Insurers Escape Paying Penalties That Should Have Been Levied By IRS, Report Finds
Meanwhile, news outlet report on the challenge of reaching the remaining 33 million uninsured, Rep. Elijah Cummings' speech on universal health care, Alaska lawmakers' meeting to reconsider their Medicaid-expansion lawsuit and the expected premium announcements in Minnesota.
The Fiscal Times:
IRS May Have Allowed Insurers To Escape Millions In Fees And Penalties
The Internal Revenue Service may have allowed scores of insurers to avoid paying millions of dollars in taxes and penalties under a provision of the Affordable Care Act, according to a new report by a Treasury Department inspector general. (Pianin, 9/25)
Five Thirty Eight Economics:
33 Million Americans Still Don’t Have Health Insurance
The White House has said it will focus this year’s enrollment push on the remaining uninsured. So it’s worth taking a closer look at who those people were. Most of them — about 56 percent — fell into three major groups that were widely expected to have high uninsurance rates: immigrants, young adults and people in the so-called Medicaid gap. But that still left more than 14 million Americans who don’t have insurance and don’t fall into any of these categories. ... Without immigrants and people in the Medicaid gap, the total number of uninsured is about 22 million people, more than a third of whom are young adults ages 19 to 34. (Barry-Jester and Casselman, 9/28)
The Washington Times:
Elijah Cummings Calls Obamacare ‘First Step,’ Vows Universal Health Care Coverage
Rep. Elijah E. Cummings says he believes affordable health care for all Americans is an achievable goal, and cites President Obama’s signature law as a good start. Addressing an audience of hundreds of people Saturday at the Chase Brexton Charm Ball, the longtime Maryland Democrat said the “first step was the Affordable Care Act. We must be clear to not mistake a comma for a period.” (Althoff, 9/27)
Alaska Dispatch News:
Alaska Lawmakers Will Consider -- Or Reconsider -- Medicaid Lawsuit Monday
A House-Senate committee is scheduled to meet Monday to discuss how and whether to move forward with the Alaska Legislature’s lawsuit to stop Gov. Bill Walker from unilaterally expanding the Medicaid health care program. ... The original committee vote authorizing the Legislature’s lawsuit was 10 to 1, with all the members of the Republican-led House and Senate majorities in favor. But at least one Republican member of the Legislative Council, Anchorage Rep. Mike Hawker, says he hopes to steer his colleagues away from the lawsuit at Monday’s meeting. (Herz, 9/27)
The Minneapolis Star-Tribune:
Health Insurance Premiums To Rise For Thousands In Minnesota, But How High?
Thousands of Minnesotans who buy health insurance on their own are bracing for final word on whether their premiums will spike next year. On Thursday, the Minnesota Department of Commerce is scheduled to release 2016 rates for shoppers who buy individual policies. (Snowbeck, 9/28)