Farmer cooperative health plans may rattle individual market in Minnesota
Lawmakers blessed the new coverage from agricultural co-ops earlier this year in legislation on the troubled individual insurance market under the federal Affordable Care Act.
Some fear the co-ops could hurt the individual market by pulling large numbers of healthy farmers from a risk pool that's already smaller and more costly than expected. But there are doubts about the immediate impact of the co-ops, since organizers face a big challenge in explaining a new program at a time when many farmers have been busy with a late harvest.
"It is damn hard to set up an insurance company," said
Farmers are among the roughly 166,000 state residents who buy individual health insurance policies -- a group composed largely of people under age 65 who are self-employed or don't get coverage from their employers.
The new state law allows for agricultural cooperative health plans (ACHPs) in which farmers in certain circumstances can band together in "self-insured" health plans like those used by many large employers.
Co-op coverage is open only to members who actively work in production agriculture, the law says, or provide direct services to the state's industry. The statute says members must participate for at least three consecutive years or they could be subject to a financial penalty.
Open enrollment started
"We're losing too many farms," said
The individual market has seen sweeping change under the Affordable Care Act, which bans health insurers from denying coverage to people based on pre-existing health conditions. The federal law provides large tax credits for many individuals, but those with incomes that are too high for the subsidies -- a group that includes many farmers -- are stuck paying market prices that have been soaring.
Symptoms of the market's instability have been painfully obvious, including big premium jumps and carriers limiting options since major ACA changes kicked in for 2014. Data from the
Next year in
Considering those big deductibles, premium payments feel like a "monthly slap in the face," said
That all sounded good to Angell, since her current health plan doesn't provide in-network access to the nearest hospital. It's an example of the "narrow network" limits that are now common in the individual market.
"I'm leaning in that direction," Angell said of the co-op health plan following the meeting at an
At the nearby
"Harvest is about two to three weeks behind schedule," he said last week. "It makes it hard to take any time."
To join the 40 Square health plan, farmers must purchase co-op stock and have at least one common law employee. (The co-op provides a two-page guide to help farmers determine which workers fit the definition.) If the co-op hasn't enrolled 500 families by early December, organizers will decide whether to extend open enrollment or shut down the offering for 2018 -- with plenty of notice to those who've signed up, said
As of last week, Vrieze said just under 100 member-owners had enrolled.
Organizers of 40 Square say they started working at the Legislature to clear the way for the new health plan long before the Affordable Care Act. The goal was to let farmers "participate in the risk-reward mechanism" in self-insured groups, so they benefit directly by controlling costs via efficient use of health care, said
The co-op's paperwork includes answering a series of questions about a person's health history. 40 Square won't turn down anyone based on pre-existing conditions but could charge significantly higher premiums based on the responses. This "medical underwriting" process was required by the co-op's stop-loss insurer since the new group doesn't have a track record for projecting costs, organizers say.
Vrieze said it's not 40 Square's intent to cherry pick members who are less likely to run up big health bills. "However, in order for us to make this viable, we do, absolutely -- just as the individual market -- we have to have healthy people in our pool," she said.
That aspect of 40 Square raises concerns for Sen.
Vrieze countered that people with health problems might sign up for co-op coverage, despite medical underwriting, for better access to doctors and hospitals.
At Land O'Lakes, the new cooperative health plan will ask enrollees about their health history but won't charge different premiums based on the answers, Grove said. Land O'Lakes hopes to expand the new health plan to farmers in other states, she said, depending on what happens with a recent executive order from President
State regulators say it's not yet clear if the new
Insurers don't expect huge numbers to sign up for 2018 co-op coverage because the plans are new, but they have questions about the long-run impact, said
"These new co-op plans have regulation and tax advantages that will save their members money right off the bat," he said. "It's good for their members, but those taxes and those regulations were there for a reason, and [it] leaves higher bills and more responsibility for everyone else buying insurance."
___
(c)2017 the Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
Visit the Star Tribune (Minneapolis) at www.startribune.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
BNY Mellon Wealth Management Hires Carolina Montiel as Managing Director in the Family Wealth Investment Advisor Group
Delivering Health Care to At-Risk Children Must Be Bipartisan Priority Again
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News