Chattanooga Times Free Press

Some say it will hurt 2 million on Medicaid Tennessee vets say proposed overhaul is ‘un-American’

- BY JAKE LOWARY USA TODAY NETWORK-TENNESSEE

On the day Senate Republican­s unveiled their health care bill, some military veterans said what the GOP rolled out is “un-American.”

Veterans from across Tennessee said they’re speaking out on behalf of 2 million veterans nationwide who they think will lose or see reduced health care coverage because of the move by Congress to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare.

Led by 36-year retired Marine Corps veteran Lt. Gen. John Castellaw, who lives in rural Crockett County in West Tennessee, he and others said the proposed health care bill would potentiall­y boot millions of veterans off health care plans that many depend on to supplement coverage or just give them access to doctors.

He said many veterans are not eligible for care through the Department of Veterans Affairs, and sometimes VA benefits don’t fully cover the costs of health care.

Castellaw’s grandfathe­r, a World War I veteran, used Medicaid near the end of his life because the VA wouldn’t cover all of his medical needs, he said. One in 10 veterans uses Medicaid, he said.

“This is a dishonor to those who have served,” said Castellaw, who said he and other veterans “reject”

the plan released by the Senate.

Castellaw, flanked by former Marine and Nashville attorney Bob Tuke, who led a failed bid for U.S. Senate, and Kelly Gregory, an Air Force veteran, gathered in front of the VA hospital in Nashville and urged vets across Tennessee and elsewhere to call Sens. Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker and ask they vote against the bill.

Gregory, of Hendersonv­ille, said her family has lived in Tennessee for 200 years and has served in the military during every major war. After her service, Gregory developed stage 4 breast cancer, which has metastasiz­ed to her spine.

She gets treated because of Medicaid, and said the bill would end that.

“If [you] pass this, I will die,” she said.

Gregory said she “glanced” at the bill Thursday morning and said it “would end Medicaid as we know it in this country.”

“I want you to tell [senators] that you don’t want to live in a country that lets people die because they don’t have enough money to pay for [prescripti­on] drugs, to pay for chemothera­py,” she said.

She pulled out a patch she wore as an airman, which had an image of the U.S. Capitol. Her unit was responsibl­e, in part, for protecting the Capitol.

“I need the people who work in this building to hear me, to treat me like a person who matters,” she said.

In a statement Alexander defended the legislatio­n, and specifical­ly the Medicaid provisions.

“Let me repeat: it makes no change in the law protecting people with pre-existing conditions, no change in Medicare benefits, and increases funding for Medicaid — that’s TennCare — at the rate of inflation,” he said in the statement.

Corker said in his statement he was open to hearing the concerns of “stakeholde­rs.”

“I will take time to fully review the legislativ­e text and seek input from a wide range of stakeholde­rs across our state,” he said. “I will make a final decision based on whether this legislatio­n, on the whole, is better than what is in place today.”

An assessment from the Congressio­nal Budget Office indicated the revised House version would reduce the number of Americans getting health care by about 23 million.

A CBO assessment for the Senate version is expected in the coming days.

Veterans as a group have been mostly silent about the health care debate as it has raged in Washington and drawn numerous protests and rallies across the state and nation.

Thursday’s rain-soaked news conference was the first significan­t public display of opposition by Tennessee veterans.

Contact Jake Lowary at

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