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AMA seeks
support for ending health-insurance discrimination
The American Motorcyclist Association is seeking support from all
Americans involved in outdoor recreation to end health-insurance
discrimination against people who pursue a wide variety of activities,
including motorcycling.
For years, motorcyclists, ATVers, snowmobilers, horseback riders,
skiers, hang gliders, scuba divers and others have faced discrimination
from some employers who specifically ban those legal recreational
activities from coverage under their health-insurance programs. That has
put thousands of Americans in a position of either purchasing separate
insurance policies just to cover them for one activity, or facing the risk
of going without coverage.
The AMA has worked with a consortium of recreation groups, including
the All-Terrain Vehicle Association, the American Council of Snowmobile
Associations, the American Horse Council, the BlueRibbon Coalition, the
Motorcycle Industry Council, the Motorcycle Riders Foundation and the
National Ski Areas Association, to address this issue. After years of
effort, that group has been successful in getting "The HIPAA
Recreational Injury Technical Correction Act" introduced in Congress.
This bill, designated HR 1076 in the House and S 616 in the Senate, would
bar employers from discriminating against those who take part in legal
recreational activities when it comes to the health-insurance programs
they offer their workers.
More than 10 years ago, the AMA worked to get language specifically
designed to end this discrimination into the original HIPAA (Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) legislation that was passed
by Congress in 1996 and signed into law by then-President Bill Clinton.
But when federal agencies wrote rules to implement that law a few years
later, they reversed the intent of Congress, allowing this type of
health-insurance discrimination to continue.
"It's taken us more than a decade, but we've now gotten back to
the point where Congress can take action to close this dangerous loophole
in the insurance coverage many Americans get through their
employers," said Ed Moreland, AMA vice president for government
relations. "We can't afford to miss this opportunity."
Individuals can support HR 1076 and S 616 by visiting the AMA Rapid
Response Center at www.AMADirectlink.com
and sending messages to their senators and congressmen.
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