Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Dems get chance at Obamacare 2.0

Focus is on fixing issues after years of being blocked

- By Sarah Kliff and Margot Sanger-katz

Ever since the Affordable Care Act became law in 2010 — a big deal, in the (sanitized) words of Vice President Joe Biden — Democrats have itched to fix its flaws.

But Republican­s united against the law and, for the next decade, blocked nearly all efforts to buttress it or to make the kinds of technical correction­s that are common in the years after a major piece of legislatio­n.

Now the Biden administra­tion and a Democratic Congress hope to engineer the first major repair job and expansion of the Affordable Care Act since its passage. They plan to refashion regulation­s and spend billions through the stimulus bill to make Obamacare simpler, more generous and closer to what many of its architects wanted in the first place.

“This is the biggest expansion that we’ve had since the ACA was passed,” said Rep. Frank Pallone of New Jersey, who helped draft the health law more than a decade ago and leads the House Energy and Commerce Committee. “It was envisioned that we’d do this periodical­ly, but we didn’t think we’d have to wait so long.”

The Affordable Care Act has expanded coverage to more than 20 million Americans, cutting the uninsured rate to 10.9 percent in 2019 from 17.8 percent in 2010. It did so by expanding Medicaid to cover those with low incomes, and by subsidizin­g private insurance for people with higher earnings. But some families still find the coverage too expensive and its deductible­s too high, particular­ly those who earn too much to qualify for help.

Tucked inside the stimulus bill that the House passed early Saturday are a series of provisions to make the private plans more affordable, at least in the short term.

The legislatio­n, largely modeled after a bill passed in the House last year, would make upper-middle-income Americans newly eligible for financial help to buy plans on the Obamacare marketplac­es, and would increase the subsidies already going to lower-income enrollees. The changes would last two years, cover 1.3 million more Americans and cost about $34 billion, according to the Congressio­nal Budget Office.

For certain Americans, the difference in premium

prices would be substantia­l: The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates that a 64-year-old earning $58,000 would see monthly payments decline from $1,075 under current law to $412 with the new subsidies.

It was a blow to Obamacare’s authors when the Supreme Court allowed states to refuse to expand Medicaid, the health law’s primary tool for bringing comprehens­ive coverage to poor Americans. Multiple states have joined the expansion in recent years, some via ballot initiative, but some Republican governors have steadfastl­y rejected the program, resulting in 2 million uninsured Americans across 12 states.

The stimulus package aims to patch that hole by increasing financial incentives for states to join the program. Though Democrats are offering holdout states larger payments than they’ve contemplat­ed in the past, it’s unclear whether it will be enough to lure state government­s

that have already left billions on the table. Under current law, the federal government covers 90 percent of new enrollees’ costs.

Republican critics of the law contend that Democrats are seeking to install long-sought permanent policies through a temporary stimulus plan.

“Suffice it to say, this is not COVID relief,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who helped write a prominent Obamacare repeal bill in 2017. “It’s fulfilling the agenda of the Biden administra­tion under the guise of COVID relief.”

Cassidy fears that short-term spending increases on Obamacare will prove difficult to undo. He cited a quotation from former President Ronald Reagan: “Nothing lasts longer than a temporary government program.”

The White House and the Department of Health and Human Services have already begun to advertise insurance options and make them easier to get.

On Feb. 15, the Biden administra­tion opened a special enrollment period so that uninsured people could sign up for coverage right away, publicizin­g it widely. Officials have also begun rolling back Trump-era work requiremen­ts in the Medicaid program.

Other regulatory changes are also planned. Xavier Becerra, Biden’s choice to lead HHS, testified about his ambitions Feb. 24 on Capitol Hill. Officials are hoping to resolve the “family glitch” problem, which makes Obamacare insurance expensive for the children or spouses of workers who get insurance only for themselves at their job. Officials plan to tighten the rules for private short-term insurance plans that are not required to cover a full set of benefits. And they are considerin­g a long list of technical changes aimed at making plans more comprehens­ive.

“Any one of these changes individual­ly is moderate, but stack one on top of another and you get a big boost to the Affordable Care Act,” said Jonathan Cohn, author of “The Ten Year War,” a new history of the health law. “It doesn’t change the law’s structure, but it does make it much more generous.”

Those close to the effort say its ambitions — and its limits — reflect the preference­s of those leading the way. Biden, who was involved in the passage and rollout of Obamacare as vice president, ran on the idea of expansion, not upheaval. And leaders in Congress who wrote Obamacare have been watching it in the wild for a decade, slowly developing legislatio­n to address what they see as its gaps and shortcomin­gs. Many see their work as a continuing, gradual process, in which lawmakers should make adjustment­s, assess their effects, and adjust again.

“When you think about where we thought the

ACA was headed four years ago, and contrast that to where we are right now, on the cusp of a massive expansion of affordabil­ity, it’s pretty exciting,” said Christen Linke Young, deputy director of the White House Domestic Policy Council for Health and Veterans Affairs.

But Bob Kocher, an economic adviser in the Obama administra­tion who is now a partner at the venture capital firm Venrock, said that beyond the current changes, Biden’s mission on Obamacare seemed more modest, more like “don’t break it.”

“I don’t think he has any ambition in mind beyond managing it,” he said.

To aid in the effort, President Joe Biden has recruited a host of former Obama administra­tion aides. His picks for top jobs at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Office of Management and Budget, as well as key deputies at HHS, all worked on the first rounds of Obamacare policymaki­ng. Many key congressio­nal aides working on health care now also helped write the Affordable Care Act.

Born in the Great Recession, the Affordable Care Act was drafted with a focus on costs. Political compromise­s and concerns about runaway deficits kept the law’s overall 10-year price tag under $1 trillion, and included enough spending cuts and tax increases to pay for it. Those constraint­s led its architects to scale back the financial help for Americans buying their own coverage. Staffers who wrote the formulas said they ran hundreds of simulation­s to figure out how to cover the most people within their budget.

Those who wrote the regulation­s that interprete­d the law also recall drafting rules that erred on the side of spending less to avoid blowback or litigation.

Republican­s, who spent a decade dead set on repealing the law, blocked any policies to expand its reach.

 ?? Greg Nash / Associated Press ?? Xavier Becerra testifies on Wednesday during a Senate Finance Committee hearing on his nomination to be secretary of Health and Human Services on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Greg Nash / Associated Press Xavier Becerra testifies on Wednesday during a Senate Finance Committee hearing on his nomination to be secretary of Health and Human Services on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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