Improving upon AB 1400 from last session, AB 2200 would guarantee comprehensive, high-quality health care for all Californians as a human right
SACRAMENTO – Today, California Assemblymember Ash Kalra (D-San José), with the crucial support of California Nurses Association (CNA), introduced Assembly Bill (AB) 2200, the California Guaranteed Health Care for All Act. AB 2200 would enact a comprehensive framework of governance, benefits, program standards, and health care cost controls for a single-payer health care coverage system in California. Also known as CalCare, passing this policy framework will allow California to begin consolidating existing health care programs, obtaining necessary federal waivers, and determining public financing.
“When we first introduced CalCare almost three years ago, we were recovering from a worldwide pandemic that truly revealed how broken our healthcare system had become. Unfortunately, not much has changed since then; we have continued to live in the American phenomenon where health outcomes are so connected to wealth, employment, and where you live, that inevitably it leaves those in our community that are traditionally disadvantaged at greater risk of bankruptcy, sickness and death,” said Assemblymember Ash Kalra. “The status quo needs to change and inaction is not an option. AB 2200 will start the necessary process of revolutionizing health care access in this state and asserting that health care is truly a human right.”
California’s union nurses, represented by CNA, are committed to continuing to lead the organizing to build the grassroots movement necessary to win support for and pass CalCare. “From our experiences caring for patients, we nurses have known the need for and fought for decades for everyone to have guaranteed health care through a system like CalCare,” said Cathy Kennedy, RN and a president of California Nurses Association. “The Covid pandemic just underscored the desperate societal need for this program now. CalCare will ensure that public health—not profit—is the priority of our health care system.”
Upon being authorized and financed, CalCare will ensure that all Californians, regardless of employment, income, immigration status, race, gender, or any other considerations, can get the health care they need, free at the point of service. CalCare also includes long-term care services and supports for people with disabilities and the elderly, a health care cost control system, and ways to address health care disparities.
AB 2200 improves upon prior versions, including:
- Establishes an Advisory Committee to provide input on integrating public employee retiree health benefits into CalCare
- Explicitly lists gender-affirming care and an expansive offering of reproductive care as included benefits
- Establishes an Office of Health Equity to promote health equity across many identities
- Requires greater investment by providers into recruitment and retention of health care workers to prepare for and address the increased demand of health care services
- Ensures that physicians and medical doctors are represented on the CalCare board
A single-payer system will cost less overall than our current system and will significantly slow the growth of health care costs over time, saving billions each year. In addition, it could boost economic growth by eliminating future medical debt, allowing greater freedom to change jobs, and more.
Californians overwhelmingly support the transition to a single-payer health system. In a 2021 poll conducted for the Healthy California for All Commission process, 65 percent of low-income Californians supported single-payer health care, with even higher support of 72 percent among low-income communities of color.
The principal coauthors of AB 2200 are Assembly Members Bryan (D-Los Angeles), Wendy Carrillo (D-Los Angeles), Connolly (D-San Rafael), Lee (D-San José), and Senators Cortese (D-San José) and Lena Gonzalez (D-Long Beach). AB 2200 is also coauthored by Assembly Members Friedman (D-Glendale), Haney (D-San Francisco), Jackson (D-Moreno Valley), McCarty (D-Sacramento), McKinnor (D-Inglewood), Ortega (D-San Leandro), Reyes (D-San Bernardino), Luz Rivas (D-San Fernando Valley), Santiago (D-Los Angeles), Ting (D-San Francisco), and Senators Becker (D-Menlo Park) and Laird (D-Santa Cruz).
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Assemblymember Ash Kalra represents California’s 25th Assembly District, which encompasses the majority of San José, including downt220own and open space areas in southeast Santa Clara County. He was first elected in 2016, becoming the first Indian American to serve in the California Legislature in state history, and was re-elected to his fourth term in 2022. Assemblymember Kalra is the Chair of the Committee on Judiciary and also serves as a member on the Housing and Community Development, Local Government, and Natural Resources committees.
California Nurses Association is the largest and fastest-growing union and professional association of direct-care nurses in the state, with more than 100,000 members in more than 200 facilities. CNA is an affiliate of National Nurses United, the largest organization of RNs in the country, with more than 225,000 members.