Roundtable on Healthcare For Women-Owned Businesses

Roundtable on Access to Affordable Health Coverage by Women-Owned Businesses

National Women’s Business Council

First published March 2003

Women business owners are growing increasingly concerned about the difficulty of securing affordable health care coverage for employees. It is estimated that 60% of the 41 million uninsured Americans reside in families with members employed by small businesses. The NWBC estimates that 7.3 million of the uninsured are employees or families of employees of the 9.1 million women-owned firms in the U.S.

The National Women’s Business Council (NWBC) recognizes the need for more information about this critical issue and has conducted an analysis of current research and the alternative solutions that have been proposed. This report, “Access to Affordable Health Coverage for Women-Owned Businesses: A Summary of Key Issues and Policy Options,” is now available at the NWBC’s Web site, www.nwbc.gov (or by clicking http://www.nwbc.gov/ResearchPublications/listReports.html ).

In response to the feedback and input received from women business owners across the country, the NWBC also convened a Roundtable discussion in February to hear from those who are directly affected by this problem. The Roundtable brought together women business owners, business association leaders, issue experts, and public policymakers from across the U.S. to discuss not only the concerns involved in providing affordable health care coverage but also the most effective solutions that can be considered in the 108th Congress. A complete transcript of this event is now available at the NWBC’s website, www.nwbc.gov (or by clicking http://www.nwbc.gov/ResearchPublications/listReports.html ). The transcript includes testimony from Secretary of Labor Elaine L. Chao, Administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration Hector Barreto, and Representative Donald Manzullo, Chair of the House Committee on Small Business.

“We are pleased to announce the publication of these two reports. We hope that they help to increase awareness among the general public and policymakers about the growing concern over this issue within the women’s business owner community,” said Marilyn Carlson Nelson, Chairman and CEO of Carlson Companies and Chair of the National Women’s Business Council. “The problem of the uninsured is one with many adverse and wide-reaching effects that touch us all in one way or another.”

The NWBC supports proposals now under consideration to establish Association Health Plans as one option for small businesses to access affordable health insurance. Association Health Plans allow professional associations to offer lower cost insurance nationwide to their membership.

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