Another Obamacare delay: How big a blow?
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| Washington
Small businesses hoping to shop for health-insurance coverage at HealthCare.gov will now have to wait until November 2014.
The delay, announced Wednesday afternoon by the Obama administration, is the second for the rollout of the SHOP Marketplace 鈥 or Small Business Health Options Program 鈥 since late September. As delays go in the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), it鈥檚 not the biggest one the administration could have made. But it still matters.
Originally, the SHOP Marketplace 鈥 which is for businesses with 50 or fewer employees in states that use the federal health-insurance marketplace 鈥 was scheduled to open on Oct. 1, along with the rest of HealthCare.gov. But the Obama administration announced Sept. 26 that SHOP launch wouldn鈥檛 happen until November.
Since then, the shopping feature for individuals on HealthCare.gov has been so problematic that the government鈥檚 tech team has focused on that rather than getting SHOP up to speed.
Now, the new delay means that small businesses must wait an extra year to shop for coverage online. But they can still look for coverage through a broker or agent or go directly to insurers.
"We鈥檝e concluded that we can best serve small employers by continuing this offline process while we concentrate on both creating a smoothly functioning online experience in the SHOP Marketplace, and adding key new features, including an employee choice option and premium aggregation services, by November 2014," the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) wrote in a Q-and-A distributed to health-law stakeholders, according to The Washington Post.
The delay does not affect small businesses located in the 14 states with their own health-insurance marketplaces. Nor does it threaten the financial viability of the system.
Still, the delay for small businesses in the other 36 states is important because it deals another blow to the website鈥檚 troubled image 鈥 and to the Obama administration. The Thanksgiving-eve announcement seemed to be an effort to slip bad news over the transom when not many people would be paying attention.
This summer, on the eve of Independence Day, the White House announced a one-year delay in the mandate for large businesses to provide health insurance to their employees. Small businesses face no such mandate, although employees have an individual mandate to carry insurance.
Republicans and opponents of the ACA jumped on the small-business delay as yet another example of how the president 鈥渂it off more than he can chew鈥 with the health-care law.
鈥淏usiness owners across this country are already having health care plans for their employees canceled by this law, and now they鈥檙e told they won鈥檛 have access to the system the president promised them to find them different coverage,鈥 House Speaker John Boehner (R) said in a statement. 鈥淚nstead, they鈥檒l have to resort to a system you鈥檇 expect to see in the 1950s.鈥
Wednesday鈥檚 announcement comes three days before the administration鈥檚 self-imposed deadline, Nov. 30, for major improvements in the functionality of HealthCare.gov.
By Saturday, 鈥渢he vast majority [of individuals] will be able to go through the site smoothly,鈥 said CMS spokeswoman Julie Bataille on a conference call with reporters Wednesday.
But, Ms. Bataille warned, Nov. 30 is not a 鈥渕agic date鈥 or a 鈥渞elaunch,鈥 suggesting that users could still encounter problems, especially if traffic is high.
By Saturday, 50,000 users should be able to use the site at the same time, she said. If there are 鈥渆xtraordinarily high spikes in traffic,鈥 consumers will be put in a new queuing system and notified by e-mail when they can return to the site.