What the Obamacare Court Ruling Means for Open Enrollment

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/16/us/obamacare-enrollment-deadline.html

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When a federal judge in Texas struck down the Affordable Care Act on Friday, ruling that its mandate requiring most people to buy health insurance was unconstitutional, it thrust Obamacare into the spotlight right at the deadline to sign up for next year’s coverage.

Open enrollment was scheduled to end on Saturday in most states, and every year, a surge of people sign up at the last minute.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services sent out an email to millions of Americans on Saturday trying to allay concerns, and HealthCare.gov displayed a red banner alerting people that the court’s decision would not affect open enrollment.

“Are you covered yet?” HealthCare.gov tweeted on Saturday. “Hurry!”

But, because things were not complicated enough already, you might still have time to enroll depending on where you live. Some states have deadlines in January.

Here is a quick rundown of what happened in Texas and what the ruling means for your open enrollment and beyond.

In a lawsuit filed this year, a group of Republican governors and state attorneys general challenged the Affordable Care Act, arguing that the requirement that people have health insurance — known as the individual mandate — is unconstitutional, and therefore, so is the entire law.

At issue was whether the individual mandate still compelled people to buy coverage after Congress reduced the tax penalty for people who do not have health insurance to zero dollars. (In 2017, the average tax penalty was $708, according to preliminary data.)

In his ruling, Judge Reed O’Connor of the Federal District Court for the Northern District of Texas said the individual mandate “can no longer be sustained as an exercise of Congress’s tax power.” Judge O’Connor, a George W. Bush appointee, said that he would not “parse the A.C.A.’s provisions one by one,” but that he had to invalidate the whole law.

That does not mean the Affordable Care Act is immediately null. The judge did not issue an injunction to stop federal officials from enforcing the law, and a group of states led by Democrats have promised to appeal the decision.

The case may well make its way to the Supreme Court.

The case could threaten the survival of the landmark health law and, with it, health coverage for millions of Americans, protections for people with pre-existing conditions and much more.

But for now, open enrollment is proceeding as planned.

The case is “still moving through the courts,” the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said in an email on Saturday. “The marketplaces are still open for business, and we will continue with open enrollment. There will be no impact to enrollees’ current coverage or their coverage in a 2019 plan.”

But any confusion caused by the Texas court decision could contribute to lower enrollment numbers, which were already lagging behind last year’s turnout.

From when open enrollment started, on Nov. 1, to Dec. 8, sign-ups in the 39 states that use HealthCare.gov were down about 12 percent compared with the same period last year.

There are a few reasons enrollment has been lower this year. In states with Medicaid expansion, residents may rely less on the federal marketplace for health insurance. In addition, Congress eliminated the tax penalty for people who go without coverage, lifting pressure off people who only bought coverage under threat of a fine. There may also be less awareness about the sign-up deadlines. The Trump administration slashed funding for advertising and other forms of marketing by 90 percent last year, and those funds were not restored.

Now, add in the last-minute confusion.

“During a year when most people don’t know when the deadline is, if the only news you hear is that the A.C.A. was struck down, that is only going to hurt enrollment,” said Joshua Peck, a co-founder of the group Get America Covered and the former chief marketing officer for HealthCare.gov during the Obama administration.

For the 39 states that use HealthCare.gov, the open enrollment period ended on Saturday.

But 11 states and the District of Columbia operate their own marketplaces. The states are California, Colorado, Connecticut, Idaho, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.

The deadlines in those states vary. Some states, such as California, had already planned for deadlines that stretch into January. Connecticut, which had planned to end enrollment on Saturday, extended its deadline until Jan. 15 in response to the Texas ruling. Check your local insurance marketplace for details.