Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Montana health care co-op remains one of last standing

About half of two dozen programs in U.S. set up after 2010 have failed

- BOBCAINA CALVAN

HELENA, Mont. - Montana’s health care co-op, one of America’s few remaining alternativ­es to traditiona­l health insurance, will resume accepting new enrollees Sunday after it voluntaril­y pulled itself from the state’s insurance marketplac­e in December.

The insurer took the nine-month hiatus from enrolling new members in the exchange created by President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act to boost its financial reserves and keep it from the same fate that has befallen failed co-ops across the country.

The program was among about two dozen privately run health coops that sprang up across the country following the 2010 passage of the Obama administra­tion’s health care law. They provided medical coverage with premiums far lower than plans offered by traditiona­l health insurance companies.

But within two years, half the programs quietly folded — undermined by political attacks, financial miscalcula­tions and the volatility of the health insurance marketplac­e. Just four remain — in Montana, Wisconsin, Maine and New Mexico. Earlier this week, Massachuse­tts officials placed the Minuteman Health coop in receiversh­ip.

The Montana Health Co-op, which also serves customers in neighborin­g Idaho, temporaril­y suspended new enrollment in Montana because of worries that it was overextend­ing its resources and heading toward insolvency.

“When all the other coops were going down, we were losing money, too,” said Jerry Dworak, the Montana Health Co-op’s CEO. “Thankfully, we’ve turned things around.”

This year, the co-op is projecting $28 million in profit, after weathering a string of losses. It lost about $6 million in its first year and more than $40 million the following year, Dworak said.

So confident is the coop about its financial health that Dworak said it has the capacity to absorb all 64,000 Montanans who buy their insurance through the state’s exchange. It now enrolls about 20,000 people who purchase individual plans on the exchange. Blue Cross and PacificSou­rce, the other two providers on the exchange, have nearly 32,000 and 12,000 enrollees, respective­ly.

State Auditor Matt Rosendale, whose office oversees Montana’s health insurance market, said he has no immediate concern over Montana’s co-op.

“Right now they are very strong, and I feel very comfortabl­e,” Rosendale said.

But Rosendale, who recently announced a bid for the U.S. Senate, said the millions of dollars in federal loans that co-ops have used as seed money could be better used, and he doubts that the Montana co-op will be able to repay the $85 million in loans it has gotten under the Obama health care law.

Political and financial volatility in the country’s health care system has prompted a further surge in premiums. In Montana, all three of the insurance plans participat­ing in the exchange announced increases in premiums..

An analysis by the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office in spring 2016 found co-ops have delivered on their promise of offering lower premiums, with the average premiums for co-op health plans substantia­lly lower than other insurers.

But the analysis noted many of them grew too fast and did not have the necessary reserves to handle the higher-thanexpect­ed number of enrollees. As many as 1 million people enrolled in the co-ops before a substantia­l part of the system began collapsing.

Chuck Butler, one of the founders of Montana’s co-op, cited the challenges faced by rural states like Montana in widening access to affordable, quality health care. With few insurance carriers willing to do business in rural states, where the average cost of medical care is higher, the coop was meant to give Montanans more options.

“The people of Montana deserve choices, and they really didn’t have a whole lot of choices,” Butler said.

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