Wednesday, March 22, 2017

NYAIL Action Alert 3/22/17 Call Today to Oppose the American Health Care Act!

Action Alert in bold white letters on burgundy red background
This is an Action Alert from the New York Association on Independent Living ...

See also this Editorial from NCCI on Disability, Healthcare, and Medicaid ... 
​The House is set to vote tomorrow, March 23, on the American Health Care Act (AHCA). The AHCA will put the lives and independence of people with disabilities at risk by gutting Medicaid! Call your member of Congress today and urge them to vote NO on the American Health Care Act!

New York's members are incredibly important in this vote! They should all hear from us on this bill but it is especially urgent to get calls to those who are on the fence or support the AHCA. Only one Republican - Rep. John Katko - said he will vote against it. He should get thanked for doing the right thing for New Yorkers.

Undecided

NY-21, Elise Stefanik
NY-11, Dan Donovan
NY-2, Peter King

Plans to Vote YES

NY-1, Lee Zeldin
NY-19, John Faso
NY-22, Claudia Tenney
NY-23, Tom Reed
NY-27, Chris Collins

ACTION:

We can stop this now! Please contact your Representative in the House and tell them to vote no on the American Health Care Act. Dial 844-898-1199 to put in your zip code and get routed to the right Representative.

Talking Points:

The AHCA changes the way that the federal government funds Medicaid-setting a cap on federal funding instead of paying states based on the actual costs of healthcare. This change cuts 25% (or $880 billion) of Medicaid funding and uses that money to pay for tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.

AHCA Per-Capita Medicaid Caps will force States to cut services for people with the most significant disabilities, forcing people into institutions.

The Community First Choice Option (CFCO) will sunset under AHCA, the major incentive for states to provide community-based services which enable people with disabilities and seniors to live in the community.

The AHCA allows states to require unnecessary and administratively burdensome work requirements for people on Medicaid - ignoring substantial evidence that Medicaid allows many people with disabilities get back to work and losing Medicaid coverage could put many at risk of losing their jobs.

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