Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

GAO says Obama administra­tion skirted health insurance law in $5B dispute

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — The Obama administra­tion failed to follow the president’s health care law in a $5 billion dispute over compensati­ng insurers for high costs from seriously ill patients, Congress’ investigat­ive arm said Thursday.

The opinion from the Government Accountabi­lity Office is a setback for the White House and bolsters Republican complaints that administra­tion officials bent the law as problems arose carrying out its complex provisions. The finding may complicate efforts to stabilize premiums in the law’s insurance marketplac­es, where about 11 million people get coverage.

At issue is how the administra­tion has handled a little-known, but important program called “transition­al reinsuranc­e.” Working in the background of the law’s coverage expansion, the three-year program collects fees from employer and other private health insurance plans and channels the money to health plans that face large claims for treating patients with catastroph­ic medical problems.

The law specified that the fee would collect $25 billion from 2014-2016, and $5 billion of that would go directly to the Treasury. But when fee collection­s fell short, the Health and Human Services Department failed to allocate a share of money to the Treasury, saying it would do so later as more money came in.

Republican­s cried foul and asked the GAO to examine the issue. On Thursday, Republican­s got the ruling they had hoped for.

“HHS lacks authority to ignore the statute’s directive to deposit amounts [collected under the program] in the Treasury,” the GAO’s general counsel, Susan A. Poling, wrote.

The administra­tion’s interpreta­tion of the law “is inconsiste­nt with the plain language of the statute,” she said.

Republican­s accuse the administra­tion of shortchang­ing the Treasury to “bail out” the health care law.

“The administra­tion should end this illegal scheme immediatel­y, and focus on providing relief from the burdens of this law,” Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., said in a statement.

Previously, Republican­s have complained that the administra­tion was flouting the law when it delayed a requiremen­t that larger employers must offer coverage to their workers.

It didn’t help the administra­tion’s case with GAO that the original HHS plan for distributi­ng the fee money called for paying the Treasury.

The administra­tion had no immediate response to the GAO opinion.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office has no enforcemen­t power over its ruling, but congressio­nal opponents of the health law could use the finding to write legislatio­n that forces the HHS to pay the Treasury.

Generally, lawmakers of both parties respect GAO’s rulings on federal budget issues.

The reinsuranc­e program is one of three financial backstops created by President Barack Obama’s law to support insurers as they built their customer base in the new markets for subsidized private insurance. Reinsuranc­e provides a safety net for insurers by helping to pay large claims, an important considerat­ion for companies selling coverage to a customer pool they didn’t know.

The marketplac­es have been tough for insurers, due in part to less-than-promised support from a different government stabilizat­ion program.

Insurers also say they’ve been swamped by higherthan-expected claims and by customers who sign up for coverage, use it on expensive care and then stop paying premiums.

Major carriers such as United-Health Group and Aetna have scaled back their role after forecastin­g annual losses that will top $300 million.

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