Government Watchdog Takes Harsh Look at Healthcare.gov Rollout, Warns of More Problems to Come

A representative from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) testified before Congress on the rollout of HealthCare.gov—the federal health exchange system created under Obamacare—this morning. Here's the short version: It didn't go very well.
"We found that CMS undertook the development of Healthcare.gov and its related systems without effective planning or oversight practices, despite facing a number of challenges that increased both the level of risk and the need for effective oversight," the GAO's prepared testimony says.
But you already knew that. Everyone paying any attention at all to the news last fall knows that. What the GAO testimony does is add some color and confirm a few details.
One of the big problems was that federal health bureaucrats kept changing their minds during the development process. The Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS), which was charged with building the exchange system, "incurred significant cost increases, schedule slips, and delayed system functionality." These delays were largely due to "changing requirements that were exacerbated by inconsistent oversight." The dithering cost time, and it also cost money. Between September 2011 and February 2014, development cost estimates blew up, from about $56 million to $209 million for the federal marketplace. Costs for the data hub, another key part of the exchange, went from $30 million to $85 million.
It was a classic bureaucratic circus. No one knew who actually had the authority to tell contractors what to do, so contractors got jerked around and sent on fruitless tasks, or asked to do work that they shouldn't have been doing. The GAO report says that CMS improperly spent $30 million on bonus features that it didn't technically have the authority to order.
Delays and costs piled up, with some held off until weeks before launch, and when it came time to flip the switch, no one knew if it would work. "CMS launched Healthcare.gov without verification that it met performance requirements." We know how that worked out.
And thanks to this morning's testimony, which in addition to the GAO also included a representative from CMS, we know what's likely to happen next: more foul-ups when open enrollment begins for the second time this year.
CMS Deputy Administrator Andy Slavitt said this morning that "there will clearly be bumps" when the exchanges open for all business again in November, according to a report in Politico.
Slavitt also confirmed that the exchange still isn't built yet, with key backend payment systems that have already been delayed multiple times still incomplete. Slavitt said that the administration doesn't expect work to be finished on those systems until next year—after the second open enrollment period is over.
Slavitt seems to think that the situation is under better control than last time, thanks to an improved early warning system. The folks at GAO, however, aren't so sure. One of the watchdog's recommendations in the report is to "assess the causes of continued cost growth and delayed system functionality"—basically to figure out exactly why the system consistently costs more and takes longer to develop than expected, and what the real risks are of further delays and problems.
I don't expect this year's open enrollment period to be nearly the catastrophe that last year's was. Most likely, it will go more or less the way that the last few months of open enrollment did this year, with some ups and downs but basically acceptable performance for the front end of the system.
But I am not totally sure of this, in part because last summer, the GAO issued another early warning that that administration was not on track with work on the exchanges. In the wake of that report, worries about delays grew.
This was the administration's response to that line of criticism:
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*ahem* May I pre-empt trolls?
FAKE SKANDULL!!!!
BIGGEST FREE MARKET SUCCESS EVAH!!!!
WHY DO YOU HATE POOR PEOPLE AND WANT THEM TO NOT HAVE ACCESS TO TEH HEALTHCAREZ, SUDERMAN???!??!!?!?!Eleventy!1!
You forgot to mention how irredeemably racist this entire line of criticism is.
Honestly though, y'all just gotta stop hatin'.
+1 dropped "g"
All the problems of big IT projects in the private sector, but magnified a hundred-fold, with no one held responsible, and with a nearly limitless amount of money to burn through before someone pulls the plug.
if they'd have defined requirements, anyone could have delivered.
They couldn't define requirements because the people in charge were not fit for the job. Non tech, no configuration management, no economic inventives, all they do is spend until it runs out then ask for more.
This baby is hardwired.
The right TOP. MEN. weren't in charge.
Way OT, but I'm usually busy during the PM links: So I tried my hand at authoring some ProgDerp of my own on FB for satirical purposes, and it is shocking how easily they take the bait.
Saw broken glass on a street today and it triggered the memory of when my car was broken into. I remember the intrusive nature of the policeman's questions "Did you leave out any valuables?" "Was the CD case and GPS just sitting out in the open?". The officer assured me these were just "routine questions."
Unbelievable right? Apparently it's "routine" to victim-blame! I think we should spend less time shaming victims of burglaries and more time teaching people not to burglarize. We just choose not to teach people to not burgle other people. When a sign says I should 'hide my valuables,' I don't see advice or help, I see a message that we live in a society that says it's ok for guys to be burglars.
I honestly thought people would recognize it as satire and say "rape isn't funny!" But people are commenting with word of support and tying it to sexual assault as if I wasn't already doing so in a mocking manner. Ex: "Exact same thing with victim blaming and sexual assault. What were you wearing? Did you drink? Were you alone?
Really? How is it my responsibility to be mindful nit to trigger someone into attacking me, or robbing from me?"
I knew I had dumb friends, but not weapons grade levels of stupidty.
*slow clap*
I'm not sure I have the balls, but I may need to steal that in its entirety and try it out.
OH! SORRY - used the word "steal" - should have given a trigger warning?! Sorry!
Just let me know how it goes!
1) We're from the government; we're here to help.
2) The check is in the mail.
3) I promise I'll pull out.
etc
This government program will save money and help the economy.
Drake|7.31.14 @ 2:05PM|#
"This government program will save money and help the economy."
It's truly an investment in the future!
"I feared for my life."
"It was coming RIGHT AT ME!"
+1 "pitbull"
"I thought his cellphone was a gun."
When your bosses' aims are purely political, you're going to have problems. Add a dash of the tragedy of the commons, and voila, you have an expensive fiasco.
So, any word on whether or not all (or any) of the site's ridiculous number of security vulnerabilities have been fixed? I can't find any news on that front.
I'm legitimately surprised that this hasn't been more of an issue. Maybe it wasn't as bad as we thought?
Maybe nobody ever entered their credit card information to actually pay a premium, so there was nothing worth stealing?
The federal system does not process payments, at least not yet.
Based on testimony of some pretty smart security professionals in January, it was extremely bad.
I don't know YouTube's method for selecting the related videos that are suggested after playing a selection, but I thought it was amusing that, after playing the HHS HealthCare.gov "On Schedule" video, YouTube suggested a video featuring
Baghdad Bob.
Is he still alive, or did the war/aftermath kill him?
He was let go - there wasn't really anything to charge the guy with.... I don't know if he is still alive or not.
He is alive. He ended up in Jordan and works a rather mundane office job IIRC.
I'm now sad, he should have gone into entertainment.
He should be working as Obama's press secretary. He'd be more credible than what we have.
If I were an advertising exec, I'd find him...
OT:Upper middle class White guy decides to tilt at the windmill of attempting to stop Asians from eating everything that treads upon the surface of the Earth.
Video in which I meet the #pangolin mafia and cringe at leeches in Sumatra.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
We need to auction off "pangolin mafia" as a forum handle.
I'm sorry - you were saying?
Squatter!
Not suggested: Farming the pangolin.
Worked for the Buffalo.
The Chinese are already doing that, and it still gets on the upper middle class left-wing pricks' nerves. 1.5 billion Chinese should adjust their cultural food preferences to suit the aesthetic tastes of upper middle class left-wing pricks, you see.
Utah-based language school fires employee for promoting the gay agenda by writing an article about homophones (words that sound the same but have different meanings, like "through" and "threw"):
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/201.....sound-gay/
That's pretty niggardly of them.
I...umm.. That must be a hoa...no. Err...
*sigh* I can't even.
That blows.
His next article should be about irony.
Metallurgy is a bountiful topic.
If that account is true, that school's students should start demanding their money back.
Best part: the comments pinning this on "for-profit" education.
No word as to whether the owner is himself a product of public education.
Government Accountability? That's a joke, right?
Please bring your tax records for the past five years.
7
/IRS
They were on my hard drive and it crashed so I recycled it!
In that case, we will estimate your tax liability at double the prior year's amount and request prompt payment.
You may appeal, but penalties and interest will accrue during the appeal process.
"Slavitt seems to think that the situation is under better control than last time, thanks to an improved early warning system. The folks at GAO, however, aren't so sure"
This cynicism is totally unwarranted.
- Spontaneous Fires are now down by 23%
- Above Average Wait Times are now 47% less Above Average, and the Average number is getting close to "within a day"
- The part that connects the exchanges with the IRS to confirm income and qualification for Subsidies is now finally being discussed with the IRS, who previously had no idea what they were trying to do! Now they do know! And boy are they surprised!
- They have re-assigned almost all known Mentally-Handicapped Sex-Offenders who were previously staffed as 'exchange facilitators'
True story: friend said he followed the instructions, mailed them a paycheck stub, they send him a letter saying his paperwork is incomplete because he's supposed to send them TWO stubs even though it only asked for one. He sends it.
Now he still gets letters about an incomplete file and when he calls the Obamacare "help line" is told that it takes several weeks to update so he will probably continue to receive such letters for quite some time. Think of all that wasted paper and postage!
Why does Pres. Obama hate the trees?!
"it" = the ACA website
They are assigned as "exchange facilitator managers".
delayed system functionality
Beautiful.
AFAIK, there are large parts of the backend of the federal site that still are not built. Here's the diagram I've posted several times before. The site is supposed to interface with five different federal agencies, 50 state Medicaid systems, plus all the insurance companies. Connecting with pre-existing government databases is hard. Even the FBI failed when it tried to build some big project that connected with its own internal systems.
The 50%+ failure rate of large IT projects means that the odds are that the federal site may never be fully functional. I predicted this two years ago, to the mirth and disbelief of my lefty Facebook friends. So far, I have been proven correct.
The 50%+ failure rate of IT projects is due to evul corporashuns.