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The latest on the Key Bridge collapse, New York puts forth legislation to get clean energy projects on the grid and Wisconsin and other states join a federal summer food program to help feed kids across the country.

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Republicans float conspiracy theories on the collapse of Baltimore's Key Bridge, South Carolina's congressional elections will use a map ruled unconstitutional, and the Senate schedules an impeachment trial for Homeland Secretary Mayorkas.

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Historic wildfires could create housing and health issues for rural Texans, a Kentucky program helps prison parolees start a new life, and descendants of Nicodemus, Kansas celebrate the Black settlers who journeyed across the 1870s plains seeking self-governance.

Report Shows Ohio's Richest Would Benefit from GOP Health Plan

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Thursday, June 22, 2017   

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio's millionaires could see an average tax cut of close to $27,000 a year if the American Health Care Act (AHCA) becomes law, according to new analysis.

Those tax cuts would be paid for in part by removing nearly 540,000 Ohioans from health insurance rolls.

Alan Essig, executive director of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, says data from the Congressional Budget Office confirms that the health bill that cleared the U.S. House is less about health policy than tax breaks for the top 3 percent of U.S. earners.

"The end result is 23 million people losing health care coverage,” Essig stresses. “The reason for that is to pay for $660 billion worth of tax cuts that overwhelmingly go to the wealthiest Americans."

Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), low and moderate income Americans have been able to get coverage due to a tax on individuals making more than $200,000 a year, or $250,000 for couples filing jointly.

Supporters of the AHCA say cuts to Medicaid and reversing the program's expansion would reduce the federal deficit and lower health care costs.

Essig says the majority of Medicaid recipients who could be impacted by cuts would be the elderly, people with disabilities, pregnant women and children.

He adds that insurance premiums for an average 64-year-old with an income of $27,000 would rise from $1,700 to more than $16,000 a year.

Essig warns that bankruptcies due to medical bills, which have gone down under the ACA, or Obamacare, could be back on the rise.

"Real people will end up losing their health care coverage, and that will impact people's health, people's lives and people's bank books,” he states. “We're going to be going back to where we were, which I don't think is where anyone wants to go."

The U.S. Senate has not yet made its version of the health bill public, and has promised to bring it to a vote before the July recess.





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