California's Obamacare Insurance Exchange May Delay Online Enrollment

During a June trip to California, President Obama stopped in San Jose to talk about the state's health exchange. Golden State officials were among the most aggressive and enthusiastic in the nation when it came to implementing the law, and Obama touted their work on the health care overhaul as a model for the nation.
Opponents of Obamacare, the president said, "had all kind of sky-is-falling, doom-and-gloom predictions" about how the law might fail. California was proving them wrong. "It turns out that what we are seeing in the states that have committed themselves to implementing this law correctly, we're seeing some good news."
But the latest news from California's exchange is not so good for the president's health law. State officials warned yesterday that they might delay the opening of the exchange's online enrollment system—the core feature of the exchange. The Wall Street Journal reports:
California's new health-insurance exchange, the biggest of the state marketplaces emerging under the federal health-care overhaul law, said there was a possibility consumers won't initially be able to enroll in coverage online when it is launched on Oct. 1.
Peter V. Lee, executive director of Covered California, the state agency creating the exchange, said Thursday in a meeting of its board that the agency potentially would "phase in support" for the exchange, starting with allowing offline means of sign-up and later adding the ability to fully enroll online.
Lee said that the decision to delay hasn't officially been made yet, and that the announcement was made in order to help manage expectations. And enrollment, he said, would still be possible over the telephone.
Even still, this is a worrying sign for the law's implementation. And it suggests that criticisms aimed at the law's complex technical challenges were, at the very least, not too far off base.
It also threatens to undermines the president's promises about how the law will work. When Obama stopped in San Jose in June, he said that one of the key things to know about the law was that uninsured individuals in California would be able to buy quality, affordable health coverage under the law beginning in October. "And here's how," he said. "States like California are setting up new, online marketplaces where, beginning on October 1st of this year, you can comparison shop an array of private health insurance plans side-by-side, just like you were going online to compare cars or airline tickets." Maybe not?
If California goes through with the delay, it won't be the only state to have missed the deadline for online enrollment. Oregon, another eager implementer of the health law, has already officially confirmed that its online enrollment won't be ready on October 1.
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Didn't 29% to 45% of elite athletes predict this?
He better keep those comments, dammit!
Seriously, what happened to Bailey's post? In other questions: why was commenting down last night? and what's going on with the new prompt for setting up a link?
I told you guys it'd go downhill once they started paying their interns. Next thing you know they'll want lunch breaks and to be allowed to go home at night...
AND THEN THIS HAPPENS.
NSA upgrading their Reason-watching software?
Then one will drop dead and it'll be a Kochtopussian anarchy
The previous software was only able to track Warty's location 29-45% of the time.
Last night was a squirrelocalypse.
I was in position to break the Ben Affleck as Batman story too!
The slings and grappling hooks of outrageous fortune...
Hey, guess what they found out about 29-45% of elite athletes?
Damn, you out-scooped Ron Bailey.
...and that the announcement was made in order to help manage expectations.
Differing expectations are based pretty solely on ideology at this point.
If Obama has a brain in his head he'll start referring to it as PelosiCare...to reflect the real architect of this fucking cat rodeo!
Say, couldn't we all just pretend like the law was never enacted? I mean all of us--the administration, the rest of the government, the states, the media, all the medical and insurance providers, the rest of us--just assume it never happened at all? Wouldn't we all be better off?
So we could deem the measure as "not passed"?
By popular disacclaim.
I can't even begin to imagine what kind of a clusterfuck those phone calls will be. Imagine signing up for a mortgage over the phone, with a goon from the DMV handling it.
And enrollment, he said, would still be possible over the telephone.
Yeah, FUCK THAT.
"Look, I've been on hold for an hour, and you've only taken half of my application. Can I--"
"Sir, I am going on my lunch break. Please call back after lunch, and we'll start the process all over again like I never ever heard of you before. Which will be true by the time I hang up."
They're developing an app for that. It'll be ready about june 2017... and will only work on out of date androids.
It's going to be a disaster:
The people handling the applications have to be manually logged into several database systems, and my guess is that the access will be through emulators acting like DEC VT220 terminals with manual copying and pasting data between applications.
The hold times and mistakes are going to be EPIC!
"The hold times and mistakes are going to be EPIC!"
And since they're all part-time help, it'll take three or four phone calls to complete the application.
I envision a phone bank with workers filling out printed versions of the systems data entry screen. Mailing copies of the handwritten forms to enrollees via USPS.
I really want to know what 36.5% of athletes.
No, it was 29-45%, so it was actually negative 16%.
I was kinda wondering what good a stat like "somewhere between 29% and 45%" was.
Or 28.55
hey, who wrote this post?
Ron Bailey, obviously.
oh, look Peter Suderman now has a byline!
See the idea that Ron Bailey would get credit totally made him fess up.
You dense git, those predicting doom-and-gloom worried that the law would work to do precisely what it's intended to do: finalize the centralization of healthcare delivery rather than addressing any of its legitimate problems. And but for the modest reprieve of delays in implementation, they're being proven right.
We probably aren't helping by hitting f5 repeatedly.