Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Subsidies gone, Montana insurance companies raise rates

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HELENA, Mont. — Two companies have increased their health insurance rates for Montana after the president ended subsidies for lowto moderate-income policy holders under the Affordable Care Act.

PacificSou­rce will raise its monthly premiums by an average of 13.1 percent, compared to the 7.4 percent submitted when the cost-sharing reduction payments, known as CSRs, were in place, state Auditor and Insurance Commission­er Matt Rosendale said Thursday. The Montana Health Co-op premium increase went from 4 percent to 16.6 percent.

Rosendale said he was disappoint­ed that PacificSou­rce and the co-op raised their rates, saying “both companies had assured me that they would have been able to honor their prior rates, even if CSR’s were not paid.

The companies will now have to answer to their customers for their reversal in that assurance.”

About 63,800 Montanans buy health insurance on the exchange, with about 25,000 receiving benefit from the subsidies.

When President Donald Trump announced last week he was ending the subsidies, Montana Health Coop CEO Jerry Dworak said the co-op could not afford the more than $30 million loss it would take in 2018 and could end up in receiversh­ip if it were not allowed to revise its rates or leave the state marketplac­e.

The co-op expects to lose $8 million this year with the end of the subsidies that allow insurers to sell policies that carry lower co-payments and deductible­s.

Rosendale said Oct. 13 that he would hold the companies to the rates they submitted. A state law, however, allows insurers to revise their rates to reflect any “material change” to the previous rate filing. Legal analysis by the auditor’s office determined the loss of the subsidies constitute­d a “material change.”

The insurance commission­er’s office does not have the legal authority to deny the rate increases, Rosendale said in a statement.

The rate increases affect the silver-level health insurance plans on the individual market and go into effect on Jan. 1.

Federal subsidies for low-income consumers remain intact and will offset some of the increases, Rosendale said.

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