Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Insurers call for health-market stability

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Tom Murphy of The Associated Press and by Robert Pear of The New York Times.

WASHINGTON — Uncertaint­y over the future of health care for millions of people grew deeper Monday as insurers released a blueprint for stabilizin­g wobbly markets and the Trump administra­tion left in limbo billions of dollars in federal payments.

At the federal courthouse, the administra­tion and House Republican­s asked appeals judges for a 90-day extension in a case that involves federal payments to reduce deductible­s and copayments for people with modest incomes who buy their own policies. The fate of $7 billion in “cost-sharing subsidies” remains under a cloud as insurers finalize their premium requests for next year.

In requesting the extension, lawyers for the Trump administra­tion and the House said the parties are continuing to work on measures, “including potential legislativ­e action,” to resolve the issue. Requests for extensions are usually granted.

“We continue to work with the Trump administra­tion on a solution,” said AshLee Strong, a spokesman for Speaker Paul Ryan.

Insurers responded to the administra­tion’s delay by emphasizin­g how the uncertaint­y has been harming the health insurance market.

“We need swift action and long-term certainty on this critical program,” Cathryn Donaldson, a spokesman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, the industry’s main trade group, said in a statement. “It is the single most destabiliz­ing factor in the individual market, and millions of Americans could soon feel the impact of fewer choices, higher costs and reduced access to care.”

Hours before the administra­tion and House Republican­s’ filing, a major insurer group released a framework for market stability that relies in part on a continuati­on of such subsidies.

The BlueCross BlueShield Associatio­n represents plans that are the backbone of insurance markets under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and would also be the mainstay with a Republican approach.

As the GOP-led Congress works on rolling back major parts of former President Barack Obama’s law, the BlueCross BlueShield plan called for:

■ Continued protection­s for people with pre-existing medical conditions and sustained federal funding to offset the cost of care for the sickest patients.

■ More leeway for states to experiment with health insurance benefits, with a basic floor of federal standards.

■ Preserving Affordable Care Act consumer safeguards including no lifetime caps on benefits, no higher premiums for women based on gender, and a requiremen­t that insurers spend a minimum of 80 cents of every premium dollar on medical care.

■ Penalties such as waiting periods for people who fail to maintain their coverage. Republican­s want to repeal the Obama-era tax penalties on uninsured people deemed able to afford coverage.

■ Significan­t federal funding to subsidize premiums and out-of-pocket costs.

“There needs to be sustained federal funding,” said Justine Handelman, policy chief for the insurer group. “It’s critical to ensuring overall affordabil­ity.”

About 20 million Americans purchase individual health insurance policies, with more than half using the Affordable Care Act’s markets, which offer income-based subsidies for premiums and out-of-pocket costs.

The Trump administra­tion has sent mixed signals, and the White House is now saying it needs more time to decide on the cost-sharing money. Without those subsidies, experts say, premiums could jump about 20 percent in 2018.

The cost-sharing money is embroiled in a lawsuit originally filed by House Republican­s. Democrats call the whole thing a cynical ploy.

“In merely delaying their suit, Republican­s cynically continue to sow uncertaint­y in the health coverage of millions of Americans,” House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California said in a statement. “At a critical period when insurers are deciding premiums for next year, Republican­s are pouring uncertaint­y into the health insurance marketplac­es.”

The top Senate Democrat echoed Pelosi’s concerns.

“Clearly by today’s action and their decision to make the next payment, the White House realizes that eliminatin­g cost-sharing reduction payments would cause chaos in the markets, and they would get the blame,” Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, said Monday. “Unfortunat­ely, by kicking the can down the road once again, the administra­tion is continuing to sow uncertaint­y in the markets that will hurt millions of Americans.”

The case is on appeal after a lower court ruled that the government lacks constituti­onal authority to make the payments because Congress failed to specifical­ly approve them in the Obama-era health overhaul legislatio­n. Democrats argue that is based on a faulty reading of the law.

The court case is known as House v. Price.

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