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Randall Flagg
 Rep: 139 

Re: US Politics Thread

So your brother is probably someone who could use an extra $40 a month from his utilities.  He probably could use an extra $500 a year from his tax rebate.  But fuck people like them getting a modest $40 a month.  That $5 from a water bill is laughable!  It amazes me how people like you claim to be champions of the poor and are the first to mention their plight, but you mock them with scorn and trivialize small gains for them in every other aspect.  For people who pinch pennies, that's an apple pie to have with sunday dinner 2 times a month.  I'm sure a kid who would be happy to have a PS3 would like a slice of cherry pie on Sunday with their KFC.  But because $5 is change to you or me, fuck those guys.  And you have the audacity to call Buzz someone who only gives a fuck about himself.  You'll laugh at the poor if it allows you to take a shot at Trump.

misterID
 Rep: 476 

Re: US Politics Thread

misterID wrote:

They could fix Obamacare, easily. But too many people are obsessed with destroying it instead. And they couldn't even do that right.

buzzsaw
 Rep: 423 

Re: US Politics Thread

buzzsaw wrote:
misterID wrote:

They could fix Obamacare, easily. But too many people are obsessed with destroying it instead. And they couldn't even do that right.

Easily?  I'm all ears.

People are obsessed with destroying it because they were destroyed by it.  Politicians are obsessed with it because their people want it done.  Certainly there's a screw Obama bonus in it for them, but Obamacare has done major damage to anyone not subsidized who are paying significantly more for less.  I mean it's great that you can cover dependents and life partners.  If they could have limited it to the important things, it would have limited the financial impact to everyone.  Instead they tax you for having a good plan, which essentially forced everyone into the same shitty plans.  Even if you didn't have coverage before, this didn't help because you couldn't afford the premium still and the deductibles are so high you'd need to be deathly ill or in a plane crash to get any benefits from it. 

So I am curious to hear how you're easily going to fix this.  I don't think the damage can be fixed at this point.

misterID
 Rep: 476 

Re: US Politics Thread

misterID wrote:

They were destroyed because it was incrementally pulled apart to purposely make premiums go up. That's a fact.

Cap drug & medical costs, insurance malpractice judgements and implement a public option for folks making less than 30 grand. Offer tax breaks for getting insurance and impose a $5-10 k fine for gaming the system (waiting until you're sick to get insurance) and you don't get the negotiated prices for care until it's paid. Support it with a junk food tax.

buzzsaw
 Rep: 423 

Re: US Politics Thread

buzzsaw wrote:
misterID wrote:

They were destroyed because it was incrementally pulled apart to purposely make premiums go up. That's a fact.

Premiums went up immediately.  Deductibles went up immediately.  Things were fucked up long before any changes were made.  What else you got?

Cap drug & medical costs, insurance malpractice judgements and implement a public option for folks making less than 30 grand. Offer tax breaks for getting insurance and impose a $5-10 k fine for gaming the system (waiting until you're sick to get insurance) and you don't get the negotiated prices for care until it's paid. Support it with a junk food tax.



The first part isn't going to happen for so many reasons.  The rest of it isn't going to make a difference.

misterID
 Rep: 476 

Re: US Politics Thread

misterID wrote:

We already played this game. I laid down facts and you ignored them. Like this:


1. CO-OPs short-changed from the start
Let’s start by considering the ACA’s Consumer Operated and Oriented Plans, or CO-OPs. Early drafts of the ACA called for $10 billion in federal grants for the CO-OP program. But insurance lobbyists and conservative lawmakers insisted on $6 billion in loans instead of $10 billion in grants, restrictions limiting CO-OPs to the individual and small-group market (and not the more stable and profitable large-group market), and limitations stating that the federal loan money could not be used for marketing.

The ACA passed in 2010 and the CO-OPs were to be up and running in the fall of 2013, in time for the first open enrollment period. But during 2011 budget negotiations, $2.2 billion was cut from the CO-OP funding. And then during the “fiscal cliff” negotiations at the end of 2012, another $1.4 billion in CO-OP loan funding was eliminated.

So instead of $10 billion in grants, the CO-OPs got $2.4 billion in short-term loans, and a slew of restrictions on their business practices. Some of those restrictions were relaxed in 2016 under new HHS regulations, but it was too little, too late for most CO-OPs.

As of 2017, only five of the original 23 CO-OPs are still operational. (Evergreen Health in Maryland is technically still operational, but it’s in the process of being acquired and converted to a for-profit insurer.)

2. Day One legal challenges
On March 23, 2010, the same day the ACA was signed into law, attorneys general from 14 states began the process of challenging the ACA’s individual mandate via the court system. A total of 26 states eventually joined in the lawsuit, which went all the way to the Supreme Court.

In June 2012, the Supreme Court upheld the legality of the individual mandate, but ruled that the federal government could not withhold Medicaid funding from states that didn’t expand Medicaid. This had the effect of making the ACA’s Medicaid expansion optional, which has in turn hobbled the ACA’s progress in many states.

3. Refusal to take ACA’s Medicaid expansion
The ACA scheduled Medicaid expansion to take effect at the beginning of 2014. But at that point, half the states had opted against expansion, despite the fact that the federal government paid the full cost of expansion for the first three years (and nearly all of it after that). Even now, in 2017, there are still 19 states that have not expanded Medicaid.

That obviously has a negative impact on people living in poverty, but it’s also deleterious to the individual insurance markets in those states.

Medicaid expansion allows adults with income up to 138 percent of the poverty level to enroll in Medicaid. In states that have not expanded Medicaid, however, the state’s regular eligibility guidelines apply, and generally prevent able-bodied childless adults from enrolling, regardless of how low their income is.

And ACA premium subsidies in the exchanges don’t apply to people with income below the poverty level, as those applicants were supposed to be eligible for Medicaid instead. So in 18 of the 19 states that have not expanded Medicaid (all but Wisconsin), there is no financial assistance available for people with income below the poverty level who don’t qualify for Medicaid based on each state’s strict eligibility guidelines. That creates a coverage gap, into which 2.6 million people currently fall.

Those 2.6 million people should have coverage, according to the ACA. But 26 states sued the Obama Administration to block the ACA, and the result was that Medicaid expansion became optional. Nineteen states still haven’t expanded Medicaid, despite the fact that their decisions leave 2.6 million people with no realistic access to health insurance coverage.

But what about the people with income between 100 percent and 138 percent of the poverty level? In states that expanded Medicaid, those individuals are eligible for Medicaid. In states that have not expanded Medicaid, people in that income bracket are eligible for substantial premium subsidies in the exchange, but not Medicaid.

An August 2016 HHS Research Brief indicates that in states that have not expanded Medicaid, people with income between 100 percent and 138 percent of the poverty level account for nearly 40 percent of total exchange enrollment – the highest percentage of any income category in those states. In contrast, people at that income level make up just 6 percent of the exchange enrollment in states that have expanded Medicaid.

Lower incomes are correlated with poorer health. And in states that haven’t expanded Medicaid, a substantial percentage of the population enrolled in exchange plans have incomes below 138 percent of the poverty level. The result is an individual market risk pool that has overall worse health than it would have if Medicaid had been expanded. Refusal to expand Medicaid is one of the factors that drives premiums up in the individual market.

4. Obstruction of enrollment efforts
Most states have opted to let HHS do the heavy lifting on exchange creation. Although there has been some shifting over the years, there are currently just 12 fully state-run exchanges (11 states and DC). The rest of the states use HealthCare.gov, either as part of the federally run exchange, or as an enrollment platform for a federally supported state-based exchange.

In states that use the federally run exchange, HHS provides funding for navigators to assist with the outreach and enrollment process. This is local, community-based help that particularly benefits lower-income people, and it’s funded by the federal government. Sounds like a win for the states, right?

But by January 2014, laws had been passed in 17 states that restricted navigators’ ability to help residents understand and enroll in the new plans. Some of those laws have since been blocked by the judicial system – Missouri’s, for example – but quite a few red states took it upon themselves to hamper their residents’ access to people and organizations who could help them make sense of the new insurance rules and plans.

Fast forward to January 2017. Trump was inaugurated 11 days before the end of the 2017 open enrollment period. And in the final week of open enrollment, the federal government scaled back advertising and outreach for HealthCare.gov, including pulling some ads for which payment had already been made. The result? Enrollment declined year-over-year in HealthCare.gov states, but grew in states that run their own enrollment platforms. This is particularly troubling for the stability of the insurance pools, because the last-minute stragglers who sign up at the end of open enrollment tend to be young, healthy people – exactly the people who are needed in the risk pool to keep it stable.

5. Efforts to invalidate premium subsidies
In King v. Burwell (formerly King v. Sebelius), plaintiffs argued that premium subsidies could not legally be distributed in states that didn’t establish their own health insurance exchanges. The Supreme Court ruled in the government’s favor in 2015, upholding the legality of premium subsidies in every state.

It’s notable, however, that Indiana, Oklahoma, Alabama, Georgia, Nebraska, South Carolina, and West Virginia all joined amicus briefs in support of the plaintiffs in King v. Burwell. Those states – all of which use the federally run exchange – supported the idea that premium subsidies should not be available in states that use the federally run exchange.

If the challengers had won, the individual mandate penalty would no longer have applied to most exchange enrollees in states that use the federally facilitated exchange, as coverage would not be considered affordable without the premium subsidies. And the employer mandate penalty would also not have applied, since it’s triggered when employees receive subsidies in the exchange.

But there are 1.16 million people in those seven states who are receiving premium subsidies in 2017. Not only would their subsidies no longer be available had the King v. Burwell plaintiffs prevailed, but without premium subsidies, the individual market would likely have collapsed altogether in states that didn’t run their own exchanges.

6. A legal challenge to cost-sharing reductions
The ACA’s cost-sharing subsidies are an essential part of making health care accessible for lower-income Americans. For people with incomes up to 250 percent of the poverty level, cost-sharing reductions (CSRs) are automatically added to silver plans, making the coverage much more robust than it would otherwise be.

The federal government reimburses health insurers for the additional coverage provided by the CSRs; those reimbursements totaled $7 billion in 2016. But in 2014, House Republicans, led by then-Speaker John Boehner, filed a lawsuit against the Trump Administration, challenging the executive branch’s authority to reimburse insurers for CSRs, as they had not specifically been appropriated by Congress.

In 2016, a district court sided with House Republicans. But the ruling was stayed to allow the Obama Administration to appeal, and CSR reimbursements have continued to flow to insurers ever since. The case took on a new twist when the Trump Administration took over, as it’s now House v. Price – House Republicans versus a Republican administration – and it’s been pended throughout the first part of 2017.

The Trump Administration has presented mixed messages in terms of whether CSRs will continue to be paid. In April, Trump even indicated that he would consider holding CSRs hostage in order to get Democrats to negotiate on health care reform.

The uncertainty surrounding CSRs has been repeatedly cited by insurers in their concerns about the stability of the individual markets. When Anthem cautiously indicated in April that they would continue to offer exchange plans in 2018, they noted that if the CSR situation is not resolved by June, they will reconsider their participation and/or substantially increase premiums for 2018.

This has been the same refrain from insurers all across the country this spring. And instead of working to stabilize the individual market by resolving the issue, the Trump Administration and Congressional Republicans have continued to drag it out, further destabilizing the individual market.

7. Undermining of ACA’s risk corridors
Risk corridors were a three-year program designed to keep the individual markets stable during the early years of ACA compliance. The idea was to take money from insurers that ended up with lower-than-expected claims, and send it to insurers that ended up with higher-than-expected claims.

And if insurers with higher-than-expected claims needed to be reimbursed more than the amount contributed by insurers with lower-than-expected claims, HHS was going to make up the difference. This was clarified in the 2014 Benefit and Payment Parameters, finalized in 2013. On the flip side, if insurers had done exceedingly well, HHS would have been able to keep the excess funding. Obviously that didn’t happen.

Then in late 2014, Republican lawmakers, led by Senator Marco Rubio, added language to a must-pass budget bill (Cromnibus) that retroactively made the risk corridors program budget neutral. This was after 2014 coverage had been provided for nearly the full year, and after 2015 open enrollment was already underway, with rates long-since locked-in.

Claims were indeed higher than expected in 2014. When the dust settled, carriers with higher-than-expected claims were owed a total of $2.87 billion, while carriers with lower-than-expected claims only contributed $362 million to the program. HHS took that money – which they could no longer supplement with federal funding due to the December 2014 Comnibus Bill – and spread it around to all the insurers that were owed money, but they were only able to pay them 12.6 percent of what was owed.

The 2015 risk corridor results were similarly bleak.

Large insurers were mostly able to weather this setback. But smaller insurers, and particularly the start-up CO-OPs, were not.

8. Trump’s executive order
On January 20, within hours of his inauguration, Trump signed his first executive order. The order directs federal agencies to

“exercise all authority and discretion available to them to waive, defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation of any provision or requirement of the Act that would impose a fiscal burden on any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or regulatory burden on individuals, families, healthcare providers, health insurers, patients, recipients of healthcare services, purchasers of health insurance, or makers of medical devices, products, or medications.”

The IRS soon reversed course on their previous plans to stop accepting “silent” returns that didn’t answer the “Did you have health insurance?” question. To be clear, the ACA penalty remains in effect for people who don’t have health insurance. But Trump’s executive order makes it easier for people to get around the penalty, simply because the IRS has been directed to do whatever they can, within the confines of current law, to minimize penalties.

In April 2017, HHS finalized a market stabilization rule aimed at propping up the individual insurance market via new regulations. But time and again, insurers have repeated that two of their biggest concerns are certainty with regards to ongoing funding for CSRs, and enforcement of the individual mandate. Neither of these are addressed by the market stabilization rule, and indeed, the Trump Administration has done the opposite of what insurers need on both issues.

9. AHCA’s effect on market stability
The House of Representatives has also worked to undermine the individual mandate via the American Health Care Act (AHCA) that they passed in early May.

The legislation would eliminate the individual mandate penalty retroactively to the start of 2016. And while it would instead institute a 30 percent rate increase (or health-status underwriting in states that opt for that) for people who don’t maintain continuous coverage, that provision wouldn’t take effect until after the 2018 open enrollment period is complete.

As passed by the House, the AHCA undermines insurers’ efforts to keep healthy people in the risk pool. Unsurprisingly, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that 4 million people would drop coverage in 2017 if the AHCA were to pass. Half of them are in the individual market, despite the fact that less than 6 percent of the U.S. population has coverage in the individual market.

Fewer healthy people in the risk pool results in further market destabilization. And there is no doubt that the people who would drop coverage in 2017 if the AHCA were to be enacted are currently healthy; sick people don’t voluntarily drop their health insurance.

10. GOP refusal to work on bipartisan fixes
The ACA has been in effect for seven years, and Republican lawmakers have been trying to repeal or defund it for seven years. (You can see some of their efforts here.) But they have been mostly unwilling to work together with Democrats to make any significant changes to the ACA to make it work better.

It’s true that the 21st Century Cures Act – which passed in late 2015 – had bipartisan support and allows small businesses to reimburse employees for the cost of individual market health insurance. This had previously been prohibited under guidance that HHS and the DOL had finalized in 2013, as part of their work to implement the ACA.

But other fixes that could have been made to the ACA never got off the ground. The family glitch has persisted, as has the Medicaid coverage gap (granted, fixing either of them would have been expensive, which is why the family glitch exists in the first place).

Republican lawmakers could have worked with Democrats to appropriate funding for cost-sharing reductions in 2014 – or anytime since then – rather than suing the Obama Administration.

Nothing would have changed in terms of cost outlays, since the federal government has continued to fund CSRs. But the individual market would certainly be much more stable now if lawmakers had opted to fix the problem instead of bringing a lawsuit over it.

The individual market has struggled. Thank the GOP.
Nobody is arguing that everything is fine in the individual market. But there have been signs in early 2017 that it has turned corner and is heading towards a stable equilibrium.

For that to happen, however, Congressional Republicans and the Trump Administration would have to commit to funding CSRs for the foreseeable future, vigorously enforce the individual mandate, and work at a state and federal level to ensure that people have access to enrollment assistance in every area of the country. Given the GOP’s unceasing efforts to drag down the Affordable Care Act so far, that would be remarkable – nay, miraculous.

buzzsaw
 Rep: 423 

Re: US Politics Thread

buzzsaw wrote:

When your first point shows that it was fucked up from the beginning, I don't need to waste time reading the rest of it.

misterID
 Rep: 476 

Re: US Politics Thread

misterID wrote:

14

buzzsaw
 Rep: 423 

Re: US Politics Thread

buzzsaw wrote:

I know.  You post 10,000 words for whatever reason when the first 100 or so completely invalidate your point.  Priceless.

That whole list is a bunch of poor excuses directing blame anywhere other than the law.  Here's a fact you can consider that wouldn't take 10,000 words to explain: If they had passed the law the right way in the first place, half of those issues would have been addressed upfront in discussions instead of after the fact.  Force a piece of shit through and you're going to get that piece of shit ripped apart.  That's how the game works.

misterID
 Rep: 476 

Re: US Politics Thread

misterID wrote:

Facts. You really hate them. You crumble every time. big_smile

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