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Wednesday, Jul 22 2015

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Maryland, Feds To Recoup $45M From Noridian For Botched Health Exchange Website

The company will make this payment to settle claims and avoid legal action in an agreement announced Tuesday.

The company state officials blame for the botched rollout of Maryland's online health exchange will repay $45 million to settle the claims in an agreement announced Tuesday. The settlement — just over 60 percent of what the state paid Noridian Healthcare Solutions — was approved unanimously by the health exchange board during a meeting Tuesday afternoon. U.S regulators still must approve the deal, because much of the funding was federal. (Cohn and McDaniels, 7/21)

The prime contractor hired to build Maryland’s flawed online health exchange will pay $45 million to the state and federal governments to avoid a lawsuit over its performance, Attorney General Brian Frosh announced Tuesday. Maryland’s health exchange drew national attention last year when the Web site crashed moments after launching. It was plagued by glitches for months afterward. (Hicks, 7/21)

The main contractor in Maryland's initially flawed health care exchange website has agreed to repay $45 million to avoid legal action over its performance, officials announced Tuesday. Maryland's website crashed right after opening Oct. 1, 2013, as part of President Barack Obama's health care law, and it wasn't the only state to have problems. Oregon, Nevada and Hawaii abandoned their state-run exchanges and now use the federal one. (7/21)

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