With President Obama’s much-anticipated health care speech to Congress on the horizon, the head of the Senate Finance Committee has rolled out a new proposal for a compromise bill, the New York Times reports. Sen. Max Baucus’ plan would offer scaled-down coverage to some, and, to cover the $880 billion price tag for expanded insurance,  charge fees to insurance companies, labs, and medical device makers, rather than asking for give-backs from individuals.
                                    
                                    
                                
                                
                             
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                                
                                
                                    
                                        Under the plan, people 25 and under would be eligible for cheaper insurance for catastrophic illnesses only, and millions of lower-income people who don’t currently qualify for Medicaid would get a scaled-down version of the coverage. The Finance Committee’s bill, which doesn’t include a public option, likely has the best chance of getting through the Senate—but four other committees from both houses already have versions of legislation on the table.