The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

What Trump’s health care move means for Conn.

- By Christine Stuart

HARTFORD — President Donald Trump followed through on his threats to eliminate subsidies for some of the poorest individual­s receiving their health insurance through the Obamacare exchanges.

Since the funding for those cost-sharing reduction payments, which go right to insurance carriers to lower the co-payments, deductible­s and co-insurance, were never appropriat­ed by Congress, the Trump administra­tion decided to “discontinu­e” them. What does this mean for Connecticu­t? It means Connecticu­t’s two insurance carriers won’t receive $50 million to offset the help they give to low-income customers. There are about 48,000 consumers in the state helped by those subsidies.

Nationwide the payment is around $7 billion annually to help about 7 million Americans afford coverage.

Also since Trump has eliminated the payments immediatel­y, the carriers won’t receive their October, November and December payments. There is no way for the carriers to make up for those losses.

The carriers did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Without any guarantees from Washington,

Connecticu­t’s insurance regulators decided to allow two carriers to boost their premiums for plans on the individual market in 2018 by an average of 31.7 percent for Anthem and 27.7 percent for ConnectiCa­re Benefit customers.

On Sept. 13, the two insurance carriers Anthem and ConnectiCa­re Benefits, said they will participat­e in 2018.

The two carriers had until Sept. 15 to make a decision about whether they would continue offering plans on the exchange in 2018. The eliminatio­n of the CSR’s could give them the legal leverage they need to back out.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said the eliminatio­n of the CSRs “is vindictive and deliberate­ly designed to sabotage healthcare insurance markets throughout the nation.”

He said premium costs will continue to rise and put healthcare out of reach for many.

“While President Trump may turn his back on millions of Americans, I vow to do all that I can to fight back,” Malloy said.

U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said Friday that Trump is having a temper tantrum over Congress’ inability to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

“Let’s call this what it is—the president is intentiona­lly hurting every American because he’s having a temper tantrum over Republican­s’ unwillingn­ess to repeal the Affordable Care Act,” Murphy said. “Families in Connecticu­t will see their health care costs skyrocket because Donald Trump is having a bad week.”

He said that’s why reaching a bipartisan consensus on healthcare was so urgent.

“If Republican­s reject commonsens­e bipartisan compromise, they will own every scrap of what’s left of the American health care system when Donald Trump is through with it,” Murphy added.

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, also D-Conn., said the president’s continued sabotage of the ACA is “mean-spirited, rash, irrational — and apparently boundless.”

He said a bipartisan solution “our only hope to counter the health care tragedy.”

The decision to eliminate the payments will increase the national debt by $194 billion by 2026 because the higher premiums will force the government to pay more in subsidies, according to the Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Insurance companies have confirmed that eliminatin­g cost sharing payments account for an 18 percent increase in costs for Connecticu­t families.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States