firstdown
11-07-2012, 03:50 PM
Mandated or Mandatory either way doesn't mean it's Obamas fault.All Insurance carriers demand paperwork filled out and if it's not ,yes you get dropped.That was going on before Obamacare and it will go on after.
Your missing the point. The paper work is new and now required by the federal gov. to comply with Obam Care. If I don't fill out the paper work they cancel my insurance and isn't the purpose of Obama Care to get more people insured?
Giantone
11-07-2012, 06:31 PM
Your missing the point. The paper work is new and now required by the federal gov. to comply with Obam Care. If I don't fill out the paper work they cancel my insurance and isn't the purpose of Obama Care to get more people insured?
The point I'm trying to make is no matter what your insurance there is paper work ,be it goverment or whoever,and it must be filled out or you get dropped.
Slingin Sammy 33
11-20-2012, 04:27 PM
More costs of Obamacare, approx. $ 8-12M / yr. annually in the City of VB alone. Property taxes either go up or City services go down. This is happening throughout the country. So much for no tax increases on anyone making under $ 250K.
Enjoy, this is what the majority voted for.
Projected $46M deficit is slight relief to Beach leaders | HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com (http://hamptonroads.com/2012/11/projected-46m-deficit-slight-relief-beach-leaders)
Giantone
11-20-2012, 05:00 PM
More costs of Obamacare, approx. $ 8-12M / yr. annually in the City of VB alone. Property taxes either go up or City services go down. This is happening throughout the country. So much for no tax increases on anyone making under $ 250K.
Enjoy, this is what the majority voted for.
Projected $46M deficit is slight relief to Beach leaders | HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com (http://hamptonroads.com/2012/11/projected-46m-deficit-slight-relief-beach-leaders)
....and the crying continues.
firstdown
11-20-2012, 05:35 PM
More costs of Obamacare, approx. $ 8-12M / yr. annually in the City of VB alone. Property taxes either go up or City services go down. This is happening throughout the country. So much for no tax increases on anyone making under $ 250K.
Enjoy, this is what the majority voted for.
Projected $46M deficit is slight relief to Beach leaders | HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com (http://hamptonroads.com/2012/11/projected-46m-deficit-slight-relief-beach-leaders)
or they decide to stop spending to go after a pro NBA team or they stop paying for study after stupy for light rail. While I agree Obama care will hit everyones pockets the city is setting it up like its everyones fault but theirs when its running a deficit.
NC_Skins
11-20-2012, 08:41 PM
No, the goal is for bleeding hearts to make sure that everyone gets insurance how Nancy Pelosi says they should get it.
I got mine. **** everybody else.
GOP should adopt this motto. Would suit them well.
Slingin Sammy 33
11-20-2012, 09:00 PM
or they decide to stop spending to go after a pro NBA team or they stop paying for study after stupy for light rail. While I agree Obama care will hit everyones pockets the city is setting it up like its everyones fault but theirs when its running a deficit.I'll be the last one to defend the NBA team debacle, and I voted against the Light Rail boondoggle. I'm pretty sure VB has to have a balanced budget by law.
Giantone
05-27-2013, 05:45 PM
Wonkbook: Some very good news for Obamacare
Wonkbook: Some very good news for Obamacare (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/05/24/wonkbook-some-very-good-news-for-obamacare/?tid=socialss)
Obamacare got some very good news on Thursday.
In 2009, the Congressional Budget Office predicted that a medium-level “silver” plan — which covers 70 percent of a beneficiary’s expected health costs — on the California health exchange would cost $5,200 annually. More recently, a report from the consulting firm Milliman predicted it would carry a $450 monthly premium. Yesterday, we got the real numbers. And they’re lower than anyone thought.
As always, Sarah Kliff has the details (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/05/23/california-obamacare-premiums-no-rate-shock-here/?wprss=rss_ezra-klein). The California exchange will have 13 insurance options, and the heavy competition appears to be driving down prices. The most affordable silver-level plan is charging $276-a-month. The second-most affordable plan is charging $294. And all this is before subsidies. Someone making twice the poverty line, say, will only pay $104-a-month.
Sparer plans are even cheaper. A young person buying the cheapest “bronze”-level plan will pay $172 — and that, again, is before any subsidies.
California is a particularly important test for Obamacare. It’s not just the largest state in the nation. It’s also one of the states most committed to implementing Obamacare effectively. Under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger — remember how that really happened? — California was the first state to begin building its insurance exchanges. The state’s outreach efforts are unparalleled. Its insurance regulators are working hard to bring in good plans and make sure they’re playing fair. If California can’t make the law work, perhaps no one can. But if California can make the law work, it shows that others can, too.
And perhaps others will. We’re beginning to see competition drive down proposed rates in some exchanges around the country. Remember Maryland, where CareFirst grabbed headlines (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/04/25/wonkbook-ready-for-obamacare-rashomon/) with a shocking 25 percent proposed increase in rates? More plans have streamed in with lower bids. Kaiser Permanente, for instance, is only increasing its rates next year by 4.3 percent — a modest increase that will make CareFirst’s proposal almost impossible to sustain. My guess is when the exchange actually opens in October, CareFirst will have dropped its price substantially. If they don’t, then Kaiser and others will grab all the market share.
Giantone
06-06-2013, 07:11 PM
More Good News on the Health Care Mandate.
Thanks To Obamacare, Major Insurers Have To Give Back $36 Million To California Small Businesses | ThinkProgress (http://thinkprogress.org/health/2013/06/05/2101831/thanks-to-obamacare-major-insurers-have-to-give-back-36-million-to-california-small-businesses/?mobile=nc)
"On Tuesday, Golden State small businesses and their employees got some great news: two of the state’s largest insurers will have to give them over $36 million in insurance rebates because of an Obamacare consumer protection.
The health law forces insurers to spend at least 80 percent of the premiums they charge on paying for actual medical services, rather than administrative overhead or profits. That means more money for ordinary consumers — and less for profitable insurance companies.
The so-called “80/20 rule” put $1.5 billion back into Americans’ pockets in 2011 alone. The average rebate was $151 per family across all insurance markets, and in states where insurers blatantly gouged prices, average rebates topped a whopping $500 per family.
Now, the benefits for Californians with small business health plans are beginning to materialize. Blue Shield of California will be forced to pay back $24.5 million in rebates. Anthem Blue Cross will have to pay back another $12 million.
While cheering the latest numbers as a victory for California small businesses and their employees, consumer advocates argue that the insurance industry should try harder to proactively lower costs for companies and individuals.
“Health insurers should work to cut upfront premiums rather than reimburse consumers afterward,” said Jon Fox, consumer advocate at the California Public Interest Research Group Education Fund, in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “Millions of dollars in rebates are a clear sign that health insurers are overcharging consumers.” "