Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sign-ups show health law’s staying power in Trump era

- BY RICARDO ALONSOZALD­IVAR

WASHINGTON — A deadline burst of sign-ups after a tumultuous year for the Obama health law has revealed continued demand for the program’s subsidized individual health plans. But the Affordable Care Act’s troubles aren’t over.

On the plus side for the overhaul, official numbers showed a sizable share of first-time customers, 36 percent, were among those rushing to finish HealthCare.gov applicatio­ns in the run-up to Friday’s enrollment deadline.

“People need health care, that is plain and simple,” said Kevin Watkins of Florence, Ala. A self-employed consultant helping small businesses sell online, Watkins re-enrolled for 2018. He’ll pay less than $100 a month after subsidies.

Final national enrollment numbers aren’t expected until next year because some states running their own insurance websites extended sign-ups to Jan. 31. States in charge of their own programs are striving to equal last year’s enrollment.

Enrollment in the 39 states served by HealthCare.gov is expected to be lower, which could intensify criticism of the Trump administra­tion’s decision to cut the federal sign-up season in half. The administra­tion has extended the deadline for some people to finish their health insurance: Callers to the HealthCare.gov service center Saturday morning got a recorded message saying “don’t worry” — if they had left their phone number before the deadline, they will get a return call and still can enroll for 2018.

Nationally, 12.2 million people had enrolled by the end of the Obama administra­tion’s final sign-up period. Under Trump, there could be 1 million to 2 million fewer sign-ups, said Larry Levitt of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

Still, it was only a year ago that the health law seemed headed for oblivion as Donald Trump swept into the White House with a Republican-controlled Congress. Now its full repeal seems to be off the table. But the program for people who don’t have job-based coverage faces the same old challenges of high premiums and declining insurer participat­ion, along with some new ones.

One new challenge comes from the GOP tax bill, which repeals the law’s requiremen­t that people have health insurance or risk fines.

Parallel to that, the administra­tion is preparing to issue rules facilitati­ng the sale of lower-cost insurance plans that will deliver less than the law’s “essential” benefits package.

Put the combinatio­n together and experts say it will draw healthy customers away from already shaky ACA insurance markets, raising premiums for those left behind and giving insurers new reasons to drop out.

The law’s supporters were still upbeat as the shortened open enrollment season in most states wound down.

“What we are seeing is that this insurance is meeting people’s needs and it is affordable if you receive financial assistance,” said Elizabeth Colvin of Foundation Communitie­s, a nonprofit in Austin, Texas, that helps low-income people enroll. “So much of the story has been telling people that the ACA is not working. That’s not the reality in central Texas.”

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