State of California
Office of the Governor
09/05/2006
Governor Schwarzenegger Announces Veto of Government-Run Health Care
System

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's statement:

I commend Sen. Sheila Kuehl's commitment and dedication to providing
health care coverage for all Californians, but I must veto SB 840
because I cannot support a government-run health care system.

Socialized medicine is not the solution to our state's health care
problems. This bill would require an extraordinary redirection of
public and private funding by creating a vast new bureaucracy to
take over health insurance and medical care for Californians - a
serious and expensive mistake.  Such a program would cost the state
billions and lead to significant new taxes on individuals and
businesses, without solving the critical issue of affordability.  I
won't jeopardize the economy of our state for such a purpose.

SB 840 relies on the failed old paradigm of using one source - this
time the government - to solve the complex problem of providing
medical care for our people.  It uses the same one-sided approach
tried in SB 2, the employer-mandated coverage measure signed into
law before I became governor. I opposed SB 2 because it placed
nearly the entire burden on employers, and voters repealed it in 2004.

I want to see a new paradigm that addresses affordability, shared
responsibility and the promotion of healthy living.

Single payer, government-run health care does none of this.  Yet it
would reduce a person's ability to choose his or her own physician,
make people wait longer for treatment and raise the cost of that
treatment.

With my partners in the Legislature, I look forward in 2007 to
working to develop a comprehensive and systemic approach to health
care that not only provides affordable medical treatment to people
when they are ill, but that strives to make sure people don't get
sick in the first place.   An approach that supports cost
containment and recognizes the shared responsibility of individuals,
employers and government.  That promotes personal responsibility and
builds on existing private and public systems.

As part of this comprehensive approach, my administration already
has worked hard on the fight against obesity, a leading cause of
disease in this country.

I signed the landmark Healthy Schools Now Act, which bans junk food
and sugar-laden drinks in public schools.  Our budget also included
$18 million to replace that junk food with fresh fruits and
vegetables so we can start promoting healthy living choices for our
youngsters.

On the question of access, I've made children's coverage a priority,
resulting in nearly a quarter million additional children covered by
our Medi-Cal and Healthy Families programs.

And on the question of affordability, I reached agreement with the
Legislature to provide discounts on prescription drugs of up to 60
percent for our neediest citizens.

But we're not stopping there.

I convened a California Health Care Summit in July that for the
first time brought together experts on all sides of this issue.  At
the table with us were representatives from academia, government,
business, health care and labor.

From that summit and follow-up meetings, there emerged a strong
sense of how to proceed on health care reform.

Affordability is the key to making our system work for everyone, and
affordability is exactly what we are dedicating ourselves to.

By implementing a statewide plan advancing health information
technology that I called for in a recent executive order, we can
shave billions of dollars off healthcare costs in California.

By creating the 500 elementary school-based health centers I called
for in our Health Summit, medical treatment will be more accessible
to our children who need it most and they can avoid costly emergency
care.

With the same willingness to compromise that we showed this past
legislative session on issues like global warming, I know we can
reach our goals.  I look forward to working with Sen. Kuehl and
other members of the Legislature, as well as the experts who
participated in our summit and other stakeholders, to create a
healthier California.

http://gov.ca.gov/index.php?/press-release/3751

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