Few Contingencies in Place If Court Rules Against Obamacare Subsidies

Millions of Americans could soon lose health insurance when the Supreme Court decides the latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act this month, but states have made few plans to deal with the potential fallout, and they may get little help from Washington, President Barack Obama warned Monday.

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By Noam N. Levey

Millions of Americans could soon lose health insurance when the Supreme Court decides the latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act this month, but states have made few plans to deal with the potential fallout, and they may get little help from Washington, President Barack Obama warned Monday.

"If somebody does something that doesn't make any sense, then, it's hard ... to fix," the president said, suggesting that his administration can't do much if the justices side with the health care law's Republican critics.

When the court rules this month, the justices could eliminate insurance subsidies in as many as 37 states that use the federal HealthCare.gov marketplace established under the law. The law's challengers argue that a strict reading of the statute makes those subsidies available only in states that established their own marketplaces, rather than having the federal government operate the marketplace for them.

A state could restore the aid if it runs its own marketplace, as California and 12 other states and the District of Columbia already do.

Only two states whose residents are in jeopardy _ Pennsylvania and Delaware _ have outlined strategies for preserving subsidies, however.

"I'm afraid the potential for major disruptions is only now starting to dawn on people," said former Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt, a Republican who was health and human services secretary under President George W. Bush. Leavitt is working with a group of former federal and state health officials on contingency plans to help states.

In many places, Republican legislators and governors oppose any action to accommodate the Affordable Care Act.

But even Republican governors who are looking for ways to protect their residents are struggling to figure out what they can do.

Many officials hope_ quietly, in the case of Republicans _ that the justices will side with the administration and leave the law intact.

But if that does not happen, the lack of contingency planning _ abetted by the Obama administration's refusal to publicly discuss options for states to maintain aid for their residents _ threatens to wreak havoc with most of the nation's insurance markets and set off a blame game between the Obama administration and congressional Republicans.

Obama took a shot at his opponents in his remarks Monday at a news conference while at the Group of Seven conference in Germany.

He called the challengers' claims a "contorted" and "twisted interpretation" of the law and said the justices should not even have considered the case.

And, the president said, if the court backs the challengers, Congress could easily restore subsidies by passing a simple bill that clarifies that they are available in all states, as the law's architects have said they should be. "Congress could fix this whole thing with a one-sentence provision," he said.

Congressional Republicans, however, have said they will consider restoring aid only as part of a bill that also repeals major parts of the law, including the mandate requiring people to have coverage and the minimum insurance standards.

"Let's be clear: If the Supreme Court rules against the administration, Congress will not pass a so-called 'one-sentence' fake fix," said Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., who has been working on a GOP response to the case. "Republicans didn't create the ongoing mess."

The Republican demands would probably precipitate a standoff between Congress and the White House that could drag on for months, even as consumers across the country lose coverage and premiums skyrocket as insurance markets collapse.

Republican congressional leaders haven't even been able to agree among themselves on what to ask for, despite pledging this year to have an alternative by June.

"Political gridlock is a significant possibility," Leavitt said. "And in the absence of a federal solution, enormous pressure will come to bear on states."

The result could jeopardize access to medical care for more than 6 million Americans who rely on the subsidies.

"The consequences of losing the financial assistance that makes health insurance affordable would be absolutely devastating for low- and middle-income people with a disease such as cancer," said Christopher Hansen, president of the American Cancer Society's Cancer Action Network.

The marketplaces _ which opened in 2013 and now cover about 10 million people _ allow Americans who don't get health care benefits at work to shop online among plans that must all offer basic benefits and cannot turn away customers, even if they are sick.

Consumers qualify for subsidies if they make less than four times the federal poverty level _ about $47,000 for a single adult and $97,000 for a family of four.

Building a marketplace from the ground up would be almost impossible for most states.

California, Connecticut, Maryland and other states that operate their own marketplaces spent years building them at a cost of almost $4 billion in federal aid.

Few governors or state legislators want to take on the responsibility or the expense. In Illinois, the Democratic state legislature refused in December even to take up legislation to create a marketplace.

Some advocates hope that three states that now rely on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to jointly operate their marketplaces may offer an alternative model.

Oregon, Nevada and New Mexico have established their own marketplace, but use the federal HealthCare.gov website to allow consumers to purchase insurance. That approach could shield their residents, depending on how a court ruling is written.

But replicating that arrangement may require states to collect fees from insurance companies and to pay the federal government for using HealthCare.gov. Those steps will probably require approval from Republican controlled legislatures in most states, a huge political barrier. The process would also take time.

When a group of state health officials from around the country gathered last month in Chicago to discuss contingency plans, many concluded the model wasn't feasible, according to participants.

"We're under the hammer of a deadline here," said one participant.

Another potential model might allow states to do even less officially, but still qualify as state-based marketplaces.

Seven states _ Arkansas, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, New Hampshire and West Virginia _ are "partnership" states that oversee health plans and provide consumer assistance to residents, though the states still use the federal HealthCare.gov site.

Another seven –– Kansas, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota and Virginia –– also help regulate health plans being sold on HealthCare.gov, though they are not partnership states.

Even allowing these 14 states to qualify as state marketplaces would be difficult, however, requiring additional federal regulations and affirmative moves by state leaders to back the health care law.

And federal health care officials have said repeatedly in recent months that they won't be able to offer states much help if the court invalidates the subsidies in more than half the country.

"(Our) administrative ability, if the court makes those decisions, is limited," Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell said Thursday at a forum organized by the Wall Street Journal. "The number of uninsured would jump dramatically."

(Christi Parsons in Kruen, Germany, contributed to this report.)

(c)2015 Tribune Co.

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