Neal Defends Obamacare in Williamstown

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Williams College Director of Health Services Ruth Harrison showed U.S. Rep. Richard Neal around the Thompson Health Center.

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — With the Affordable Care Act looking like it is here to stay, Congress expects to continue tweaking the law.

In the State of the Union, President Barack Obama called on Congress to stop perpetual votes to repeal the act — Republicans have filed more than 40 repeal bills — and instead work on bettering it.

The Berkshire's voice in the House of Representatives is happy with the bill and  has aspects of it he will work to preserve.

"There will be opportunities to make changes. But not to miss the point, we are not going to change a ban on pre-existing conditions. We are not going to change capping out-of-pocket expenses, keeping 26-year-olds on their parents health care. Women's health care and preventive services are expanded dramatically, that's not going to change," U.S. Rep. Richard Neal said on Friday after touring Williams College's Thompson Health Center.

"The question is how are you going to use the market to discipline price."

Since its inception, 10 million people have now signed up, Neal said, despite the glitches in the federal website. He says the technological aspect of health care can be fixed but managing costs can't be done until everyone is signed up.

"I don't know how you manage costs if you don't have everyone in the system," he said.

Neal said the goal was never to reverse health-care cost trends but instead stabilize them. This year, he says costs are rising an average of 3 percent, which is a far cry from the 12 percent years ago.

"Medical inflation is the lowest it's been in years," Neal said.


With health care being a major contributor to federal, state and municipal budgets, the system is continually up for debate. Neal's trip to Williamstown was intended to keep him in touch with health providers.

"Health care is playing out with all different experiments across the nation and any chance I get to hear more about how services are delivered, I think it is very helpful to the ongoing debate," Neal said. "I don't think anyone thinks the battle over health care is finished."

The health center provides various services to the students at no charge — other than that covered by insurance. Director of Health Services Ruth Harrison told Neal that the Affordable Care Act has helped by ensuring students have either the school's health care plan or their own. The center sees 11,000 student visits per year.

"We are their primary care from the time they leave home," Harrison said, later adding that some students hadn't had any health care prior to arriving on campus.

But when it comes to services the organization can't provide and needs to refer, students are may be saddled with heavy costs, she said. Additionally, once students graduate, they no longer qualify for the school's health insurance and have to seek their own.

The way to lower costs, in Harrison's opinion, is to get as many people enrolled in insurance plans. Neal and Harrison discussed emergency rooms getting left with bills from uninsured patients, making it more difficult for the providers financially.

"Having millions of uninsured people is not a way to lower health care costs," Harrison said.

She told Neal that she would want to see school-based health care provide preventive services and that she supports more community clinics.

The congressman stopped at the health care center in the afternoon after spending the morning teaching a civics class at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts and touring the college's new science center.


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Prosperity Way Phase 1 Complete; Berkshire Gas Volunteer Day

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Some 55 Avangrid/Berkshire Gas employees spent the day sawing, hammering and painting at Prosperity Way.
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Prosperity Way was founded on the dream of creating an affordable neighborhood where local working families can own a home, build a future, and create lasting memories. Soon, that vision will become reality as homeowners begin moving in.
 
Nearly a year ago, Central Berkshire Habitat for Humanity broke ground on its three-phase affordable housing project. Now, volunteers are putting the final touches on the six homes and have already begun phase two. 
 
"One of the homeowners is closing on her house tomorrow, so she's moving in this weekend, and then the other family is moving in next week," said Habitat CEO Carolyn Valli. 
 
During Phase 2, seven additional homes will be built, the first modular ranch for that phase has been set, and the stick-built ranch is currently in construction. There are two additional ranches on site, to be set once foundations are cured and two colonial homes are scheduled for delivery on Monday, she said. 
 
Phase 3 will have the construction of another seven homes. Central Berkshire Habitat hopes to finish the project before 2028, dependent on securing sufficient grant funding to bridge the gap between construction costs and affordable sale prices, Valli said. 
 
Energy ran high on Thursday, as more than than 50 employee volunteers from Berkshire Gas, a subsidiary of Avangrid Inc., spent the day helping move the project forward through painting, landscaping, and construction work.
 
"We are an energy company in all aspects. We generate wind energy, we have electric utilities and gas utilities, and this crew is demonstrating their energy for a good cause today to support home building for folks who might otherwise never be able to afford a home," said Chris Farrell, Berkshire Gas' communications and government relations manager. 
 
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