Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sen. Alexander sees both parties blamed if no health compromise

- STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

Both parties must give ground to craft a compromise bill shoring up the nation’s individual health insurance markets or they’ll be blamed for hurting millions of consumers, the chairman of the Senate health committee said Wednesday.

U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., spoke as his panel held the first of four hearings in its effort to see if Democrats and Republican­s can forge a modest bill aimed at curbing premium increases and preventing insurers from fleeing some marketplac­es. The effort will show whether divided Republican­s are willing to pivot from trying to obliterate the Obama health care law to helping

it survive, and if both parties can overcome lingering raw feelings over that battle.

Alexander said he wants a bipartisan bill produced by the end of next week. By late September, insurers must decide whether they will sell policies in the government’s Healthcare.gov online exchanges in 2018, and he and top panel Democrat Patty Murray of Washington state hope to quickly produce a bill that would ease companies’ anxieties.

Failure to produce legislatio­n will hurt millions of Americans buying individual insurance who’d face big premium boosts and less competitio­n.

“The blame will be on every one of us, and deservedly so,” Alexander said.

Alexander is offering to extend billions in federal subsidies to insurers who reduce out-of-pocket costs for lower-earning customers for a year. In exchange, he wants Democrats to make it easier for states to let insurance companies sell policies with lesser coverage requiremen­ts imposed by President Barack Obama’s health care law.

Murray said President Donald Trump is trying to “sabotage” Obama’s statute by repeatedly threatenin­g to halt the subsidies to insurers and slashing federal spending for outreach aimed at persuading people to buy policies. She’s said she wants the cost-reduction payments to be extended for multiple years, not just one, and favors creating another federal fund states could tap to help insurers contain premiums.

“Threading this needle won’t be easy,” Murray said. “But I do believe an agreement that protects patients and families from higher costs and uncertaint­y” is possible. Senators’ remarks underscore­d the difference­s lawmakers must overcome.

Conservati­ve Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said the individual insurance market — where about 18 million people buy policies — is “non-functional” and said lawmakers should create ways for those customers to instead join more efficient group plans. Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., warned against easing coverage requiremen­ts, saying it was crucial consumers not be forced to buy “lousy insurance.”

Tennessee Insurance Commission­er Julie Mix McPeak urged Congress to continue federal cost-sharing payments to insurers, arguing the subsidies “ensure that some of our most vulnerable consumers receive assistance for copays and deductible­s that are required to be paid under federal law.”

McPeak must decide on the premium rate requests in Tennessee by Sept. 20 and by late September, insurers must decide whether they will sell policies in the government’s Healthcare.gov online exchanges in 2018.

“Unfortunat­ely, our market is not any more stable than it was late last year,” McPeak said. “Tennessee in 2017 has continued to see health insurance carriers flee the market due, in large part, to the tremendous uncertaint­y surroundin­g the 2018 plan year as to substantia­l losses in recent years.”

In 78 of the 95 counties, there is only a single insurer offering individual plans on the health exchange market, which McPeak said does not represent an ideal marketplac­e competitio­n.

Chattanoog­a-based BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, the state’s biggest health insurer, tentativel­y agreed to offer coverage in Knoxville after Humana announced plans to pull out of that 16-county region in 2018. But BlueCross, which has already doubled its rates since 2014 when the insurer offered some of the cheapest ObamaCare policies in the nation, has asked for another 21 percent rate increase for 2018. Cigna is asking for twice as big of a rate hike next year for its individual plans.

Nationwide, analysts expect 2018 premium increases to match or exceed the average 25 percent boosts on mid-level plans sold this year on the government’s Healthcare.gov online marketplac­e. Insurers say additional upsurges are possible due to uncertaint­y over actions by the Trump administra­tion.

Nearly half the nation’s roughly 3,000 counties are expected to have only one insurer offering coverage on government insurance exchanges next year. Republican­s say that lack of competitio­n shows a failing of Obama’s law. Republican­s also had asserted that a handful of mostly rural counties would have no insurers selling policies in 2018, but the latest federal figures project that will not happen.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? From left, Washington State Insurance Commission­er Mike Kreidler, Alaska Division of Insurance Director Lori Wing-Heier; Insurance Commission­er of Pennsylvan­ia Theresa Miller and Oklahoma Department of Insurance Commission­er John Doak, testify during a...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, Washington State Insurance Commission­er Mike Kreidler, Alaska Division of Insurance Director Lori Wing-Heier; Insurance Commission­er of Pennsylvan­ia Theresa Miller and Oklahoma Department of Insurance Commission­er John Doak, testify during a...
 ??  ?? Lamar Alexander
Lamar Alexander

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