Thousands of Idahoans cancel health insurance plans on exchange ahead of subsidies ending
Idaho’s health insurance exchange ended open enrollment Monday night, with thousands of Idahoans canceling plans ahead of the expiration of deep federal government subsidies.
Overall, enrollment in health insurance plans on Your Health Idaho rose by 3 percent this year compared to last year, with more than 120,000 Idahoans enrolled in plans on the state exchange. But the exchange also saw twice as many people — nearly 8,850 — disenroll in health insurance plans, 24 percent less new enrollments, and more people shifting to cheaper insurance plans, where health care costs are higher.
Your Health Idaho Executive Director
“While we’re certainly encouraged by the increase in enrollment, we’re concerned about those that will find the plan they selected unaffordable and cancel coverage,” he told the
In the coming months, Kelly said he expects another 20,000 Idahoans will cancel coverage due to affordability concerns. It’ll likely take until April for enrollment to settle, he said, as Idahoans get a better sense of how their insurance premiums fit in their budget, and as insurance companies can cancel coverage for nonpayment.
Enhanced premium tax credits that deeply subsidize health insurance premiums on Affordable Care Act exchanges are set to expire at the end of this year, unless
‘Idaho is about to be ground-zero for a national health care affordability crisis,’
Idaho’s health insurance exchange, Your Health Idaho, is likely the first state-based exchange in the nation to end open enrollment this year.
“Idaho is about to be ground zero for a national health care affordability crisis — not because Idahoans did anything wrong, but because
In
So, she gets insurance on the exchange for her two kids, subsidized by the tax credits, Bazer said.
But when she got a raise at work recently — to help deal with the rising costs of her own private insurance plan — “there was just enough to kick my boys out of eligibility for the enhanced premium tax credit,” she said.
“Even if they had been able to stay on, their premium was going to increase
Instead of extending tax credits, Idaho
In the
Crapo and fellow Republican Risch also voted against a Democratic bill in the
“If there is a crisis coming, it is entirely of the Democrats’ making,” Crapo said in a statement. “My colleagues on the other side of the aisle created the premium tax credits as part of the Obamacare system, because they did not trust their own policy to make health insurance affordable without shifting the burden of paying for it from enrollees to taxpayers.”
Risch could not be reached for comment.



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Thousands of Idahoans cancel health insurance plans on exchange
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