America’s biggest employers, from GE to IBM, are increasingly moving retirees to insurance exchanges.

(Bloomberg) — America’s biggest employers, from GE to IBM, are increasingly moving retirees to insurance exchanges where they select their own health plans, an historic shift that could push more costs onto U.S. taxpayers.

Time Warner Inc.  said Sunday it would steer retired workers toward a privately run exchange, days after a similar announcement by International Business Machines Corp. General Electric Co. last year said it, too, would curb benefits in a move that may send some former employees to the public insurance exchanges created under the 2010 Affordable Care Act.

While retiree health benefits have been shrinking for years, the newest cutbacks may quickly become the norm. About 44% of companies plan to stop administering health plans for their former workers over the next two years, a survey last month by consultant Towers Watson & Co.  found. Retirees are concerned their costs may rise, while analysts predict benefits will decline in some cases.

“Things are going to change dramatically,” said Ron Fontanetta, a partner at New York-based Towers Watson, which advises GE and other large companies. “Over the next two to three years, we see a much more aggressive rethinking of what employers are going to provide.”

The adjustments come as insurers have increased access the past few years to Medicare Advantage plans that provide benefits beyond the U.S. government health program for the elderly. Additionally, the health-care law promises to make it easier for those younger than 65 to buy insurance that’s guaranteed and subsidized by taxpayers.

Private Exchanges

The private exchanges are designed to join with companies to find the best deals for the former workers. The public exchanges established under ‘Obamacare,’ set to open Oct. 1, were created to provide insurance for millions of uninsured Americans. In both cases, enrollees will be able to select from a menu of private health plans.

Companies argue that many retirees can find more choice and a better deal on the exchanges, said John Grosso, head of the retiree health task force at Aon Hewitt LLC, a Chicago-based consultant. Instead of taking a one-size-fits-all company plan, a healthier retiree might find a less expensive policy with a higher deductible, or one that saved money by favoring generic drugs, he said in a telephone interview.

Less healthy workers or those who need more comprehensive coverage may not fare as well, Grosso said.

‘Gold-Plated’ Plans

“Some of them may not be as well off because they had a really gold-plated plan, but others who are paying a meaningful contribution to their own plan now can right-size the coverage,” he said.

At the same time, retirees have expressed concern that subsidies provided by companies in private exchanges may not keep up with rising medical costs, potentially putting them at financial risk in the future. And an influx of retirees could put added pressure on public exchanges that provide taxpayer-supported subsidies.

Retirees aren’t the only ones feeling the pinch. Last month, United Parcel Service Inc. told workers it would no longer provide health care for 15,000 spouses who can get benefits through their own employer. The company cited rising medical costs in general as well as the added expenses and new insurance options created by the health law.

IBM’s Decision

IBM said last week it will shift about 110,000 Medicare-eligible retirees to Tower Watson’s Extend Health, the largest private Medicare exchange. Former workers will find more options than the business could provide through its own plan, IBM, the third-largest U.S. employer according to data compiled by Bloomberg, said in a statement e-mailed Sept. 7. Caterpillar Inc. and DuPont Co. also have moved Medicare-age retirees onto the Extend exchange.

For most, coverage will come “at the same or lower cost” than they pay now. The Armonk, New York-based company will still make contributions to a tax-free health retirement account for the workers.

IBM capped its subsidies to retirees in the 1990s and “didn’t make this change to save money,” Doug Shelton, a spokesman, said in an e-mail. “It does not reduce our costs.” Rather, the company is making the change to help former workers, whose premiums and out-of-pocket charges are projected to triple by 2020 under the current plan, Shelton said.

Some unions now angry about PPACA.

WASHINGTON (AP) — When President Barack Obama helped push the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) through Congress, he counted labor unions among his strongest supporters.

But some unions leaders have grown frustrated and angry about what they say are unexpected consequences of PPACA — problems that they say could jeopardize the health benefits offered to millions of their members.

The issue could create a political headache next year for Democrats facing re-election if disgruntled union members believe the Obama administration and Congress aren’t working to fix the problem.

“It makes an untruth out of what the president said, that if you like your insurance, you could keep it,” said Joe Hansen, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. “That is not going to be true for millions of workers now.”

The problem lies in the unique multiemployer health plans that cover unionized workers in retail, construction, transportation and other industries with seasonal or temporary employment. Known as Taft-Hartley plans, they are jointly administered by unions and smaller employers that pool resources to offer more than 20 million workers and family members continuous coverage, even during times of unemployment.

The union plans were already more costly to run than traditional single-employer health plans. PPACA has added to that cost — for the unions’ and other plans — by requiring health plans to cover dependents up to age 26, eliminate annual or lifetime coverage limits and extend coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

“We’re concerned that employers will be increasingly tempted to drop coverage through our plans and let our members fend for themselves on the health exchanges,” said David Treanor, director of health care initiatives at the Operating Engineers union.

Workers seeking coverage in the state-based marketplaces, known as exchanges, can qualify for subsidies, determined by a sliding scale based on income. By contrast, the new law does not allow workers in the union plans to receive similar subsidies.

Study: Navigators, Nonprofits Least Likely Sources of Health Insurance Guidance.

Across the country, the federal government is bestowing millions of dollars on a navigator program and an array of non-profits to help guide people through the new health insurance marketplaces. But a new nationwide survey raises questions about how readily consumers will turn to these groups for advice on health coverage.

The study, conducted by HealthPocket.com, a nonpartisan web site that compares and ranks health plans for individuals, families and small businesses, found that navigators and non-profits are the least likely sources for information about health insurance to which consumers will turn. According to the survey, consumers are far more likely to look to their doctors and pharmacists for advice, and even more likely to stand pat with the insurance they already have and not seek any sort of advice at all.

“The financial viability of the new health insurance exchanges is closely tied to the enrollment of younger, healthier individuals, and administration officials have stated that they would like to get 2.7 million enrolled from this age segment,” said Bruce Telkamp, CEO of HealthPocket, based in Sunnyvale, Calif. But “given that only 3 percent of consumers in the critically important 18 to 34 year age group indicated that they will use navigators or nonprofits as a primary source of advice, the administration will need to rely heavily on marketing channels outside of the navigator program and nonprofit outreach to meet its enrollment goals.”

Navigator is the term used by the Affordable Care Act to describe the health insurance councilors and customer service personnel who will help people enroll and sort through their health plan options on the new exchanges. Last week, the Obama administration announced it was awarding another $67 million in grants to non-profits and other community-based organizations to hire and train navigators. These awards come on top of the $150 million in government monies provided in July to nearly 1,200 community health centers nationwide for the same purpose.

 

Obamacare Navigators get $67 million in grants.

CHICAGO (AP) — President Barack Obama’s administration has announced $67 million in awards to organizations that will help people sign up for insurance under the new health care law.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced Thursday the Navigator grant awards to 105 organizations in states that are letting the federal government run their online insurance marketplaces.

The Navigator program will be particularly important to the health law’s success in some Republican-led states that aren’t doing any state-directed outreach to the uninsured.

The grant winners don’t have much time to hire and train outreach workers. Enrollment for the health law’s new coverage options starts Oct. 1, and benefits kick in Jan. 1.

Navigators must complete a training program developed by the federal government and pass an exam.

PPACA navigators to earn $20-$48 an hour.

Consumer Cost Protection in Obama Health Plan Is Delayed.

Federal regulators have delayed a consumer protection in President Barack Obama’s signature health law that limits the out-of-pocket costs of people with insurance.

The one-year postponement of the annual limit on costs that patients must pay above what their insurance covers is another setback for a health-care law that has met resistance from Republicans and faced delays in enforcement of other key provisions.

The White House announced on July 3 that it would postpone, also for one year, the so-called employer mandate, which requires companies with 50 or more workers to provide health insurance to employees.

The limit on out-of-pocket costs, such as deductibles and co-payments, was supposed to be $6,350 for an individual and $12,700 for a family beginning in 2014. Federal officials now will allow some insurers to wait until 2015 to comply with the consumer protection.

The one-year postponement applies only to group health plans such as those offered by employers and unions and only to plans which use independent managers to handle pharmaceutical or other benefits, said an administration official who asked not to be identified speaking about internal deliberations.

Individual policies sold in the new marketplaces created by the health care law still must comply on schedule with the overall limits on out-of-pocket costs included in the health care law, the official said.

WSJ Rips New Obamacare Exemption for Congress.

The administration’s new rules that allow members of Congress and their staffs to escape the healthcare exchanges under Obamacare represent a double standard, according to a Wall Street Journal editorial.

It boils down to “illegal dispensations for the ruling class, different rules for the hoi polloi,” the Journal said Thursday.

Obamacare stipulates that “the only health plans that the federal government may make available” to Congress are the ones that are part of the law’s insurance exchanges.

But that requirement set off complaints among members and their aides, “because they won’t qualify for Obamacare subsidies and they’ll lose employer contributions they now receive under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP),” the Journal said.

The Journal criticized President Barack Obama for personally instructing the Office of Personnel Management to retain the congressional benefits.

“The eat-your-own-cooking provision begins with the phrase ‘Notwithstanding any other provision of law.’ The feds now interpret that clause as a loophole to mean that the Affordable Care Act did not change the 1959 law that created the FEHBP.”

That means congressional employees can remain enrolled in the FEHBP at the same time that they use Obamacare exchanges.

“The feds then ‘clarify’ — their euphemism — that the regulatory meaning of health benefits in the FEHBP can be Obamacare plans. Voila, taxpayers will continue to chip in $4,900 for individual and $10,000 for family coverage,” the editorial continued.

The lawmakers and their aides will still have to use the exchanges, as required by law, but only because it would have been “too explosive politically” not to, the Journal said.

The Journal said Congress would have done better to create a law offering its workers a raise to make up for the loss of government benefits and subsidies.

“But that would mean an ugly political fight that voters might notice. It’s so much easier to slip through this political fix in August when Congress is out of session and the press corps can’t wait to hit the beach,” the newspaper said.

House Passes Bill To Keep IRS From Enforcing Obamacare.

House Passes Bill To Keep IRS From Enforcing Obamacare

Today, the House passed the Keep the IRS Off Your Health Care Act of 2013. The purpose of the bill, H.R. 2009, as introduced by Rep. Tom Price (R-GA), is simple: to prohibit the Secretary of the Treasury from enforcing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010.

Experts: Obamacare will lead to massive spying on US health records.

Jul 24, 2013 The federal government may be  one step closer to keeping tabs on consumers’   health care information with a  new data hub under Obamacare.
dailycaller.com/2013/07/24/experts-obamacare-will-lead-to-massive-spying-on-u-s-health-records/

 

Labor Unions: Obamacare Will ‘Shatter’ Our Health Benefits, Cause ‘Nightmare Scenarios’

Labor Unions: Obamacare Will ‘Shatter’ Our Health Benefits, Cause ‘Nightmare Scenarios’

Labor unions are among the key institutions responsible for the passage of Obamacare. They spent tons of money electing Democrats to Congress in 2006 and 2008, and fought hard to push the health law through the legislature in 2009 and 2010. But now, unions are waking up to the fact that Obamacare is heavily disruptive to the health benefits of their members.

Last Thursday, representatives of three of the nation’s largest unions fired off a letter to Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, warning that Obamacare would “shatter not only our hard-earned health benefits, but destroy the foundation of the 40 hour work week that is the backbone of the American middle class.”

The letter was penned by James P. Hoffa, general president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters; Joseph Hansen, international president of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union; and Donald “D.” Taylor, president of UNITE-HERE, a union representing hotel, airport, food service, gaming, and textile workers.

“When you and the President sought our support for the Affordable Care Act,” they begin, “you pledged that if we liked the health plans we have now, we could keep them. Sadly, that promise is under threat…We have been strong supporters of the notion that all Americans should have access to quality, affordable health care. We have also been strong supporters of you. In campaign after campaign we have put boots on the ground, gone door-to-door to get out the vote, run phone banks and raised money to secure this vision. Now this vision has come back to haunt us.”

‘Unintended consequences’ causing ‘nightmare scenarios’

The union leaders are concerned that Obamacare’s employer mandate incentivizes smaller companies to shift their workers to part-time status, because employers are not required to provide health coverage to part-time workers. “We have a problem,” they write, and “you need to fix it.”

“The unintended consequences of the ACA are severe,” they continue. “Perverse incentives are causing nightmare scenarios. First, the law creates an incentive for employers to keep employees’ work hours below 30 hours a week. Numerous employers have begun to cut workers’ hours to avoid this obligation, and many of them are doing so openly. The impact is two-fold: fewer hours means less pay while also losing our current health benefits.”

What surprises me about this is that union leaders are pretty strategic when it comes to employee benefits. It was obvious in 2009 that Obamacare’s employer mandate would incentivize this shift. Why didn’t labor unions fight it back then?

Regulations will ‘destroy the very health and wellbeing of our members’

The labor bosses are also unhappy, because of the way Obamacare affects multi-employer health plans. Multi-employer plans, also called Taft-Hartley plans, are health insurance benefits typically arranged between a labor union in a particular industry, such as restaurants, and small employers in that industry. About 20 million workers are covered by these plans; 800,000 of Joseph Hansen’s 1.3 million UFCW members are covered this way.

Taft-Hartley plans, they write, “have been built over decades by working men and women,” but unlike plans offered on the ACA exchanges, unionized workers will not be eligible for subsidies, because workers with employer-sponsored coverage don’t qualify.

Obamacare’s regulatory changes to the small-group insurance market will drive up the cost of these plans. For example, the rules requiring plans to cover adult children up to the age of 26, the elimination of limits on annual or lifetime coverage, and the mandates that plans cover a wide range of benefits will drive premiums upward.

But the key problem is that the Taft-Hartley plans already provide generous and costly coverage; small employers now have a more financially attractive alternative, which is to drop coverage and put people on the exchanges, once the existing collective bargaining agreements are up. That gives workers less reason to join a union; a big part of why working people pay union dues is because unions play a big role in negotiating health benefits.

So the labor leaders are demanding that their workers with employer-sponsored coverage also gain eligibility for ACA subsidies. Otherwise, their workers will be “relegated to second-class status” despite being “taxed to pay for those subsidies,” a result that will “make non-profit plans like ours unsustainable” and “destroy the very health and wellbeing of our members along with millions of other hardworking Americans.” ‘The law as it stands will hurt millions of Americans’

The leaders conclude by stating that, “on behalf of the millions of working men and women we represent and the families they support, we can no longer stand silent in the face of elements of the Affordable Care Act that will destroy the very health and wellbeing of our members along with millions of other hardworking Americans.”

President Obama, of course, pledged that “if you like your plan, you can keep your plan.” But the labor leaders say that, “unless changes are made…that promise is hollow. We continue to stand behind real health care reform, but the law as it stands will hurt millions of Americans including the members of our respective unions. We are looking to you to make sure these changes are made.”

Avik Roy, Contributor  Forbes, July 15, 2013

New California Health Insurance Exchange Marketplace.

In the next few months you will be hearing about “Exchanges” for businesses & individuals on TV
and radio.  The California health insurance exchange will begin to offer plans and enrollment after October 1st. with coverage taking effect January 1, 2014.  The new marketplace will offer California Exchange and Off-Exchange health plans in addition to existing private plans.   All new health plans will be offered on a guaranteed acceptance basis with all pre-existing conditions covered.   More Exchange & Off-Exchange benefit details and rates should be available by August .   It usually will only make sense for you to move to a health plan in the State Exchange if you are eligible for a tax subsidy.  The Cal State exchange premium assistance offered is only for those who fall between 133% to 400% of the Federal Poverty Level based upon household income.
You can count on us!  We’re your key health reform and exchange resource.  We are ready to assist you every day–on the phone and in person providing you with time and cost saving programs.  Please call us before  you do anything with your current coverage and I will advise you on the best course of action that will provide quality coverage and save you money.

You may be better off keeping your existing health plan or alternatively consider the Off-Exchange and California Health Insurance exchange plans which may save you money and provide enhanced benefits.  Our services will assist you in applying for a possible tax subsidy, selecting the best health plan, and enrollment process.

Thank you again for the pleasure of being of service and for your business!

Kind Regards,
Frank West

For fast online quotes, benefit details, & applications for health,
group health, medicare supplement, dental, and life insurance
please visit: https://frankwestinsurance.com

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