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Oregon To Feds: Give Tax Credits To Shoppers Who Bypassed Troubled Exchange

Two officials from the Oregon governor鈥檚 office were on a mission in D.C. Tuesday — trying to get a federal go-ahead to compensate individuals who purchased insurance on their own because of the breakdown of the state鈥檚 health care exchange.

Image by Darwinek via Wikimedia Commons

Sean Kolmer, the governor鈥檚 health policy adviser, and Dan Carol, director of multi-state and strategic initiatives for Gov. John Kitzhaber鈥檚 administration, said they would meet with officials at the Department of Health and Human Services and seek permission to give tax credits to consumers caught between the glitch-ridden exchange website and their need for health care coverage beginning Jan. 1. To be eligible, Oregonians would need to have to have attempted to sign-up for a plan through but wound up purchasing a health plan outside of the exchange to ensure continuing coverage.

鈥淭hey had to be somewhere in the queue, and the only reason they went outside the market was because (Cover Oregon) wasn鈥檛 helping them (sign-up),鈥 Kolmer said of the criteria to qualify.

Kolmer said that he understood from HHS that other states hope to provide similar compensation but said he didn’t know which states.

About 170,000 people signed up for health insurance beginning in January through Cover Oregon or the , the state鈥檚 version of Medicaid, Of those, about 20,000 people received private coverage and more than 35,000 joined OHP. More than 114,500 people enrolled directly in the Oregon Health Plan through the Oregon Health Authority.

But Cover Oregon has been a headache for consumers and officials alike. 聽The state has paid Oracle Corp. $92 million so far to build its exchange site, only to have to give up on the website and turn to processing paper applications. Months later it鈥檚 still not working as it should. Kolmer said the state isn鈥檛 paying the company now unless it gets the website fully functioning and 鈥渨orking end to end鈥 by March 31, when open enrollment ends. The state is withholding $18 million so far in payments.

Due to the technical problems, Oregon state officials have been discussing a variety of fixes聽and聽some officials, including Republicans in the legislature,聽have called for聽joining the federal exchange instead of聽the state continuing to run its own. But the state currently is considering using 鈥渟ome of the federal [exchange] technology鈥 rather than joining the federal exchange, said Ariane聽Holm, a spokeswoman for Cover Oregon.

An Oregon official said that converting to a federal exchange was not discussed when state representatives met Tuesday with HHS.

Although the state has set up an interim process that allows people to shop for and enroll in health care, it isn鈥檛 what state officials envisioned,聽 Kolmer said. 鈥淚t obviously streamlines the process, but it doesn鈥檛 make it as easy as everyone would love for it to be.鈥