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Buerkle signs up to fight medical device tax

A tax on medical devices sold in the U.S. starts in 2013.
Randy Cox
/
via Flickr
A tax on medical devices sold in the U.S. starts in 2013.

Republican Congresswoman Ann Marie Buerkle is co-sponsoring a bill to remove a medical device tax from the new health care law.

The tax is part of the funding solution that Congress rigged up to pay for healthcare overhaul. If the tax stands, it'll kick in starting in 2013.

AdvaMed, the medical device-lobbying group, has a boilerplate statement saying that it supports the removal of the tax, but isn’t aggressively pushing for the legislation. It’s waiting to see if Congress makes any other changes to the law.

Republican Erik Paulsen fromMinnesota introduced the legislation. In the senate, Utah's Orin Hatch is introducing a companion bill. Buerkle, who represents Syracuse and parts of Rochester, says the bill sends a good message to device makers, that:

“We’re not going to get the way of your success. We don’t want to hurt your business, and we’ll make changes to this law to allow you to proceed without raising taxes on you." 

Buerkle favors an outright repeal of the entire health overhaul law, but says she'll go after the bits she finds most offensive with measures like the device tax bill.

Meanwhile device makers, like Welch Allyn from Skaneateles, and ConMed from Utica, are working on ways to absorb the tax, which could include passing the cost on to customers, like hospitals and health clinics.

Innovation Trail alumnus Ryan Morden is originally from Seattle. He graduated from the University of Washington with a bachelor's in journalism, minoring in political science and Scandinavian studies. Morden was Morning Edition producer and reporter at WRVO before moving over to the Innovation Trail project. Before landing at WRVO, Morden covered the Washington State legislature as a correspondent for Northwest News Network (N3), a group of nine NPR affiliates in the northwest.