Kerry Burns of Coventry, R.I., left, confers with Elizabeth Edwards, senior fellow, Center for American Progress, and wife of former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, as they testified on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.
Harry Hamburg, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A Rhode Island woman urged senators Tuesday to ease bankruptcy rules for people devastated by medical debt, as she described the pain of losing a child and going broke from his health care bills.
The frightful experience of Kerry Burns, of Coventry, R.I., raised a crucial question of bankruptcy law: should people going broke due to high medical bills get a break over those bankrupted by divorce or high credit card bills?
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., chaired the Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing on his bill to carve out an exception for people whose medical bills were the main cause of their financial distress.
Whitehouse's approach was backed by Elizabeth Edwards, a cancer patient and wife of former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina. Representatives of conservative think tanks argued no special status was justified.
Edwards, who is married to the former Democratic senator and presidential candidate, praised Whitehouse's plan as a way to give medical debtors "a less burdensome, less catastrophic bankruptcy option that recognizes the unique circumstances that have driven them to bankruptcy."
She is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.
Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., said he disagreed with a major provision of Whitehouse's bill: elimination of an income-related test for medical debtors only. The test currently is required to determine if someone is qualified for a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which allows the debtor to get a fresh start by wiping out all debts.
Burns, however, was the single witness who expressed the problem by recounting her horrific experience.
The Rhode Island social worker, with a master's degree, said she and her husband were not among the uninsured. They lost everything, even though insurance covered the majority of nearly $5 million in treatments for her son Finnegan, who was hospitalized in intensive care for 13 months before he died last March. Finnegan Burns, who lived to be only 4<0x00BD>, had cystic fibrosis.
During his illness, Burns and her husband took leave from their jobs as debts piled up. They cashed in retirement funds, sold belongings including their second car, and received upward of 30 calls a day from creditors
who called their cell phones while they were with Finnegan in the intensive care unit.
Burns and her husband kept up mortgage payments through 10 months of hospitalization, but were no longer able to pay starting last January. Then came the bankruptcy filing.
- Looking for a hotel? See the best and worst...
- Many insurance plans fall short of law
- KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Selling adventure: How Backcountry.com's CEO...
- Couple can't retire because of $116,000 in...
- Field of solar energy dishes to sprout at...
- Valerie Phillips: Fond farewell to Morgan...
- Studies try to find why poorer people...
28 - KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
19 - Couple can't retire because of $116,000...
19 - House GOP plans summer tax cut vote
7 - OIl prices drop; will gas follow?
5 - Self consumption is considered greedy,...
3 - Eagle Gate Tower renamed World Trade...
3 - Home prices dropped 2.6 percent in year...
2






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments