The mention of a "fine" took me some digging to find what they were actually talking about, but it seems to be general IRS fines for not complying to 501(c) standards (which could also result in shutting them down) and an additional $50,000 fine for failing to comply with standards regarding the community needs assessments.
Though I have to admit, this one amuses me a bit. Blaming the ACA for the organizations being hit by the IRS for evidently lying on their taxes (some of them before the ACA came into effect) is kinda' hilarious
It's blaming the ACA because the ACA causes the changes that would end up having the hospitals no longer comply with 501(c) standards.
Also, the article state that for-profit hospitals give a similar amount of free care to non-profit hospital (3.2 against 3.7%).
Keep in mind that that is only for hospitals in the state of California. That information also wasn't cited, so I went digging for the GAO article. I found one
here, but it doesn't have the information they discussed so I'll have to dig later.
Honestly, are you really opposing the ACA because it's going to make people so much better than charities won't have enough people to help anymore?
I'm not necessarily opposed to the ACA. I haven't educated myself on all of the ins and outs. There's just a lot of scary stuff being thrown around, and one side decrying it as something very harmful is equally as scary as the other side whispering, "Don't worry, everything will be fine." The end result is that I'm highly skeptic of the ACA. I plan on really looking through the whole thing soon, though. Still, I feel like I'd prefer almost any other version of "affordable" healthcare than "mandatory insurance". Our healthcare costs are just astronomically high because a necessary facet of our society has been allowed to run rampant with pricing. Mandatory insurance just places that burden on the taxpayers who already have the burden of having to deal with ridiculous medical expenses.
Also, there has been a trend in retail companies forcing their employees from full-time to part-time as a preemptive measure to get out of providing healthcare when the ACA goes into effect. That's pretty damaging, but maybe they'll be covered by federal subsidies. Problem is, since they employ a lot of people, that might mean more subsidies from the government, meaning that it could be an even heavier drain.
Other stuff about the ACA: I'm not satisfied with their answers about the unemployed. Looking up information about how the unemployed will be covered, they rely on the same system as those who are employed who will get federal subsidies, and that the federal subsidies will just subtract from what you owe, not actually cover it (granted from what I've read they haven't specified if the subtraction will or will not result in a zero, but there's nothing to suggest that it does). Then, you have a three-month grace period where you can try and get your shit together to pay the money before you're involuntarily kicked off of insurance. After that, you're fined for not having insurance, and if you're kicked off of insurance because you owe medical bills, then I don't think you can get other insurance until those bills are paid, meaning you're fined forever until those bills are paid. That sounds like it will
really fuck up some people, so I'm hoping that the system doesn't work the way I just described (which I pulled from that Technical Explanation from Congress .pdf I linked earlier).
Also, goodness is it liberal in here. Do we not have any Republicans or conservatives on Bay12 or have they all been scared off?