CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — West Virginia officials expect to partner with the federal
government to operate a new insurance marketplace called for by the
federal health care overhaul, but say their choice appears limited by
projected costs, tight timing and questions left unanswered by the Obama
administration.
A state-federal partnership is one of three
options for running this marketplace, known as an exchange. In each
state, an exchange would aim to unite the buying power of individuals,
families and small businesses as they select from coverage plans offered
by private insurance companies. The federal law would also help many
consumers pay premiums.
States had faced a Friday deadline for
telling the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services how they
planned to proceed, but federal officials gave them another month to
decide. At least 16 states and the District of Columbia have already
announced they want to operate the exchanges themselves. Another 15 want
no role and will leave it to the federal government to handle exchanges
in their states.
While its officials continue to crunch numbers
and review options, West Virginia appears likely to join neighboring
Ohio and six other states in building an exchange partly with federal
help.
"It's fair to say, based on everything we know, that we're
likely to head in the direction of a partnership," Rob Alsop, chief of
staff to Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin, told The Associated Press on Friday.
West
Virginia's eventual decision hinges on the relatively small size of its
expected exchange. The insurance commissioner's office has estimated
that between 37,000 and 60,000 people would seek coverage through this
new marketplace. The exchange would have to spread among its
policyholders hefty costs from staff, call centers, a complex computer
system and other operational needs.
"It's a myriad of
administrative functions that when you have relatively few people
participating, you have what looks like a very high-cost product," said
Revenue Secretary Charles Lorensen, whose Cabinet department oversees
the insurance agency. "Those costs have to be borne by the exchange. It
has to be sustainable."
Alsop said estimates have projected an
annual price tag of between $15 million and $17 million. Officials have
all but concluded that West Virginia cannot afford to run the exchange
by itself. The federal government, meanwhile, can likely help because it
will be creating the same sort of operational network in multiple
states, Alsop said.
But he and other officials noted a recurring complaint: the lack of sufficient details and guidance from Washington.
"Right
now, we're making a decision based on what we know our costs would be
as a state, and it seems to be burdensome upon our consumers," said
state Insurance Commissioner Michael Riley. "Logic would tell us that
the feds would be able to offer this at a lower cost because of
economies of scale, but we still await that answer."
A leading advocate of the federal law is urging the state to handle the other key exchange component: consumer engagement.
Perry
Bryant, executive director of West Virginians for Affordable Health
Care, believes the exchange's success rests on the state promoting the
new marketplace and then helping people and small employers pick the
best coverage.
"It's public education," Bryant said. "This is
complicated stuff, with premiums and copays and deductibles, and some of
these people may have never had insurance."
Bryant cited how well
the state has enrolled those eligible for its Children's Health
Insurance Program, which covers more than 25,100 youths. He contrasted
that with the special insurance pool for people otherwise denied
coverage because of pre-existing provisions. Washington runs that pool
for the state, and Bryant estimated it has less than 150 enrollees.
"The federal government has done a miserable job," Bryant said. "Why would we want them to do the consumer engagement piece?"
Bryant
agrees that West Virginia cannot run an exchange by itself, but also
views that as a missed opportunity. The state could have pursued a
federal grant to help it build and operate the marketplace, he noted.
But time has run out: exchanges must begin enrolling people for coverage
next October, and the policies will take effect in January 2014.
At
least some health insurers see value in a state-federal partnership,
said Jane Cline, West Virginia's longtime former insurance commissioner.
Her agency studied the exchange model before the federal overhaul,
which passed in 2010 while Cline was president of the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners.
"Some of the health
insurers we work with believe that the federal government does have some
offerings," said Cline, who is now public policy director for the
Spilman, Thomas & Battle law firm. "I think it's prudent to evaluate
all of the options, and that's what the governor appears to be doing."
Both
Bryant and Cline credited Jeremiah Samples, an insurance commission
official, with aiding that review. Among other tasks, Samples helped
develop the enrollment and cost estimates. He's also held regular
meetings with insurers, agents, medical providers and consumer advocates
to keep them all in the loop.
"We're in a tough situation,
because we're trying to convey, to tell our stakeholders information
based on, really, assumptions about" the federal law, Samples said. "The
burden, at this point, is on the federal government to get this
information to states, and West Virginia is not unique in this."
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.