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  1. #1
    Machine Gunner muddywings's Avatar
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    Default Colorado far behind health insurance goal

    i've been curious as to how Colorado health exchange has been doing. Now we know! I know CA has been rather proud of their system but Oregon hasn't had a single enrollee (as of a few days ago when I was reading the reports).

    Maybe we need to merge all these Obamacare threads into one single thread of hate....

    http://gazette.com/colorado-far-behind-health-insurance-goal/article/1509960


    DENVER — Colorado is dramatically behind its goals for getting people to sign up for health insurance under the new health care law, prompting demands from exchange board members for better stewardship of public money.
    Enrollment through Colorado's state-run exchange is barely half the state's worst-case projection, The Denver Post reported Monday (http://bit.ly/1c42PGH ).
    The online shopping site announced last week that it had signed up 6,001 Coloradans so far. Exchange board members had projected a lowest-level mid-November enrollment of 11,108.
    The midlevel scenario for November was 20,186 members, and the highest projection 30,944 members.
    The shortfall could compromise the exchange's "ability to deliver on promises made to Colorado citizens" and threatens the funding stream for the exchange itself, according to board emails obtained by the newspaper in an open records request.
    As federal startup grants taper off under Obamacare funding, the exchange is meant to pay for itself with per-member charges on the private insurance companies offering policies.
    It needs 136,300 enrollees in 2014 to raise $6.5 million of its $51.4 million expenses.
    Significant operational issues are not being addressed in the wake of bumpy local and national startups for Obamacare, said board member Ellen Daehnick, whose emails and comments are sharply critical of board leadership.
    "The enrollment numbers are not meeting the projections," Daehnick said in an interview. "They are behind even the low projections. This board has moved from looking at a plan to looking at actual performance that has not met expectations, at least from my perspective."
    The exchange has not hit either internal projections or those made earlier by consultants supportive of the Affordable Care Act, said board member Dr. Mike Fallon, a conservative voice on the board who calls the act overly complex and expensive.
    "None of this surprises me," Fallon said of the shortfall. "I don't know what we as a board could have done. Health insurance is a difficult product to sell."
    Other board members said hitting enrollment marks now is not as important as making sure exchange websites and call centers work smoothly when people are ready to sign up.
    Surveys show many potential exchange customers have had no insurance for years, said board chair Gretchen Hammer, who is director of the Colorado Coalition for the Medically Underserved. Those consumers have different decisions to make than someone with private insurance who needs new coverage on Jan. 1, Hammer said.
    Other board members have expressed concerns that the slow enrollments portend a logjam at the Dec. 15 deadline for buying coverage that would start at the beginning of next year. They have asked the Connect for Health Colorado executives and staff for assessments of what would happen if tens of thousands of Coloradans try to buy policies at the last minute.
    "In the midst of this situation, the communication from the (executive director) to the board has been that the launch is successful, even 'fabulous,' with a few glitches," Daehnick wrote fellow board members on Oct. 24. "Available information does not support this assertion."
    One of the exchange's frustrations since the Oct. 1 launch is that federal rules require private insurance consumers seeking a subsidy on the exchange to first find out if they qualify for Medicaid. In practice in Colorado, that has required a tedious 12-page application; if any information is missing or wrong, consumers might wait up to 45 days to get their "denial" and then move on to buy a private policy.
    Officials at the state Health Care Policy and Finance department, overseeing Medicaid, have told the exchange they are working with federal officials to slim down the process for those certain they want private insurance instead of Medicaid.
    The exchange and Medicaid have made some good progress, said board member Steve ErkenBrack, who is head of Rocky Mountain Health Plans in Grand Junction. But, he said, he knows there are many who desperately need to get through to a new policy by Dec. 15.
    "This is not a theory for people, this is about real people with real problems, and we need to make sure that transition is as smooth as possible," he said.


    Read more at http://gazette.com/colorado-far-behi...DuXV7H5CAfy.99
    "The thing about quotes on the internet is that you cannot confirm their validity." -Abraham Lincoln

  2. #2
    Machine Gunner muddywings's Avatar
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    Default Exchange boss wants pay hike

    Then there is this: http://www.healthpolicysolutions.org...ants-pay-hike/

    Patty Fontneau, the CEO and executive director of Colorado’s health exchange, has asked for a raise and could receive a pay hike plus a bonus by year’s end.
    Any debate over Fontneau’s salary will happen behind closed doors. A spokeswoman for the exchange said executives requested that any compensation discussions happen in executive session. Those sessions are not open to the public, but Fontneau’s salary and any increases will be public.
    Colorado’s exchange board meets today, but it’s unclear how soon they’ll review Fontneau’s performance.
    She is paid $190,550 a year and received a 10 percent bonus last December. The exchange’s other executives, Chief Operating Officer Lindy Hinman and Chief Financial Officer Cammie Blais, both are paid $164,800 a year and each also received a 10 percent bonus last year.
    Discussions of executive compensation come at a time when Colorado’s health exchange has had a rocky start and enrollments are below the exchange’s own lowest projections.
    According to the latest numbers that exchange managers released, Colorado’s exchange enrolled 6,001 people in private health plans from Oct. 1 — when the exchange launched — through Nov. 16. During October, 3,408 enrolled in private health plans while about 2,593 bought private plans during the first two weeks of November.

    launch exchange projections show that the low estimate for October was about 3,600 while the low projection for all of November is 11,108. To keep pace with a mid-level projection for November, the exchange would have to sell more than 20,000 plans this month and another 40,000 next month. (Click here to see projections through December, 2014.)
    While sign-ups are lagging, Fontneau and her team have won kudos for launching a more successful exchange than the botched federal system, www.healthcare.gov.
    One Republican lawmaker suggested during a legislative oversight hearing on Friday that Fontneau should have run the federal system and that Connect for Health should share its software with the federal government.
    “I am an opponent of the Affordable Care Act. I was at best ambivalent about SB 200 (the bill that authorized Colorado’s exchange)…but I have been incredibly pleased with the work that you have done,” said Rep. Bob Gardner, R-Colorado Springs. “Our system does seem to be working.”
    Connect for Health Colorado is a nonprofit public entity known as an “instrumentality” of the state rather than a state agency. Taxpayer money is funding the exchange. So far, the exchange has received $177 million in federal grants and will get millions of dollars from Colorado’s unclaimed property fund that used to go to Cover Colorado, an insurance fund for people who couldn’t get health insurance elsewhere. Now insurance carriers cannot bar people with preexisting conditions, so high-risk patients can buy through the exchange and Cover Colorado will no longer exist.
    Eventually, user fees are supposed to make Connect for Health self-sustaining.
    In terms of salaries for public employees, Colorado’s governor earns $90,000 per year.
    A state website shows that Gov. John Hickenlooper’s cabinet directors get paid more than the governor, but much less than Fontneau. Most get paid between $146,000 and $150,000 a year. Sue Birch, the state’s Medicaid director, who has been a key partner in launching Colorado’s health exchange, receives $150,000 a year, according to the website.
    In Washington, the state exchange’s CEO recently got a 13 percent pay hike, bringing his salary to $177,400 a year. (Click here to read more.)
    In Colorado, it’s unclear whether exchange board members will support a raise and bonuses for Fontneau and her team. Most state employees did not receive any raises during the recession and bonuses are rare for public employees.
    Board member Ellen Daehnick is concerned about Connect for Health’s enrollment data so far and what lagging numbers could mean for long-term financial viability.
    “I want as many Coloradans to have access to health insurance as possible whether they receive financial assistance from the government or not to get it,” said Daehnick, owner of a small business in Lakewood.
    “The best outcome would be that the rate of enrollments increases dramatically. I am rooting for the exchange to win,” Daehnick said. “But I don’t believe the record so far supports outstanding performance. In fact there might be room for discussion about whether the leadership (of Connect for Health Colorado) has met expectations.”
    Others say enrollments are disappointing, but don’t necessarily blame Fontneau for problems.
    “I think a lot of the low numbers are out of Connect for Health’s control,” said Dr. Mike Fallon, an exchange board member and opponent of the Affordable Care Act.
    “The law is flawed in general and there are a lot of people who don’t want to participate based on that and there’s a modest amount of sticker shock,” Fallon said.
    He also expects people to procrastinate and hopes there will be a “huge uptick in the next three weeks.”
    “My gut feeling is that the numbers will improve, but they will not improve as much as we would like or as much as we have projected,” Fallon said. “It’s a challenge to sell this product right now based on many factors. It’s disappointing, but not surprising.”
    Fallon said he hasn’t yet scrutinized Fontneau’s contract or evaluated her salary, but expects that compared to other leaders of nonprofits, there will be room for a raise.
    “The staff was asked to produce a system to sell health care insurance via several different ways. If you look at how she and her crew have done, she’s done a pretty good job. From a startup standpoint, we asked her to have a system available and she’s been able to do that. I would like our numbers and financial projections to be better. But a lot of that is out of our control,” Fallon said.
    Exchange board chair Gretchen Hammer, who also runs the Colorado Coalition for the Medically Underserved, declined to discuss her views on executive salaries. With respect to enrollments, she said it’s important to note that customers have until March to sign up for health plans.
    “I have a longer-term view on these numbers,” she said.
    “It should pick up,” Hammer said. “ We anticipate that people will begin to shop more seriously as we move much closer to the time that they will have the benefits.”
    Customers must purchase health insurance by Dec. 15 in order for their coverage to start on Jan. 1. The federal government has extended that deadline to Dec. 23 and Fontneau said Friday that the exchange is discussing a similar extension with Colorado carriers as well. People who do not buy health insurance by March 31, 2014 will face federal tax penalties that start low and increase every year.
    Sharon O’Hara, an exchange board member who works with many people with chronic illnesses as executive vice president for the Colorado-Wyoming chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, said early numbers don’t mean much yet since buying insurance is such a big decision.
    “I did not expect that there would be big numbers right out of the gate,” O’Hara said. “A fair number of these people have preexisting conditions and didn’t have insurance before or are underinsured. They really need to take their time.”
    In fact, her group has encouraged members to mull decisions carefully before signing up.
    “We’re encouraging them to do a fair amount of window shopping,” O’Hara said.
    With respect to executive compensation, O’Hara said she thinks most exchanges around the country have had a “bumpy start.”
    She said Colorado’s board made a commitment to review Fontneau’s performance and salary.
    “She asked for the review after the launch. We committed to do that,” O’Hara said.
    In the meantime, as the December deadline approaches, O’Hara said she’s not hearing panic from her constituents.
    “They seem to be relatively pleased and the timeline does not seem to be one that they’re feeling any pressure on,” O’Hara said.
    That’s why she expects enrollments to rise.
    “I’d be more upset if a lot of people signed up too quickly. We have a lot of choices for folks in this state. I’m lucky. My employer gives me a choice of three (plans). If I was sitting out there by myself, I’d be overwhelmed. You want people who sign up to be happy and I don’t think you can do that quickly.”


    "The thing about quotes on the internet is that you cannot confirm their validity." -Abraham Lincoln

  3. #3
    Ammocurious Rucker61's Avatar
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by muddywings View Post
    Then there is this: http://www.healthpolicysolutions.org...ants-pay-hike/

    Patty Fontneau, the CEO and executive director of Colorado’s health exchange, has asked for a raise and could receive a pay hike plus a bonus by year’s end.
    Any debate over Fontneau’s salary will happen behind closed doors. A spokeswoman for the exchange said executives requested that any compensation discussions happen in executive session. Those sessions are not open to the public, but Fontneau’s salary and any increases will be public.
    Colorado’s exchange board meets today, but it’s unclear how soon they’ll review Fontneau’s performance.
    She is paid $190,550 a year and received a 10 percent bonus last December. The exchange’s other executives, Chief Operating Officer Lindy Hinman and Chief Financial Officer Cammie Blais, both are paid $164,800 a year and each also received a 10 percent bonus last year.
    Discussions of executive compensation come at a time when Colorado’s health exchange has had a rocky start and enrollments are below the exchange’s own lowest projections.
    According to the latest numbers that exchange managers released, Colorado’s exchange enrolled 6,001 people in private health plans from Oct. 1 — when the exchange launched — through Nov. 16. During October, 3,408 enrolled in private health plans while about 2,593 bought private plans during the first two weeks of November.
    This Patty Fontneau? pfontneau@connectforhealthco.com
    Te occidere possunt sed te edere non possunt nefas est

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  4. #4
    Machine Gunner merl's Avatar
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    Default

    and of course we've all seen this:

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nati...icle-1.1523268
    Fort Collins man accidentally signs up dog for health care

  5. #5
    High Power Shooter SamuraiCO's Avatar
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    Default

    We really don't want people signing up because they will get funneled to our state Medicaid rolls. Our idiot of a Gov agreed to open Medicaid enrollments to get more Gov money (ie printed and borrowed from our children and their children) only to be left on the hook in years to come (ie more money from the state general fund taking away from infrastructure, K-12, higher education etc) leading to the call for raising taxes to pay for all the manditory spending.
    Armageddon was yesterday, today we have a real problem.

    Despite what your momma told you violence does solve problems-The Craft

  6. #6
    High Power Shooter Firehaus's Avatar
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