OPINION: Health care reform makes life easier for uninsured students

By Matt GomezThe Guardsman

Health care was reformed last  month, and while the effects may not yet be evident, benefits for  students could be great in the future.

Although this reform does  not bring the country closer to a universal, single-payer system or  include a public option, it will make necessary changes to what many  consider a corrupt handling of people’s health.

Children of  policyholders will now be allowed to stay covered under their parents’  insurance plan until the age of 26. This means there will be less of a  financial burden for those who may have been told not to get sick  because they don’t have insurance.

It also means, students will  be able to focus more on school if they aren’t constantly concerned with  either paying for their own insurance or risking their life by having  none. When jobs are scarce and school alone is hard to pay for, one less  bill, or the assurance of access to medical care, is appreciated.

The  bill was also bundled with reform that concerns the student loan  program. Instead of private banks lending government loans to students,  the government itself will loan the money, essentially eliminating the  middle man who wasn’t necessary in the first place.

This will  save taxpayers some $68 billion. President Obama plans to re-invest the  savings into education. His re-investment will increase Pell Grants,  help students pay off loans and upgrade community colleges.

According  to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, this reform will cost  about $950 billion over the next decade, but will lower federal deficits  by $148 billion.  It will also extend coverage to 32 million previously  uninsured people.

Republicans in office, who hope to see the  reform fail, are calling this bill the Democrats’ Waterloo.

Democrats,  of course, see this as their greatest victory in a long time.

Each  side hopes to prevail, but the victory of this reform is owed to the  people of this country - the people whom both Republican and Democratic  congressman are elected to represent.

The U.S. is not the  superpower it once was and it will take time to regain that status. That  can’t be achieved by constant bickering between two parties who dislike  each other solely because they hold different ideals.

The  Democrats compromised a lot for this bill to become reality. Now that it  is, both parties need to take every possible step to see this  opportunity is not wasted because some grown-ups in Washington want to  be able to say, “I told you so.” $1 trillion is still $1 trillion.

This  bill could be a Waterloo or a victory, it all depends on how the  situation is handled. This reform isn’t a revolution and it still hasn’t  granted anyone anything, but it does present an opportunity with the  potential to change the lives of many citizens of this country.