaries from the efficiency improvements in Sec. 1161 of H.R. 3962. Submitted 
38 Orig Paulsen (MN)
Excludes temporary workers from the employer mandate.Submitted 
39 Orig Paulsen (MN)
Clarifies that nothing in this bill will diminish health care services available to veterans.Submitted 
40 Orig Paulsen (MN)
Provides for the use and expansion of health savings accounts.Submitted 
41 Orig
Emerson (MO)
This amendment would allow U.S. licensed pharmacies and drug wholesalers to import FDA-approved medications so American consumers have a greater savings when purchasing prescription drugs.Submitted 
42 Orig
Ver 1
Kagen (WI)
Would require all entities that offer health care related products and/or services for sale to the public to openly disclose all of their prices, including on the internet. Would authorize the Sec of HHS to investigate and prosecute violators. Submitted 
43 Orig Murphy (CT)
Would require Members of Congress who are covered through the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) to instead purchase their health insurance through the Exchange set up by the bill.Submitted 
44 Orig Terry (NE)
Blunt (MO)
Gingrey (GA)
Inglis (SC)
Would remove the President, Vice President and Members of Congress from FEHBP eligibility and make them only eligible for the public option. Submitted 
45 Orig Boswell (IA)
Braley (IA)
Loebsack (IA)
Would make the Medicare area wage index for hospital inpatient services one percent.Submitted 
46 Orig Terry (NE)
Substitute Would give all Americans access to a health exchange with plans similar to those offered through the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program (FEHBP).Submitted 
47 Orig Gingrey (GA)
Would provide that Members of Congress and their staff will no longer be eligible for FEHBP and will receive their health care benefits from the public plan. If it is good enough for American citizens, it should be good enough for their elected Representatives. Submitted 
48 Orig Gingrey (GA)
Would provide that the Individual Mandate is an unconstitutional provision that takes away American civil liberties like never before. Therefore, the amendment would require the Secretary of HHS to provide for an opt-out process from the individual mandate for every American citizen.Submitted 
49 Orig Gingrey (GA)
Would simply say that CMS cannot user Comparative Effectiveness Research data to make coverage determinations on the basis of cost. This amendment was originally added to HR 3200 on a bipartisan basis in the Energy and Commerce Committee markup but dropped by the majority party. Submitted 
50 Orig Gingrey (GA)
Would represent HR 1086, the HEALTH ACT, which seeks to enact medical liability reform in the states. The bill would include caps on non-economic damages and other reforms included in the CBO score that showed a $54 billion in savings over a 10 year period. Submitted 
51 Orig Gingrey (GA)
Would simply bar non-economic damage awards for damages when a provider is following best-practice guidelines as developed by the Center for Quality Improvement. Submitted 
52 Orig Gingrey (GA)
Would require that the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall provide for a methodology that ensures that any savings to the Medicare program resulting from HR 3962 (and amend shall be retained in the Medicare program to make seniors health care more stable and affordable. Submitted 
53 Orig Gingrey (GA)
Would simply state that nothing in H.R. 3962 shall be construed to allow any Federal employee or political appointee to dictate how a medical provider practices medicine.Submitted 
54 Orig Barton (TX)
Revised Would strike section 1714 of the underlying bill, which is the state family planning section.Submitted 
55 Orig Deal (GA)
Requires the Secretary to verify that all applicants for coverage in the new National High Risk Pool created in the underlying bill are U.S. citizens and requires the Secretary to verify the identity of all applicants using the same identity verification process the DRA required for Medicaid applicants. The amendment also incorporates the five-year waiting period for new legal permanent residents that was created by the welfare reform legislation in 1996. Submitted 
56 Orig Deal (GA)
Johnson (TX)
Wilson (SC)
Heller (NV)
Since the operation of the Health Insurance Exchange will be funded with taxpayer dollars, this amendment will limit participation in the Exchange to U.S. citizens and members of one of the nine groups of qualified aliens that are eligible for Medicaid. To enforce this requirement, the Health Choices Commissioner must verify that all applicants to purchase an Exchange-participating plan are qualified based on citizenship or qualified alien status, and it requires the Commissioner to verify the identity of all applicants using the same process used in Medicaid. The amendment also incorporates the five-year waiting period for new legal permanent residents that was created by the welfare reform legislation in 1996.Submitted 
57 Orig Barton (TX)
Revised Would provide that no additional federal funds shall be made available to the Account or the public health insurance option unless such additional funds are the result of actions by both the House of Representatives and the Senate, with at least four fifths of those voting in the affirmative.Submitted 
58 Orig Deal (GA)
Heller (NV)
Johnson (TX)
Wilson (SC)
Reiterates the current-law requirement that all applicants for Medicaid coverage are U.S. citizens and fixes a loophole in current law by requiring any state using the new Social Security Number verification system that was created by the Democrats’ SCHIP reauthorization bill to also verify the applicant’s identity using the same identity verification process the we created in the DRA.Submitted 
59 Orig Stearns (FL)
This Amendment would strike the current language in Section 202 of the Bill, which prevents Americans from keeping their current health insurance if they like it and replace it with language that will allow Americans to keep what they have. Submitted 
60 Orig Deal (GA)
Heller (NV)
Johnson (TX)
Wilson (SC)
Requires the Health Choices Commissioner to verify that all applicants for Affordability Credits are U.S. citizens (or members of one of the nine groups of qualified aliens that are eligible for Medicaid) and requires the Commissioner to verify the applicant’s identity using the same identity verification process the DRA required for Medicaid applicants. The amendment also incorporates the five-year waiting period for new legal permanent residents that was created by the welfare reform legislation in 1996. Submitted 
61 Orig Matheson (UT)
Would modify the legislation to develop state-based health insurance exchanges instead of creating a new federal regulatory agency to oversee a national federal exchange.Submitted 
62 Orig Abercrombie (HI)
This amendment authorizes a 3-year malpractice demonstration project to cover providers, who take a substantial amount of Medicaid, Medicare, and SCHIP patients, under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA). IIn exchange, providers must meet new quality requirements such as reporting adverse events and analyzing root causes of medical error. Providers may be given preference for the program by the Secretary of Health and Human Services if they practice in medically underserved areas or specialize in health care occupations experiencing national or local shortages.Submitted 
63 Orig Matheson (UT)
Would expand grant program for states to explore additional medical malpractice alternatives. The amendment also establishes a tiered cap on non-economic damages for medical liability cases.Submitted 
64 Orig Matheson (UT)
Would establish a grant repayment program for pediatric sub-specialists.Submitted 
65 Orig Matheson (UT)
Would clarify Health Savings Accounts are credible coverage plans for employers and individuals in the health insurance exchange. The amendment would prevent individuals from receiving both subsidies and tax treatment for these plans.Submitted 
66 Orig Matheson (UT)
Would create state-based cooperatives in lieu of the negotiated rates government option for the exchange.Submitted 
67 Orig Barton (TX)
Would add a group of amendments that where accepted at the Committee on Energy and Commerce's full committee markup and were stripped from H.R. 3962 and not included in the managers amendment to H.R. 3962. Submitted 
68 Orig Brown-Waite (FL)
This amendment requires that all cuts to Medicare in HR 3962 be reinvested back into the Medicare program.Submitted 
69 Orig Neugebauer (TX)
The amendment would allow insurers to continue offering Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) health care plans by ensuring the future of high deductible health care plans.Submitted 
71 Orig Neugebauer (TX)
The amendment would prohibit abortion with Federal funds except in the cases of rape, incest or the life of the mother being in danger.Submitted 
72 Orig Paul (TX)
Amendment provides that no American can be required to purchase health insurance or denied any federal benefits for failing to purchase health insurance. The amendment also repeals sections of HR 3962 inconstant with this amendment.Submitted 
73 Orig Paul (TX)
Provides that no Americans can be denied access to a federal health care program for failing to comply with a vaccine requirement or other type of mandatory medical treatment orders implemented as part of a federal health insurance mandate.Submitted 
74 Orig Neugebauer (TX)
The amendment would put caps on non-economic damages related to medical malpractice lawsuits. Submitted 
75 Orig Paul (TX)
Amendment restricts the ability of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to censor truthful health claims about the health benefits of foods and dietary supplements.Submitted 
76 Orig Stearns (FL)
Requires the co-equal heads of the three branches of government- the President, Congress and Supreme Court Justices to be enrolled in the Public Option.Submitted 
77 Orig Stearns (FL)
Strikes section 552 which taxes medical devices.Submitted 
78 Orig Stearns (FL)
Strikes section 552 which taxes medical devices.Submitted 
79 Orig Stearns (FL)
This amendment would require that any written, visual or audio materials distributed through a covered official, entity or program shall be in English only.Submitted 
80 Orig Stearns (FL)
This amendment would allow individuals to deduct that cost of medical care and prescription drugs from their income taxes above the line.Submitted 
81 Orig Lee (NY)
Creates a 3 year/5 state medical tribunal pilot program to be administered by the Secretary of HHS.Submitted 
82 Orig Brady (TX)
This amendment expresses the sense of the Congress on the future insolvency of the Medicare program. Prohibits any cost savings from the Medicare program derived from implementation of this Act from being diverted to other, non-Medicare spending.Submitted 
83 Orig Brady (TX)
This amendment would suspend new taxes imposed by HR 3962 (including the individual mandate tax, the employer mandate tax, and the surtax on families and businesses making over $350,000 a year) unless GAO certifies the taxes will not: Reduce small business jobs; increase overseas outsourcing or shifting of full-time jobs to part-time or contract jobs (in response to employer mandates); or reduce take home pay for low and moderate income families. The amendment would also suspend new taxes on wages imposed by HR 3962 in a state if the state unemployment rate exceeds 8.5 percent ("super-high") for any period.Submitted 
84 Orig Brady (TX)
This amendment requires the Secretary of HHS to evaluate methods for allocating care coordination resources, including: 1) statistical methods to identify types of care that have a higher likelihood of being inefficient/ineffective due to poor/limited coordination of care; 2) methods to focus care coordination resources on populations and circumstances that can most benefit from increased access to care coordination resources. The Secretary may use measures developed under this section to provide payment or other incentives to focus care coordination efforts.Submitted 
85 Orig Brady (TX)
This amendment expresses the sense of Congress that prior to voting on this bill, each Member will certify in the Congressional Record that he/she has read the entire bill.Submitted 
86 Orig
Brady (TX)
Would require the Health Choices Commissioner to collect data on individual patient wait times for obtaining an appointment with a health care provider within the Health Insurance Exchange. Would require the Commissioner to report data on wait times on a public web site.Submitted 
87 Orig Brady (TX)
Would beginning in 2013 and for each year following suspend any provision of the bill that is not fully offset over the next ten year period.Submitted 
88 Orig Brady (TX)
Because the type and scope of any impact from restricting physician ownership in full-service hospitals is unknown, the amendment strikes the provision expanding the restrictions to full-service and rural hospitals. It requires a study by the Institute of Medicine (in collaboration with CMS) that pulls together data identified by MedPAC and others as necessary for determining the extent and impact of physician ownership of full-service hospitals on non-physician owned hospitals, together with recommendations for regulatory or legislative measures based on the study.Submitted 
89 Orig Brady (TX)
This amendment requires the Secretary to collect data on wait times for obtaining an appointment with primary care and specialty physicians in the government-run plan and private insurance plans offered through the Exchange. If enrollees in the government-run plan's wait times exceed the average wait time for enrollees in the private insurance plans, then the government-run plan would be repealed. Enrollees would be allowed to select a new plan.Submitted 
90 Orig Brady (TX)
This amendment would protect American cancer patients from the potential harm caused by repealing the government-run plan if enrollees in the plan have poorer 5-year survival rates than those enrolled in private health insurance offered through the Exchange.Submitted 
91 Orig Brady (TX)
This amendment would block the implementation of sections of HR 3962, including reductions to the Medicare program, in any geographic area unless the Secretary of HHS certifies that implementation will not result in: rationing of health care services; reduced health care services for seniors; longer patient wait times; or reduced availability of health care providers participating in the Medicare program.Submitted 
70 Orig Neugebauer (TX)
The amendment would allow Association Health Care Plans (AHPs) to be formed nationally by small businesses, associations and non-profits to increase their purchasing power and achieve lower health care premiums.Submitted 
92 Heller (NV)
Requires that Members of Congress enroll in the government-run public health insurance plan.Submitted 
93 Orig Heller (NV)
Increases Americans' access to affordable healthcare by implementing meaningful medical liability reform, improving access for rural and insured patients, encouraging the use of prescription drug reimportation as a means of reducing the cost of medication, and promoting preventative care.Submitted 
94 Orig Cooper (TN)
The amendment caps the income tax exclusion for employer provided health insurance for incomes between $75,000-$125,000 ($150,000-$250,000 for joint filers) at $8000 ($21,000 for a family plan) and for incomes above $125,000 ($250,000 for joint filers) at $5,000 ($13,000 for a family plan). The cap goes into effect in 2013 and is indexed to inflation. The amendment also creates an Independent Medicare Advisory Council (IMAC) to recommend annual payment updates and payment reforms.Submitted 
95 Orig Sullivan (OK)
This amendment would strike the current sub-section (a) language and place it with language that would allow the Secretary to establish, in each Service Area, programs involving the prevention of domestic violence and the treatment of Indian victims of such violence or sexual abuse.Submitted 
96 Orig Deal (GA)
This amendment preserves the six-month extension of the ARRA FMAP increase (Section 5001 of P.L. 111-5) and would provide the same FMAP rates as the underlying bill to the states that opt to cover these new optional populations (100% FMAP until 2015 and 91% FMAP starting in 2015). Under this amendment, a state would have the option to cover all or part of these expanded optional populations (i.e., Georgia would have the option to cover people up to 133% or 140% instead of 150%). Submitted 
97 Orig Deal (GA)
This amendment removes the provisions in the underlying bill that cut $10 billion from Medicaid DSH payments to hospitals and $10.3 billion from Medicare DSH payments between 2016 and 2019.Submitted 
98 Orig Schock (IL)
The amendment would provide refundable tax credits to individuals with incomes of 200% of the federal poverty level for the purpose of purchasing health insurance in the individual market. It also provides a pre-tax, above the line deduction for families with incomes above 200% FPL for the purpose of purchasing health insurance in the individual market. Submitted 
99 Orig Rogers (MI)
This amendment would strike all the tax increases found contained in H.R. 3962.Submitted 
100 Orig Rogers (MI)
This amendment would exclude part time workers from the bill’s employer health insurance mandate.Submitted 
101 Orig Rogers (MI)
This amendment would permit any health plan in existence before the creation of the bill’s federal Exchange to be grandfathered as “qualified coverage.”Submitted 
102 Orig Rogers (MI)
This amendment would require Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) to be considered as “qualified coverage” for purposes of the individual health insurance mandate in H.R. 3962.Submitted 
103 Orig Rogers (MI)
This amendment would require the Health Choices Commissioner to provide 90-days notice before an individual can be disenrolled from a health plan in the federal Exchange.Submitted 
104 Orig Cassidy (LA)
This amendment would not allow federal subsidies to be used to purchase insurance on the exchange that covers abortion services. In addition, the amendment states employers are not required to provide funds for their employees to buy an insurance policy that covers abortion services on the exchange. Submitted 
105 Orig Murphy (PA)
Gingrey (GA)
Fleming (LA)
Roe (TN)
This amendment would grant physicians, who are providing services to Medicare, Medicaid, or public plan beneficiaries, liability protection under the Federal Torts Claims Act. Submitted 
106 Orig Murphy (PA)
Boozman (AR)
Burgess (TX)
Gingrey (GA)
Fleming (LA)
Roe (TN)
Broun (GA)
This amendment would allow states to opt-out of the government-run insurance option. Employers and individuals within a state that opts-out would be exempt from H.R. 3962’s tax provisions.Submitted 
107 Orig Stupak (MI)
The amendment provides the option of allowing employees to buy into the Federal Health Benefits Plan that is offered to all Members of Congress. Submitted 
108 Orig Stupak (MI)
The amendment codifies the Hyde Amendment in H.R. 3962. The amendment will prohibit federal funds for abortion services in the public option. It also prohibits individuals who receive affordability credits from purchasing a plan that provides elective abortions. However, it allows individuals, both who receive affordability credits and who do not, to separately purchase with their own funds to purchase plans that cover elective abortions. It also clarifies that private plans may still offer elective abortions. Made in Order 
109 Orig Neugebauer (TX)
Mandatory provision of Social Security account numbers and notification of mismatches and multiple uses.Submitted 
110 Orig Lummis (WY)
The amendment would give States the option of complying with the bill’s mandatory expansion of State Medicaid program eligibility to individuals with incomes up to 150 percent of the federal poverty level.Submitted 
111 Orig Lummis (WY)
The amendment would allow States to opt out of any provisions of the bill to the extent that they mandate the purchasing of health insurance by residents in such State, mandate the provision of health insurance by employers in such State, or interfere with the ability of patients to privately contract with medical providers and insurers under the laws of such State.Submitted 
112 Orig Biggert (IL)
Would improve the waste, fraud, and abuse prevention provisions of H.R. 3962 by strengthening the Medicare enrollment process, expanding certain standards of participation, and reducing erroneous payments. The amendment also gives law enforcement agencies additional tools to pursue fraudulent providers, suppliers, and billing agencies.Submitted 
113 Orig Buyer (IN)
Amendment codifies existing HIPAA regulations on employer-sponsored wellness programs and allows for premium discounts and rebates equal to 50% of the total cost of employee-only coverage under the employer’s health plan. Submitted 
114 Orig Price (GA)
Adds language protecting the private right to contract between individuals and health care providers.Submitted 
115 Orig Price (GA)
Strikes Sec. 2401 and inserts language establishing best practice guidelines. It places limitations on noneconomic damages and punitive damages in a health care lawsuit in cases in which treatments are based on these practices.Submitted 
116 Orig Reichert (WA)
This amendment would create a hardship exemption from the employer mandate if its compliance would result in the employer laying off employees, reducing employee wages, or prevent the hiring of new employees. The amendment requires the Treasury Department to establish documentation to verify such hardship.Submitted 
117 Orig Blackburn (TN)
Protects current health coverage upon implementation of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
118 Orig Blackburn (TN)
Prohibits H.R. 3962 from imposing unfunded mandates on states.Submitted 
119 Orig Blackburn (TN)
Protects against excess spending in H.R. 3962.Submitted 
120 Orig Blackburn (TN)
Federal government is a precluded from passing any law that would give it authority to ration health care for the American people. Submitted 
121 Orig Blackburn (TN)
Nothing shall preclude an individual from purchasing or maintaining insurance qualifying for Health Savings Account deposits and nothing shall interfere with their ability to continue to make deposits according to the schedule created in the 2006 HSA legislation.Submitted 
122 Orig Blackburn (TN)
Prohibits establishment of government plan or exchange until the HHS Secretary certifies that the establishment of such will not (directly or indirectly) cause the cost of the average price of private health insurance premiums to increase.Submitted 
123 Orig King (IA)
This amendment would insert the text of H.R. 3422 into the bill to provide for increase payments to so-called tweener hospitals in the Medicare program.Submitted 
124 Orig King (IA)
This amendment would repeal Sec. 211 of PL 111-3, which watered down the citizenship documentation requirement for prospective Medicaid beneficiaries.Submitted 
125 Orig King (IA)
This amendment would remove the individual mandate from the bill.Submitted 
126 Orig King (IA)
Would remove Sec. 223 from the bill, which establishes the Health Benefits Advisory Committee.Submitted 
127 Orig King (IA)
Would remove subtitle B of title III from the bill, which would establish a government-run health insurance program.Submitted 
128 Orig King (IA)
Would remove Sec. 213 from the bill, which would require insurance companies to abide by arbitrary government rating requirements.Submitted 
129 Orig King (IA)
Would strike the provision in the bill that would prohibit the sale of private individual health insurance policies beginning in 2013.Submitted 
130 Orig King (IA)
Would require that beneficiaries of the insurance exchange provide proof of their citizenship.Submitted 
131 Orig King (IA)
Would remove the employer mandate in the bill.Submitted 
132 Orig King (IA)
Would remove the section on comparative effectiveness research from the bill.Submitted 
133 Orig King (IA)
Would remove Sec. 1161 from the bill, a section which would bring about significant cuts in the Medicare Advantage Program.Submitted 
134 Orig King (IA)
Would remove the bill's allowance for members of a household to receive affordability tax credits if only one person in the household is actually eligible.Submitted 
135 Orig Graves (MO)
Would strike the mandate and tax on employers that don't provide government approved health insurance to their employees.Submitted 
136 Orig Nye (VA)
Would exempt children's hospitals from the cuts to disproportionate share payments (DSH) under H.R. 3962. H.R. 3962 cuts $10 billion from DSH payments, which would have a devastating effect on children's hospitals. Submitted 
137 Orig Fortenberry (NE)
Would ensure that health care entities are not forced to participate in activities that violate their moral or ethical or religious beliefs and to ensure that they are not discriminated against because they choose not to participate in those activities.Submitted 
138 Orig Barrett (SC)
Would mandate that all members of Congress, their staff, and political appointees in the administration participate in the public option.Submitted 
139 Orig Barrett (SC)
There is a program in the bill that creates pilot project for liability reform state pilot projects. The bill says that any state that wants to reform tort system, their solution can’t include damage caps. Our amendment would remove that exclusion. Now, a state can draft a solution with caps and receive federal funding in this pilot project. Submitted 
140 Orig Barrett (SC)
Would “sunset” the 111 new federal programs created in this bill after 5 years. Meaning, the programs would end in 5 years unless Congress acts to reauthorize.Submitted 
141 Orig Barrett (SC)
Would prohibit the coverage of Hyde prohibited abortions in the public option. Basically this amendment will ensure that the public option in this bill will not facilitate the practice of abortions. Submitted 
142 Orig Barrett (SC)
Would strike the section in the bill that eliminates the nontaxable reimbursements of over-the-counter medication from health savings accounts-HSAs, HRAs, and FSAs. Basically this bill weakens HSAs.Submitted 
143 Orig Rogers (AL)
Would require the Secretary of HHS to certify that no seniors would lose access to their current Medicare Advantage plan before implementing cuts contained in H.R. 3962.Submitted 
144 Orig Rogers (AL)
Would strike all the Medicare cuts contained in H.R. 3962.Submitted 
145 Orig King (IA)
Revised Would remove Sec. 1701 from the bill, which would provide for a significant increase in Medicaid eligibility.Revised 
146 Orig Wittman (VA)
Would exclude certain free standing hospitals, including children's hospitals, from Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital payment reductions. Submitted 
147 Orig Johnson (IL)
Would establish a demonstration project that would allow participation in prevention and wellness programs to lower costs of premiums in all federal insurance plans, including the public option.Submitted 
148 Orig Johnson (IL)
Would provide that a financial reward for participation of an individual in a prevention and wellness program may include reductions in the premium or cost-sharing of the individual under the health benefits plan.Submitted 
150 Orig Johnson (IL)
Would express the sense of Congress that health insurance providers should take into account prevention and wellness programs that the beneficiary is enrolled in when determining premium costs.Submitted 
151 Orig Johnson (IL)
Would require the Secretaries of Health and Human Services and Labor to submit to Congress a report evaluating potential cost-savings of basing health insurance premiums on beneficiary enrollment in employer-provided prevention and wellness programs.Submitted 
152 Orig Johnson (IL)
Would provide up to a $400 tax credit to employers for each employee to implement a wellness program, as well as a $400 tax credit for employees that participate in the employer-provided wellness program. The amendment would require that at least 60% of employees participate in the program.Submitted 
153 Orig Buyer (IN)
McKeon (CA)
Would allow individuals enrolled in VA health care and TRICARE beneficiaries to be eligible for affordable tax credits. Submitted 
154 Orig Buyer (IN)
McKeon (CA)
Would ensure that nothing in this act interferes with Department of Veterans Affairs’ or Department of Defense’s existing authorities. Submitted 
155 Orig Buyer (IN)
McKeon (CA)
Would amend section 302(a) of the bill to provide that individuals enrolled in VA healthcare and individuals in enrolled or eligible TRICARE would have the option to obtain coverage through enrollment through the health insurance exchange. Submitted 
156 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 24 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
157 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 7 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
158 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 6 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
159 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 5 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
160 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 4 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
161 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 3 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
162 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 2 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
163 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike page 1 of H.R. 3962.Submitted 
164 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would insert the text of H.R. 502 as an additional tax provision in H.R. 3962, providing for the tax deductibility of all qualified health purchases. Submitted 
165 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike the requirement that Employers provide health insurance for their employees as part of their “shared responsibility” set forth in H.R. 3962. The amendment would further eliminate the penalty for non-compliance with this provision.Submitted 
166 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike the requirement that individuals purchase health insurance as part of their “shared responsibility” set forth in H.R. 3962. The amendment would further eliminate the penalty for non-compliance with this provision.Submitted 
167 Orig Bachmann (MN)
Would strike all references to the “Public Health Insurance Option” in H.R. 3962, the Affordable Health Care for America Act.Submitted 
168 Orig Murphy (PA)
Burgess (TX)
Gingrey (GA)
Roe (TN)
Would provide that there be no cuts to Medicare until a panel of nonpolitical designees from the specialty colleges and academies of medicine conduct a top-to-bottom review of the program.Submitted 
169 Orig Johnson (GA)
Would 1) establish a cap for prescription drug costs at $200 out-of-pocket cost per monthly prescription and a total monthly out-of-pocket cap of $500 for all insurance plans including Medicare Part D, 2) amend the current Medicare Part D exemption process to authorize a beneficiary to request an exemption for specialty tier drugs, and 3) request two studies to be conducted by the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) regarding discrimination and cost-sharing. Submitted 
170 Orig Hinojosa (TX)
Would add a “Hold Harmless” provision to the Medicare and Medicaid DSH Reductions in HR 3692 for counties that have a 16% rate of uninsurance or greater by 2016. It would require the Secretary to compare the calculated DSH Payment made under existing law with the calculated payment made pursuant to HR 3962 and pay the greater of the two.Submitted 
171 Orig Shadegg (AZ)
Substitute Would strike the underlying bill and allow individuals to purchase health care across through individual membership associations. Savings would be allocated to the Secretary of Health and Human Services to create a voucher program to help individuals purchase health care.Submitted 
172 Orig Shadegg (AZ)
Substitute Would strike the underlying bill and allow individuals to purchase health care across state lines. Savings would be allocated to the Secretary of Health and Human Services to create a voucher program to help individuals purchase health care.Submitted 
173 Orig Rogers (AL)
Would prohibit the federal government from using comparative effectiveness research to ration or deny care.Submitted 
174 Orig Scalise (LA)
Would require the FDA to follow the major rule-making process for any rule or guidance issued by the agency regarding the harvesting, processing, or transportation of any seafood, including molluscan shellfish. Submitted 
175 Orig Scalise (LA)
Would sunset the bill after 4 years.Submitted 
176 Orig Scalise (LA)
Would require the HHS Secretary, in consultation with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, to certify that nothing in the bill will result in a tax increase for individuals with an AGI of less than $250,000 in order for the provisions in the bill to be implementedSubmitted 
177 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 25. Submitted 
178 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 23. Submitted 
179 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 22. Submitted 
180 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 21. Submitted 
181 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 20. Submitted 
182 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 19.Submitted 
183 Orig Schrader (OR)
Would eliminate subsidies for those at and above 300% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). This amendment would also increase the initial premium percentage for those between 150%-200% FPL from 3.0% to 5.7% and the final premium percentage from 5.5% to 6.8%. This amendment would also eliminate cost sharing subsidies for those at 200%-300% FPL, and pay 100% of the cost share for those at 100%-200% FPL.Submitted 
184 Orig Schrader (OR)
Would strike Sec. 3143(e)(2) from the bill.Submitted 
185 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 18.Submitted 
186 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 17.Submitted 
187 Orig McCollum (MN)
Would add Neurology to the list of providers who deliver primary care services in section 1303 alongside family medicine, general internal medicine, general pediatrics, geriatrics, or obstetrics and gynecology.Submitted 
188 Orig Berkley (NV)
Would change the payment amounts for CPT codes 76075 and 76077 (relating to dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA)), and any successor to such codes furnished during 2010 and 2011. The payments would be set at 70 percent of the 2006 reimbursement rates for these services.Submitted 
189 Orig Fleming (LA)
Would strike page 15.Submitted 
190 Orig Sessions (TX)
Would not allow any of the provisions of this bill to be implemented if the OMB, in consultation with the Department of Labor find that 4 million jobs will be lost as a result of this bill.Submitted 
191 Orig Broun (GA)
Would strike page 27.Submitted 
192 Orig Broun (GA)
Would strike page 50.Submitted 
193 Orig Broun (GA)
Would strike page 26.Submitted 
194 Orig Broun (GA)
Would strike page 29.Submitted 
195 Orig Broun (GA)
Would strike page 31.Submitted 
196 Orig Broun (GA)
Would strike page 28.Submitted 
197 Orig Broun (GA)
Would strike page 30.Submitted 
198 Orig Shadegg (AZ)
Would provide a civil remedy for those who allege wrong-doing by their insurance company.Submitted 
199 Orig Hoekstra (MI)
Would provide a free-market health care solution that provides affordable and accessible health care for all Americans. This bill would allow small businesses to ban together, improve Health Savings Accounts, allow for the interstate sale of health insurance plans, address pre-existing conditions, provide tax equity for individuals and reform medical liability among other provisions.Submitted 
200 Orig Welch (VT)
Tanner (TN)
HR 3962 extends hold harmless protection under Medicare’s hospital outpatient prospective payment system for sole community hospitals with 100 or fewer beds. This amendment extends hold harmless protection for two years for all sole community hospitals, regardless of bed size. Submitted 
201 Orig Welch (VT)
DeFazio (OR)
Would prohibit applicable manufacturers or distributors under the Physician Payment Sunshine Act from offering or giving any gift to a covered recipient, with exceptions. Submitted 
202 Orig Welch (VT)
Would authorize the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation to test models under which states fully integrate care for full-benefit dual eligible individuals in the state. Submitted 
203 Orig Foxx (NC)
Would direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to extend for two years the reclassification in effect during fiscal year 2009 for hospitals whose Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board reclassification changed from fiscal year 2009 to fiscal year 2010 or ended as of September 30, 2009. The affected hospitals would have 20 days from enactment and publication of this provision to notify the Secretary of their decision to extend their fiscal 2009 reclassification. This is a temporary extension; any Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board reclassification that these hospitals have or will obtain for fiscal years beyond the two year extension will remain valid.Submitted 
204 Orig Braley (IA)
Welch (VT)
Would address outlier payments in home health, reduces the cuts to home health currently in H.R. 3962, and creates demonstration projects on chronic health and tele-medicine.Submitted 
205 Orig Dent (PA)
The amendment would improve the medical justice system by stabilizing compensation for injured patients, holding parties responsible for their degree of fault, ensuring that meritorious claims are swiftly resolved, reducing the practice of defensive medicine by encouraging compliance with accepted clinical practice guidelines, and guaranteeing that medical care is available to those who need it the most by providing protections to safety-net providers. Furthermore, it would provide incentives to states to adopt effective alternative medical liability laws that will reduce the number of health care lawsuits initiated, reduce the average amount of time taken to resolve lawsuits and reduce the cost of malpractice insurance.Submitted 
206 Orig Roe (TN)
Would strike page 32.Submitted 
207 Orig Roe (TN)
Would strike page 33.Submitted 
208 Orig Roe (TN)
Would strike page 34.Submitted 
209 Orig Roe (TN)
Would strike page 35.Submitted 
210 Orig Roe (TN)
Would strike page 36.Submitted 
211 Orig Roe (TN)
Would strike page 37.Submitted 
212 Orig Roe (TN)
Would strike page 38.Submitted 
149 Orig Johnson (IL)
Would express the sense of Congress that health care costs related to obesity, heart disease and diabetes could be lessened with increased participation in prevention and wellness programs.Submitted 
213 Orig Johnson (GA)
Would build on the underlying legislation by altering the cap on out of pocket medical expenses from $5,000 annually to $1,250 quarterly.Submitted 
214 Orig Michaud (ME)
Would make wage index reclassifications for hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, and home health agencies in states with high thresholds of citizens enrolled in both Medicare and Medicaid (dual eligible). Additionally, it would allow all providers in these high dual eligible states to be reimbursed for Medicaid at Medicare rates. Finally, it would provide a waiver of clawback provision for these high dual eligible states.Submitted 
215 Orig Hall (TX)
Would help prevent cuts to Medicare Advantage from falling disproportionately on rural Americans. The current language in the bill would result in Medicare Advantage funding cuts in many rural areas. Medicare advantage plans have reduced unnecessary hospitalizations and readmission rates for beneficiaries with such conditions as diabetes and heart disease, leading to greater efficiency and saved costs in administered care. This amendment would help mitigate the effect of these program cuts for rural and low-income areas.Submitted 
216 Orig Barrow (GA)
Would modify the penalty for non-compliance with the bill's mandate that employers provide health coverage to employees.Submitted 
 
Rule
Rule Number:
      H.Res. 903
 
Rule Type:
  Providing for the consideration of multiple measures in the House - One Structured rule and one Closed rule
 
Rule Summary:
  1. Provides for consideration of H.R. 3962 under a structured a rule.
2. Provides four hours of debate in the House to be equally divided and controlled by the chair
     and ranking minority member of the Committee on Energy  and Commerce, the chair and
     ranking minority member of the Committee on Ways and Means and, the chair and ranking
     minority member of the Committee on Education and Labor.
3. Waives all points of order against consideration of the bill except for clauses 9 and 10 of rule
     XXI.
4. Provides that the amendment printed in part A of the Rules Committee report, perfected by
     the modification printed in part B or the report, shall be considered as adopted.
5. Waives all points of order against provisions of the bill, as amended.  This waiver does not
     affect the point of order available under clause 9 of rule XXI (regarding earmark disclosure).
6. Provides that the bill, as amended, shall be considered as read.
7. Makes in order the further amendment printed in part C of the Rules Committee report if
     offered by Representative Stupak of Michigan or his designee, which shall be in order without
     intervention of any point of order except those arising under clause 9 of rule XXI, shall be
     considered as read, shall be separately debatable for 20 minutes equally divided and
     controlled by the proponent and an opponent, and shall not be subject to a demand for a
     division of the question.
8. Makes in order the further amendment in the nature of a substitute printed in part D of the
     report of the Committee on Rules, if offered by Representative Boehner of Ohio or his designee,
     which shall be in order without intervention of any point of order, shall be considered as read,
     and shall be separately debatable for one hour equally divided and controlled by the proponent
     and an opponent.
9. Provides one motion to recommit with or without instructions, which shall be considered as
     read.
10. Provides that during the consideration of an amendment printed in the report of the
       Committee on Rules accompanying this resolution, the Chair may postpone the question of
       adoption as though under clauses 8 of rule XX.
11. Provides for consideration of H.R. 3961 under a closed rule.
12. Provides for one hour of debate equally divided and controlled by the chair and ranking
       minority member of the Committee on Energy and Commerce.
13. Waives all points of order against consideration of the bill except for clauses 9 and 10 of rule
       XXI.
14. Provides that the bill shall be considered as read.
15. Waives all points of order against provisions of the bill.  This waiver does not affect the point
       of order available under clause 9 of rule XXI (regarding earmark disclosure).
16. Provides one motion to recommit with or without instructions.
17. Provides that in the engrossment of H.R. 3961, the Clerk shall add the text of H.R. 2920, as
       passed by the House, as new matter at the end of H.R. 3961.
 
Rule Text:
  H.Res.903
H.Rept. 111-330
 

 


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