Children not covered with pre-existing conditions until 2014

TuTu Monroe

A Realist
Haste makes waste or is this a trap?

Dems mad at insurers for pointing out that they forgot to cover kids with preexisting conditions
posted at 4:38 pm on March 29, 2010 by Allahpundit

I blogged this screw-up last week, but much to my surprise, insurance companies appear ready to make an issue of it. That may be useful in calling public attention to how shoddily the bill was drafted and how The One, who promised immediate coverage for kids, oversold it, but is the “we don’t have to insure sick kids after all!” hill really the one the industry wants to die on?
To insurance companies, the language of the law is not so clear.

Insurers agree that if they provide insurance for a child, they must cover pre-existing conditions. But, they say, the law does not require them to write insurance for the child and it does not guarantee the “availability of coverage” for all until 2014.

William G. Schiffbauer, a lawyer whose clients include employers and insurance companies, said: “The fine print differs from the larger political message. If a company sells insurance, it will have to cover pre-existing conditions for children covered by the policy. But it does not have to sell to somebody with a pre-existing condition. And the insurer could increase premiums to cover the additional cost.”
Congressional Democrats were furious when they learned that some insurers disagreed with their interpretation of the law.
Tom Maguire got deep, deep into the weeds of the statutory language this morning to try to hash this out. In a nutshell, because the Dems were nervous about delaying the benefits of their glorious boondoggle until 2014 — which was necessary, as you’ll recall, so that they could game the CBO’s first-decade cost estimate — they decided to speed up coverage for kids with preexisting conditions to this year. Except, in their haste, they did a crappy job with the drafting and only amended one of the four relevant statutory sections. Result: If insurers choose to sell a policy to a sick kid’s family, they have to cover his preexisting condition, but there’s nothing in the law — until 2014 — that requires them to sell a policy in the first place. The money question per Maguire is whether this really was negligence at work (and negligence on the GOP side in failing to catch it and exploit the issue) or whether the Dems fully intended to permit this loophole for the next four years and are now caught because The One misunderstood it and/or overhyped it.

I’ll give you another option, though. What if the Dems purposely left this section ambiguous in hopes that it would invite a challenge from the insurance industry and, ideally, the GOP? The exemption for preexisting conditions is probably the single most popular provision in the bill; extending that exemption to sick children would, I suspect, poll somewhere in the neighborhood of 90 percent. What better way to sell the bill to a wary public than to manufacture a showdown with the evil, heartless insurance companies and their Republican “corporate cronies”? If nothing else, a vote in Congress to correct the drafting “error” and close the loophole would be a poison pill for the GOP. If they vote no, they “hate sick kids”; if they vote yes, the base will take it as a sign that they’re not serious about repeal. All of which is to say, if this really is an accident, it’s a very happy one for Democrats.
hotair.com
 
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I seem to recall during the last year that one of the major complaints about these reforms is that many provisions wouldn't kick in until 4 years from now. Seems the blogger here is exaggerating a moot point as part of the anti-Obama crusade.
 
Fascinating that, according your “Allahpundit” blogger, that the republican base wants the GOP to vote to repeal a requirement that children with pre-existing conditions be accepted by insurance companies.

Also hilarous is that “Allahpundit” thinks this is a democratic “trap” to make the republicans look evil. Allahpundit just said the base wants to vote to allow insurance companies to be able to deny sick kids health insurance. I don’t think you need democrats to make you look evil.

There’s no “trap” to expose republican immorality. That’s just republican projection. Rightwing buffoonery aside, there’s this new fangled invention called “regulations”, which makes it completely unnecessary to write a new bill or redraft new language. The Secretary of Health and Human Services will simply direct staff to write regulations to clarify the legislative intent and to implement that law. Kathleen Sebilius is already on record telling the insurance companies to fuck off – they lost – and she will write regulations forcing them to insure sick kids if she has too.

In short, this is typical corporate buffoonery. I’ve seen it a billion times. These corporate goons will try to weasel their way out of being decent human beings by wordsmithing some legal language in a bill. Here’s the teabagger tip of the day: that’s what regulations are for, to force the fuckers to comply with the intent of the law.
 
Fascinating that, according your “Allahpundit” blogger, that the republican base wants the GOP to vote to repeal a requirement that children with pre-existing conditions be accepted by insurance companies.

Also hilarous is that “Allahpundit” thinks this is a democratic “trap” to make the republicans look evil. Allahpundit just said the base wants to vote to allow insurance companies to be able to deny sick kids health insurance. I don’t think you need democrats to make you look evil.

There’s no “trap” to expose republican immorality. That’s just republican projection. Rightwing buffoonery aside, there’s this new fangled invention called “regulations”, which makes it completely unnecessary to write a new bill or redraft new language. The Secretary of Health and Human Services will simply direct staff to write regulations to clarify the legislative intent and to implement that law. Kathleen Sebilius is already on record telling the insurance companies to fuck off – they lost – and she will write regulations forcing them to insure sick kids if she has too.

In short, this is typical corporate buffoonery. I’ve seen it a billion times. These corporate goons will try to weasel their way out of being decent human beings by wordsmithing some legal language in a bill. Here’s the teabagger tip of the day: that’s what regulations are for, to force the fuckers to comply with the intent of the law.
That's mostly because you don't understand what the word "replace" means.

The call is to "Repeal and Replace"...
 
That's mostly because you don't understand what the word "replace" means.

The call is to "Repeal and Replace"...

What Cypress can't comprehend (which isn't unusual) is that the Dems in their rush to pass this bill failed to say that the bill for children would take effect immediately. In other words, they goofed, big time.
 
What Cypress can't comprehend (which isn't unusual) is that the Dems in their rush to pass this bill failed to say that the bill for children would take effect immediately. In other words, they goofed, big time.


Hey, just out of curiosity, what are the insurers saying these days about this issue? I mean, Allahpundit can say whatever the fuck he wants to say, the key issue is whether insurers will take the position that they don't have to insurer children with pre-existing conditions until 2014:

A flap between the federal government and some health insurers over a provision in the new health care law that will require them to cover children with pre-existing conditions offered an early look into difficulties of interpreting the complex legislation.

Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, sent a letter Monday to the industry's main trade group warning insurers that they won't be able to deny children access to their parents' coverage starting in September after insurers questioned whether they had to sell insurance this year to families with health problems.

The trade group, America's Health Insurance Plans, responded to the secretary Tuesday, saying insurers "recognize the significant hardship a family faces when they are unable to obtain coverage for a child with a pre-existing condition" and will "fully comply" with the new rules.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/03/30/MNK31CNK2V.DTL#ixzz0jo7nw0sw
 
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