Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

ObamaCrapCare Is 'Unforgiving"


DOL Asst. Secretary: ACA ‘unforgiving’


By Brian M. Kalish
May 21, 2013
A head Labor Department official said Monday that the department cannot provide as much clarity or answer questions about the Affordable Care Act as people are seeking due to elements of the law
Speaking at the International Foundation for Employee Benefit Plans Washington Legislative Update at the Capital Hilton, Phyllis Borzi, assistant secretary for employee benefits security, acknowledged that those in the audience — mostly multi-plan trustees — are struggling with how to implement the ACA and although the DOL is working with them “these are very, very difficult issues because the statute is so unforgiving in a number of areas.”
Borzi, who is in charge of the Employee Benefits Security Administration, said that many times people come into the department’s offices to talk about the law and want to put aside the statute during the conversation. “We can’t do that,” Borzi said. “It’s only when the statute gives us some wiggle room and often it does not.”
Further, she said often when the U.S. Government is sued about the law, many of the cases accuse the government of exceeding its legal authority so “we are very cautious about not exceeding our legal authority,” Borzi said.
However she said the department remains committed to helping people as they figure out how the law will impact their plans. “We are not there yet,” she explained, “any of you wondering what will happen, I wish I could give you some clarity … but we do understand how important your plans are.”

3 comments:

  1. It needs to be "unforgiving." That is the problem with Dodd-Frank. It doesn't put the regulations into the law enough. It left it to the regulatory agencies to write the rules on derivatives. We have seen how that works. The lobbyists come in and blow it out of the water. I am still afraid that the insurance industry lobbyists will likewise prevail with ACA in some critical areas. We'll see.

    --David

    ReplyDelete
  2. ACA or obamacrapcare regulations are being written as we speak without any input from anyone who has ever handled a claim, treated a patient, run a hospital, or sold a policy. It is the blind and incompetent leading the politically motivated. This can only be a disaster.

    ReplyDelete
  3. They are responding to inputs. A few weeks ago you posted the application that ran 17 pages long. They have now cut it down to 3 pages for an individual applicant and 7 pages for a family in response to feedback. No doubt more adjustments will be needed and will happen. Give it a chance.

    --David

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for commenting. Your comments are needed for helping to improve the discussion.