How States Are Responding to Healthcare Reform Law

Many U.S. states are worried that the healthcare overhaul plan approved by the U.S. House of Representatives will usurp their sovereignty and impose more spending on their already stretched budgets.

Republican attorneys general in at least 12 states announced on Monday that lawsuits will be filed to stop the federal government from overstepping its constitutional powers.

The federal plan provides funding to help states through the overhaul of the healthcare industry, which would include requiring Americans to have health insurance and push more people into the Medicaid system for the poor that states and the U.S. government administer.

In addition to lawsuits, many states are trying to pass their own laws and constitutional amendments to keep health insurance optional. Below are some of the steps they are taking:

States not considering legislative responses include Illinois, North Carolina, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, Maine and Massachusetts. Also, there are no measures in Montana, Nevada, Oregon and Texas as there are no regular legislative sessions in these states in 2010.

SOURCES: National Conference of State Legislatures, governors’ and attorneys generals’ offices, media notices.

(Reporting by Lisa Lambert, Jim Christie in San Francisco, Joan Gralla in New York, Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)