No one struggling to pay rent can meet a $12,000 deductible [View all]
https://vtdigger.org/2026/07/14/opinon-no-one-struggling-to-pay-rent-can-meet-a-12000-deductible/
Walt Carpenter
The people designing health insurance plans have lost touch with a basic fact: For many Vermonters, healthcare is a luxury they can't afford.
Walt Carpenter has been a long-time advocate for healthcare reform in Vermont. His messages ring true across this country.
I was glad to see that Blue Cross Blue Shield canceled its proposed "Vermont Basic" health plans. The debate over this proposal showed just how completely disconnected the people designing these plans and our healthcare system have become from the lives of ordinary Vermonters.
To call a plan with an $11,800 deductible before the insurance would bother to kick in an "affordable option" exists only in a policy fantasy bubble. An individual or a family struggling to pay rent, buy groceries and keep up with utility bills in our very high-cost, low-wage society doesn't suddenly gain access to healthcare just because their monthly premium might drop by a few dollars. They simply trade one unaffordable bill for another.
When people face deductibles this large, they don't shop for healthcare -- another abomination of our high-cost culture -- they avoid it altogether. They skip doctor's visits, delay tests and ration medications until a minor problem becomes a medical crisis. That isn't insurance. It's medical roulette.
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Too many healthcare decisions are made by people who never have to choose between paying the rent or seeing a doctor. Vermonters need affordable access to care through a universal publicly funded system, not the illusion of affordability created by lower premiums paired with crushing deductibles.
Until our policymakers and our so-called business leaders stop living inside this fantasy bubble and start listening to the people forced to live with these plans, healthcare will always look affordable in the executive suites and completely out of reach in real life.