Doctor with stethoscope isolated on white
Doctor with stethoscope isolated on white Credit: Zoonar/N.Okhitin

The rising cost of healthcare continues to be a primary issue in modern America, and many people feel that the federal and state governments are not doing enough to combat the problem.

In response, organizations, communities and public officials across New England are working toward a solution of their own: pushing for a single-payer healthcare system, town-by-town.

The problem

According to a University of Massachusetts Amherst economics expert, healthcare in America costs too much for the average person.

According to a University of Massachusetts Amherst economics expert, healthcare in America costs too much for the average person. โ€œThe United States, as a country, consistently underperforms comparable countries in both health outcomes and the cost of care,โ€ said Auden Cote-Lโ€™Heureux, a UMass Amherst graduate who is now a masterโ€™s student in economics at the University of Bonn in Germany, in an interview with the Gazette. โ€œIf you look at comparable countries, we pay way more per capita for healthcare, and we have worse health outcomes, including lower life expectancy.โ€

In 2024, for example, the United States spent nearly $15,000 per person on healthcare, resulting in an average life expectancy of about 79 years, according to the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker. By comparison, Germany, considered a global leader in healthcare, spent around $9,400 per capita in 2024, with an average life expectancy of 81 years. The United Kingdom, where the average life expectancy is also 81 years, spent less than $7,000 per person.

At a Joint Committee on Ways and Means in March, the rising cost of healthcare became the focal point of a legislative hearing. Educators, teachers’ unions and school administrators pleaded with lawmakers for help. At that hearing, Sen. Jacob Oliveira, D-Ludlow, said, โ€œThe rising cost of healthcare [is] crippling our cities and towns. Itโ€™s crippling our state.โ€ Oliveira noted that while the state provides extra dollars for many expenses that districts struggle to fund, there is no such account to help pay for rising healthcare costs stemming from labor negotiations.

Against this backdrop โ€” and the federal governmentโ€™s failure to extend Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies โ€” individual communities in Massachusetts are now formally supporting a single-payer healthcare system. At least 23 municipal councils across the state, including including Springfield, Northampton and all of Barnstable County, have passed resolutions supporting an โ€œAct Establishing Medicare for Allโ€ in the state Legislature. These communities represent approximately half a million residents.

In addition to Northampton in 2025, three other cities in Hampshire County have passed similar resolutions, including Amherst in 2023, Easthampton earlier this year, and South Hadley in 2019.

โ€œThe cost of health insurance is kind of insane. In the last few years since I’ve been on council, it’s gone up about 10% per year for each city employee that’s covered,โ€ said Deborah Klemer, vice president of the Northampton City Council, in an interview with the Gazette. โ€œIt’s just adding so much cost to our budgets.โ€

Klemer worked in the healthcare system for years, and has witnessed firsthand the shifting trajectory of healthcare costs in America.

โ€œWhen I first started working in radiology in 1983, I had great healthcare. No copays. I just went to a doctor and got covered and got everything paid,โ€ Klemer said. โ€œI remember in the 90s, it started changing, and there were copays and less care. It got worse and worse … You have to jump through all these hoops, and you know you’re not getting good care either for the money you pay for health insurance.โ€

Klemer notes that employer-based health insurance often leaves people feeling stuck in jobs they didnโ€™t enjoy, arguing that a single-payer healthcare system would give people more freedom to pursue work they are passionate about without worrying about losing coverage.

The idea of implementing single-payer healthcare โ€œdoes seem to be gaining momentum, and I think now we’re at this tipping point where it’s just so unaffordable for so many, and people are starting to wake up about it and fight for it,โ€ Klemer said.

Further north, the city of Greenfield in Franklin County, which passed its single-payer resolution in 2025, is also experiencing the harsh economic effects of rising healthcare costs.

The resolution was proposed by the Greenfield Human Rights Commission, โ€œbecause of the belief that healthcare is a universal human right and need for people,โ€ said council President Lora Wondolowski.

โ€œIf you look at Greenfield, our health insurance costs went up by more than 15% last fiscal year. The next fiscal year, the proposed increase was another 19%. It’s crippling our town budget,โ€ Wondolowski said. She says a single-payer system โ€œwould decrease our costs by like $6 million.โ€

Wondolowski expressed a similar sentiment to Klemer, saying that the momentum for establishing a single-payer system in Massachusetts โ€œgives me hope. Frankly, communities all across this area and across the state are facing huge health insurance costs at the same time as people are getting kicked off of insurance.โ€

Affordable healthcare is nonpartisan

In addition to broad community support, establishing a single-payer healthcare system is popular on the individual level, even in traditionally conservative districts. In 2024, the Massachusetts Campaign for Single Payer Health Care, known as Mass-Care, ran a nonbinding public policy question in 11 districts.

The measure won in all 11 districts with an average “Yes” vote of 64%. In two of the districts โ€” the 3rd Hampden and 4th Hampden โ€” Medicare for All won even as the districts voted for Donald Trump, Mass-Care notes.

โ€œWe ran the ballot question in (Nicholas) Boldygaโ€™s district. Heโ€™s a Republican, heโ€™s MAGA. We won in the 50s when we ran it in those kinds of districts,โ€ Jon Weissman, a member of Mass-Careโ€™s board of directors serving western Massachusetts, said in an interview with the Gazette.

โ€œThe average (support) over the years is two-thirds. I say to myself, โ€˜two-thirds, oh that’s kind of low,โ€™ because I’m used to what we got in Amherst, or what we got in Leverett, or even in Granby, certainly in Northampton, where they’re up in the 70s and 80s,โ€ Weissman continued.

Some proponents of a single-payer healthcare have argued for a regional system modeled after the European drug-price-negotiation system. Such regional healthcare coalitions are not novel to the United States; in 2025, California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii formed the West Coast Health Alliance to โ€œuphold the integrity of effective public health strategies,โ€ independently from the CDC.

According to an official with Maine AllCare โ€” an organization advocating for publicly-funded healthcare coverage in Maine โ€” regionalization of the single-payer effort could prevent smaller states from being taken advantage of by insurance companies and medicine suppliers. The organization contends that regional cooperation should initially focus on groups of smaller states working together to negotiate and purchase prescription drugs. He added that broader interstate regulation of healthcare and financial systems would likely be too complex to manage.

Opponents make case

Despite the positive economic outcomes of implementing a single-payer healthcare system demonstrated by Mass-Careโ€™s economic analysis, some institutions remain opposed to the idea.

In a March interview with the Gazette, Bill Rennie, senior vice president of the Retailers Association of Massachusetts, said the increased tax rates necessitated by such a system โ€œwould have a very devastating, kind of killing, effect on the economy, and it would be something that would incentivize businesses and employees to bleed the state.โ€

Rennie identified drug providers, rather than insurers, as a major factor in rising healthcare prices. โ€œCost is still the primary concern that we really need to try and get a hold of,โ€ Rennie said. โ€œAnd from our point of view, a lot of itโ€™s on market control of certain providers.โ€

Wondolowski identified insurers as a significant part of the problem, saying that โ€œwe have an insurance lobby that’s really strong in the state, and so there’s a lot of money and lobbying that comes from the insurance industry.โ€

In a 2025 statement to the State House News Service, Lora Pellegrini, CEO of the Massachusetts Association of Health Plans, which represents insurers, said that โ€œMandating a one-size-fits-all, government-run health care system would eliminate meaningful healthcare choices for patients and require dramatic tax increases on residents and employers across the Commonwealth.โ€

Pellegrini also identified providers as a core issue, stating that implementing a single-payer system would โ€œdivert attention from the urgent work needed to control the actual drivers of rising health care costs, namely, unchecked provider prices and the skyrocketing cost of prescription drugs.โ€

Klemer said that wealthy people are insulated from the problems plaguing the healthcare system.

โ€œRich people never have to worry about any of this. They can get supplemental and all the fancy stuff, but the most needy people are always the ones that get hurt,โ€ Klemer said.

Massachusetts at vanguard

Many Bay Staters remember the passage of โ€œRomneycareโ€ 20 years ago, which provided a strong model for the federal ACA of 2010. Even though Romneycare helped provide health insurance to nearly every person in the state, some people say it wasn’t enough.

According to Weissman, the constant Republican attacks on the ACA precluded further progress in reforming the healthcare system.

โ€œEvery session of Congress, you’re defending it against the right wing,โ€ Weissman said. โ€œIt just means everyone in the legislature, in Massachusetts in particular and in Congress especially, they get to say, โ€˜Oh, we can’t touch this thing. We have to defend it as is.โ€™โ€

โ€œWe’re not asking them to tinker with it or touch it or improve it at all. We’re talking about going back to the Medicare system and improving that,โ€ Weissman said. โ€œWe never said we were working to improve the ACA. We were working to improve Medicare.โ€

โ€œNo matter how you think you’re going to pass single-payer, you have to have the largest grassroots movement Massachusetts has ever experienced,โ€ Weissman said. โ€œYou can propose halfway measures โ€” the public option for instance โ€” but in order to get that out of this legislature, you need the same size movement that you need for the whole shebang. So why not just go for the whole shebang?โ€

The current Massachusetts single-payer bill, co-sponsored by Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa, D-Northampton, is still in the Joint Committee on Health Care Financing. The reporting date was extended to June 15.

โ€œWe are working with the Committee to see if we can find a path forward,โ€ Sabadosa said in an email. โ€œI’m keeping my fingers crossed.โ€