The Buckeye Institute Calls on Court to Restore Flexibility, Security, and Choice to Health Insurance Marketplace
In its brief,
"The
For two decades Americans have been provided the choice to purchase short-term, limited duration insurance that could fill a gap in health insurance coverage for up to 12 months. This 12-month term allowed people who were out of work to obtain health insurance and have confidence that they would have coverage until they found work or the next open enrollment period under the Affordable Care Act began. In 2016, federal regulators in the Obama administration changed that rule and allowed these plans to cover for a maximum of only three months. This change meant that people who purchased a short-term plan in February, for example, would have insurance for only three months and could be left uninsured for seven months--until the next open enrollment period of the Affordable Care Act began the following January. In 2018, the
Sens. Wyden, Merkley Demand Trump Publicly Commit To Protecting Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid
Sens. Schumer, Gillibrand Announce FEMA, Homeland Security-Led Webinars on Nonprofit Security Grant Program
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