Iowa’s Republican governor has sent the federal government a list of 50 questions he says must be answered before the state can try to set up a “health care exchange” required by what is now commonly called “ObamaCare.”

Branstad has repeatedly criticized the law and he did so again in his letter to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Yesterday, during an interview that aired on Iowa Public Radio, Michael Bousselot — an advisor to Branstad on health care issues — said there are just too many unknowns.

“I’d liken it to trying to buy a car without knowing the key features or the price of the car,” Bousselot said. “…If we’re going to set up an exchange, we need to know what the requirements are, what the costs will be.”

The exchanges are to be used by small business owners and uninsured individuals to shop for insurance plans and, in some instances, receive subsidies. Today had been a deadline for state officials to indicate whether they intend to set up the exchange in their state, enter into a partnership with the federal government on the project or simply to default and let the feds set up the state-level insurance exchanges. However, the deadline has been extended ’til December 14 and Bousselot said the governor’s preference is to have state officials run it.

“If we have to have an exchange, if we must have an exchange and if that exchange is going to be built in Iowa it should be built by Iowans for Iowa’s unique health care problems,” Bousselot said.

A Democratic state senator who’s been working on this issue accused Governor Branstad of “playing partisan games” and just “complaining” rather working with Democrats and Republicans in the state legislature to set up the insurance exchange. The governor suggested in his letter that the health care exchange will “raise costs” and does nothing to address “quality” or improve the health of Iowans.

Branstad’s health care advisor put it this way: “We are missing some key pieces of information and we need those pieces of information before we can fully commit to saying, ‘This will be up by October 1 of next year.'”

Below you may read Governor Branstad’s list of 50 questions about the exchanges and the statement from the Democrat who accuses Branstad of foot-dragging.

(DES MOINES) – Gov. Terry Branstad this morning submitted the below letter of intent on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) to Sec. Sebelius, meeting the deadline previously set forth by the Health and Human Services director.

However, late yesterday, Sec. Sebelius pushed back the deadline to December 14. In response to the new, arbitrary deadline set forth by the federal government, despite all the work states like Iowa have already accomplished, Communications Director Tim Albrecht said the following:

“Make no mistake, this deadline was extended because the federal government does not have the answers or capability to administer the Obamacare program,” said Albrecht. “This deadline was not pushed back to give the governors more time, rather it was a lifeline to help save themselves.”

The text of Gov. Branstad’s letter is as follows, with 50 remaining questions the federal government has yet to answer that underscore the information the state needs to make an informed decision:
November 16, 2012

The Honorable Kathleen Sebelius
US Department of Health & Human Services
200 Independence Avenue Southwest
Washington, DC 20201

Dear Secretary Sebelius:

My top priorities as governor are to protect the health, safety and welfare of Iowans, promote our State’s fiscal well-being and ensure our State remains a leader in job creation and income growth. I write you today to inform you that Iowa will continue on its path to creating an Iowa-based exchange that is intended to protect the health of Iowans, ensure the integrity of our health insurance markets and safe-guard our State budget from unnecessary turbulence. I continue to have concerns that an intrusive Federal exchange would raise costs on individuals and businesses, making it harder for them to create jobs and raise family incomes in Iowa. In fact, I have even greater concern that the health benefit exchanges proposed in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) do nothing to address the quality of care or make our population healthier.

However, I cannot provide you with a set of timelines or complete details about the exchange until our State receives clear, binding rules from your Department. Forcing an exchange decision on states based on an arbitrary timetable, would be like forcing a consumer to buy a car without knowing the vehicle’s price tag or fuel economy. If forced to make a decision with incomplete information, then I have no choice but to default on some level to a Federal exchange. That is not my preferred path forward. Recently, I recommitted to my long-time pledge to work in a bipartisan fashion with Iowa legislative leaders and that pledge applies to our Federal partners as well. We have not abandoned our legal responsibility to create an exchange; however, the path towards consensus rests with you and Health and Human Services leadership. Our intention is not to default to a Federal exchange, but the road blocks and impediments in front of us may leave us no choice.

As a former governor, I trust you know the challenges states face when trying to navigate the murky waters of implementing a Federal mandate without clear guidance. In Iowa, formal rulemaking not only binds both the State and stakeholder to a clear set of expectations, it also allows for predictable and formal opportunities for stakeholder input that citizens deserve.

Iowa, like many states, has worked diligently, and met all deadlines for health benefit exchanges. We are updating vital systems and technology within our State, officials have met with critical stakeholders for input on exchanges and we have a solid framework for how an exchange could operate in Iowa. However, we continue to struggle with too many unanswered questions on topics critically important to the final development of an exchange that meets the needs of Iowans, including the cost of building and operating an exchange. Practical considerations will be guiding all states with the looming deadlines set by PPACA.

It is my hope that you will work with my State, and others, to address our questions and give us the flexibility and information we need to address the real challenges we face when trying to make decisions with incomplete guidance. Enclosed please find a list of issues and questions on which we seek specific guidance. Building a state-based exchange at all costs is not an option for any state. If Iowa must have an exchange, the exchange must provide solutions to the unique health care problems Iowa faces at an affordable and sustainable cost.
Sincerely,

 

Terry E. Branstad
Governor
Exchange-Related Questions for US HHS

1) Please provide a complete list of regulations that will have to be reviewed, revised and re-opened for public comment prior to implementation as a result of the Supreme Court ruling (e.g., the Medicaid eligibility regulations, exchange regulations related to interface with Medicaid). What is the schedule for re-issuing these regulations?

2) When will final rules be issued on essential health benefits, actuarial value and rating areas?

3) The federal government has already extended deadlines for applying for Level 1 and Level 2 Exchange Establishment funding into 2014. Can we expect extensions of the deadlines for other areas of implementation given the uncertainty caused by the Supreme Court ruling and the linkage between Medicaid expansion and exchange eligibility and enrollment functions? In addition, will the deadlines change for states implementing a partnership exchange? Will the deadlines be extended for states implementing a federal exchange? Can you confirm that states will be able to switch from a federal model to a partnership or state model until 2019 and that funding will be available to enable that transition?

4) When will the details of the federal partnership options be available? These cannot be considered as an option without details including cost estimates and how state and federal systems are expected to link. How will the long term funding of the federally-facilitated healthcare exchanges be sustained?

5) States considering a state-based exchange need to know whether there will be a charge to use the federal data hub, advance premium tax credit/cost-sharing reduction service, risk adjustment and transitional reinsurance programs. Will there be a charge? And, if so, how much will it be?

6) When will states learn the details of the operational systems for a federal exchange? The procedural, technical, and architectural requirements for linking to the federal exchange have not been released. It is not feasible to know if a state-based exchange is better for our citizens until we know what the contents of a federal exchange will be.

7) When will information from the establishment of a federal exchange be available for states to use if a state opts to build its own exchange? It is costly for each state to have to start from scratch and still not know how interfaces will work.

8) If states choose to build a state-based exchange, what dollars will the federal government contribute now and in the future? For the federal exchange states, when will the regulations regarding the imposition of taxes on a state’s insurers be released?

9) It has been widely reported that Congressional leaders who have to appropriate money will seek to defund exchanges. Can you explain how the enactment provisions of the law allow the Executive Branch to continue to fund exchanges without Congressional action to appropriate money?

10) What happens to a state that has taken exchange planning and implementation grants if their exchange is not financially viable after 2015? Can a state refuse to increase taxes on either its residents or insurers, thus putting the financial underpinning of an exchange at risk? What penalties does the federal government envision in this case?

11) What happens if a state accepts grant money now to begin to build a state exchange, and subsequently determines that a federal exchange may be better? Will the federal government claw back these grant dollars from the states?

12) The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has pointed out a provision in the law that reduces exchange subsidies after 2018, which means fewer and fewer people will qualify for subsidies, and the people who do qualify will get a smaller and smaller subsidy. Does the Administration support that change, and if so, how would you pay for it? If you do not, why do you think people should be forced to buy insurance if federal subsidies are shrinking?

13) Alongside the considerable challenge of greatly expanding the Medicaid program, states are charged by the PPACA with creating a single, seamless point of entry for all of the insurance affordability programs affected by the Act–Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), the Basic Health Plan (where offered), advance tax credits for individual and Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) exchange enrollees. This leaves another major question on the table. What about all of the other social service programs?

14) In order to minimize disruptions to a state’s insurance market, The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is required to certify multi-state plans that must be included in every exchange. When will the rules be released detailing the requirements and timeline for multi-state plans? How OPM structures these rules can be very disruptive to a state’s insurance market.

15) Does the federal government intend to maintain high risk pools and how will they be financed? What actions will they take in a state that has opted not to operate a high risk pool or an exchange?

16) How do states with a federal exchange ensure that Web Based Entities (WBE) are an option in their state?

17) Will HHS and the United States Department of the Treasury offset the advance payments of premium assistance tax credits to issuers for an applicant’s outstanding tax, alimony, and/or child support debts?

18) Will state-based exchanges have the flexibility to retroactively adjust past due premium amounts for interim changes in income?

19) How will the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight (CCIO) handle Qualifed Health Plans (QHP) to Medicare transitions to prevent enrollee confusion and the potential for unpaid QHP premiums due to the enrollee not terminating the QHP timely?

20) How will CCIIO minimize the adverse impact of its overly-broad employer notice requirement?

21) What is the process/timeline for the approval of a state-specific single streamlined application (SSA)?

22) Must Iowa have a Medicaid Portal or can it use the federal portal? If the answer is that it has to use a federal portal, how does it incorporate state-specific programs (SNAP, TANF, etc.?)

23) What is the role/scope of a verification plan in a state partnership exchange? Does it require federal approval? How and when should a verification plan be submitted for federal review?

24) What will the federal government require of all the states in terms of specifications for account information/record layout/package of data elements?

25) When and how should the implementation review be submitted?

26) What are the HBE reporting requirements (HHS format? ACA 1313A?)

27) Has the Plan Management Forum been rescheduled?

28) Iowa would like to verify that the ACA will only allow “Indian status” for members of federally recognized tribes.

29) Does this flow account for the possibility that some individuals may not be eligible for the exchange (because the individual has employer sponsored insurance), but person’s income could still qualify them to be eligible for Medicaid?

30) With individuals coming into the system through the FFE, what implications are there for Iowa’s existing online application for SNAP and TANF?

31) As an individual begins the application through the federal portal, what data elements will the FFE use to identify that the applicant lives in Iowa (attestation, zip code of mailing address, zip phone of residence, etc.)?

32) At the “Transmit Account to State” point in the diagram, what are the gaps between the information that the federal hub gives Iowa and the information that Iowa needs to determine Medicaid MAGI eligibility?

33) What data will be included in the account at the “Transmit Account to State” point? If this data set has not yet been determined, when will it be determined?

34) Will the single streamlined application ask about health status (pregnancy, etc.)?

35) In the Medicaid Agency swim lane, should CHIP Eligibility be moved before “Assess for Other IAP Eligibility” step? If so, this may be useful information for CCIIO to share with other states. 

36) What exactly happens at the “Assess for Other IAP Eligibility” point in the diagram?

37) What is the communication back to consumers if it appears they are not eligible for anything (insurance affordability in addition to Medicaid and CHIP)?
38) Can Iowa receive the application electronically (and thus meet the regulation that requires states to do so) through the FFE (instead of having a separate state-supported Medicaid portal)? Would using the FFE that meets the intent of the law which says that the states’ Medicaid must have the capability to accept Medicaid applications electronically?

39) Will the paper application have to reflect the data elements in the single streamlined application and then have a number of supplemental data elements that are required by Iowa, or can the state continue using the current Iowa paper joint application?

40) Iowa would like to verify that the entry point for the select group of people who are categorically eligible for Medicaid (babies born to Medicaid mothers, SSI, etc.) will remain subject to current business rules.

41) How will the business rules for Medicaid presumptive eligibility change?

42) From an education and outreach perspective, how will hospital staff get trained on the presumptive eligibility process?

43) The Blueprint roadmap lists “Navigator” under 2.6, but does not indicate it is something that could be in a state partnership model (the partnership columns are not checked). In the same roadmap, 13.3 mentions Consumer assistance and indicates it can be part of a partnership model.  The draft “Design Review Modules – State Partnership Exchanges” under consumer assistance partnership shows Navigator as part of the module.  It seems like there is a conflict that may need to be clarified.

44) Provide an overview of the federal Navigator program – are these actual people who will be stationed in the SPE/FFE states?  Will Iowa have Navigators physically in our state?

45) Describe the role/responsibility for the federal Navigators (who are the Navigators and what will their responsibilities be).

46) How will the federal Navigators integrate with state specific in-person consumer assistors?

47) What is CMS’s/CCIIO’s vision/description of what the state must do to fulfill their obligations regarding in-person assistance?

48) In the blueprint section 4.0 (Plan Management), there are sub-sections identified as 4.5 and 4.6. However, in the guidance on what states need to prepare for in the design review for SPE, these two sub-sections are not listed. Can you clarify what the state’s responsibilities are for these two sub-sections?

49) Is there a CMS’s/CCIIO’s plan for integration between the HBE implementation and the BIP implementation?

50) Describe the role federal call centers play with regard to helping a caller obtain Medicaid (will the caller be switched to the Iowa Medicaid call center based on the area code of their call?) Describe the federal plan for education and outreach? Will marketing materials be tailored to the state? Will the state have input to the marketing materials?

 Statement by State Senator Jack Hatch

“Governor Branstad should stop playing partisan political games and start helping improve Iowa’s health care.  

“While 17 other states are making health insurance better and easier to purchase, Iowa’s governor is complaining about “process” rather than catching up.  Iowans of both parties simply want Governor Branstad to work with the Obama administration to make buying private insurance easier and to help uninsured Iowans. 

“Health and Human Services Secretary Sebelius agreed to the request from Republican Governors for additional time to determine how they wish to go forward regarding the establishment of health insurance exchanges.  Everyone involved in Iowa health care hopes this overture will convince Governor Branstad to stop complaining and start working on solutions. 

“Here’s the bottom line: Iowans expect Governor Branstad to implement federal law by working with both the President, the Iowa legislature, and with Iowa health care providers and consumers.

“Let’s get to work!”

Radio Iowa