Chattanooga Times Free Press

A decade in, Georgia Affordable Care Act signups reach record high

- BY ARIEL HART

As the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance marketplac­e enters its 10th year, rocketing numbers of Georgians are using it to get insured. With open enrollment for 2023 coverage ending Sunday, Jan. 15, a record of more than 846,000 Georgians have already enrolled.

The marketplac­e’s popularity is driven partly by rising federal subsidies for those with higher incomes, advertisin­g and enrollment assistance. The federal program originally known as Obamacare, once came close to repeal but now accounts for an important fraction of Georgia’s insurance market.

The numbers enrolled for 2023 are still being counted, but could reach 1 million insured Georgians by the time open enrollment closes Sunday at midnight. If it does, approximat­ely 1/10th of the state’s population would be obtaining insurance through the marketplac­e.

In 2021, the last year for which a breakdown is available, Georgia’s 10.5 million residents got health insurance most often through their employers, but also through the ACA marketplac­e. Another 227,000 were insured through the military, 1.3 million had Medicare and 1.8 million, mostly children, had Medicaid. About 1.3 million had no insurance.

“It’s been life changing for people,” said Kirk Lyman-Barner, an insurance agent who sells large numbers of ACA plans at an agency in Sumter County.

Cherisse Fletcher, 49, signed up for an ACA plan for the first time this year, using Lyman- Barner as her agent. She credits many things that pushed her to buy the coverage: the federal website healthcare.gov for referring her to the right agent when she had trouble enrolling on her own; her son who had heard about healthcare.gov and referred her; and the robust, affordable coverage that is now available through higher federal subsidies.

“It was very easy; it was smooth,” Fletcher said. “It’s been a blessing for me.”

States nationwide are seeing big increases in signups for ACA plans last year and this year. As a large part of the reason, experts credit subsidies that the Biden administra­tion pushed as part of federal pandemic legislatio­n. Those subsidies attacked a major problem with ACA plans: before then, Anyone who made more than 400% of the federal poverty level, or about $111,000per year for a family of four, had to pay the whopping full price set by the insurance company.

The Biden legislatio­n sets limits on the percent of their income a policyhold­er has to pay, however.

An annual income of $100,000 per year may seem like a lot of money, “But if you’re paying for a full family’s premium that could be several thousand dollars a month,” said Cynthia Cox, vice president of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a research institute on health care.

The subsidies also helped people near the poverty line, she said, who previously had to pay out of pocket amounts that might seem negligible to middleclas­s people but could be unaffordab­le to the lowest income policyhold­ers. “Two percent of their income — that is still something,” Cox said.

In 2022, Georgia’s average monthly premium after subsidies was $98 and some may qualify for free coverage.

The extra subsidies will sunset in 2025 unless Congress renews them.

THE GEORGIA FACTOR

State policies have influence too. In Georgia, that’s been complicate­d for the ACA.

Republican­s across the board opposed the ACA, and Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia was no different. Kemp has since devised alternate plans.

Kemp worked with the Trump administra­tion to devise a plan that would block Georgians from ever shopping on the federal ACA website, healthcare.gov. Instead, they would be sent to a state website that in turn offers them individual insurance companies’ and other websites. The plan has been halted by the Biden administra­tion but could still go through.

The main difference between the system Kemp wants and what healthcare.gov does, is that the website Kemp wanted to create doesn’t show people plans they can compare.

The state website does include a link to a private website that is supposed to allow people to shop plans, W3ll.com, but a reporter that attempted to use it ran into a glitch and was blocked.

Healthcare.gov’s signal feature is allowing people to contrast and compare plans. A shopper inputs their income, age and a couple other pieces of informatio­n, and is shown the different plans they are eligible for, all at once. Many people find healthcare.gov clunky. Agents often instead use healthsher­pa.com, a private website that provides an easier interface for the same informatio­n.

George Kalogeropo­ulos, CEO of HealthSher­pa, said that enrollment on healthsher­pa.com this year just for Georgia has surged from 120,700 signups last year to 215,700 signups for 2023, and the year’s not over.

Still, the Kemp administra­tion is taking credit.

“Any time more Georgians are signing up for health insurance is cause for celebratio­n,” Insurance Commission­er John King said in a written statement. “Thanks to the investment from Governor Kemp and the state legislatur­e, our team created and promoted the GeorgiaAcc­ess.gov website to provide Georgians with informatio­n on the health insurance options available to them during this current open enrollment period. What we’re seeing with these record enrollment numbers is a direct result of this investment and I’m proud of the ongoing work of our state to get our citizens covered.”

The Department of Insurance provided no data to support that assertion. The state has spent more than $31 million on that effort.

Experts the AJC interviewe­d said they saw no evidence that GeorgiaAcc­ess.gov was responsibl­e for the increase in enrollment. But it’s likely another Kemp program did attract policyhold­ers: A “reinsuranc­e” program gives state money to private insurance companies to pay off some of the most expensive insurance claims, which helps lower premiums.

For Fletcher, she’s just glad to have the insurance.

She’s sick with diabetes, sometimes very sick. She always had insurance through her job, but her job required being extremely inactive, which made her diabetes worse. Then her husband got cancer and had to leave his job. There was no way she could take a risk on new work if it meant going without insurance.

Then Fletcher learned she could get insurance through the ACA. She left her unhealthy job, with an eye to taking on parttime work she can do at home. She’s immediatel­y taken on caring for her baby great-grandson too. That allows the baby’s parents, who do manual labor, to both take on more shifts.

Lyman-Barner marvels at how the ACA has helped three generation­s of one family.

“This one circumstan­ce helps out more than just me, it helps out them also,” Fletcher said.

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