Washington – What You Need To Know About March Obamacare Deadline

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    HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testifies before the committee in December on the health law’s botched rollout. Secretary Sebelius appeared on three occasions in 2013.
(Photograph: U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce)Washington – Sick of hearing about the health care law?

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    Plenty of people have tuned out after all the political jabber and website woes.

    But now is the time to tune back in, before it’s too late.

    The big deadline is coming March 31.

    By that day, for the first time, nearly everyone in the United States is required to be signed up for health insurance or risk paying a fine.

    Here’s what you need to know about this month’s open enrollment countdown:

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    ALREADY COVERED? NO WORRIES

    Most people don’t need to do anything. Even before the health care law passed in 2010, more than 8 out of 10 U.S. residents had coverage, usually through their workplace plans or the government’s Medicare or Medicaid programs. Some have private policies that meet the law’s requirements.

    If you’re already covered that way, you meet the law’s requirements.

    Since October, about 4 million people have signed up for private plans through the new state and federal marketplaces, the Obama administration says, although it’s not clear how many were already insured elsewhere. In addition, many poor adults now have Medicaid coverage for the first time through expansions of the program in about half the states.

    President Barack Obama is urging people who have coverage to help any uninsured friends and relatives get signed up.

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    NEED COVERAGE? IT’S CRUNCH TIME

    Chances are you’ll hear more reminders about health care this month. The push is on to reach millions of uninsured people.

    On Thursday, Obama will participate in a televised town hall aimed at reaching uninsured Hispanics, who make up nearly a third of all uninsured people nationally. The White House said the event is sponsored by a coalition of nonprofit groups and major Latino media outlets, and will be disseminated across broadcast stations, websites and social media.

    Wooing Hispanics is a priority, but it’s just one component of a broader effort by the administration, insurers, medical associations and nonprofit groups to get the word out and guide people through the sometimes-rocky enrollment process. They plan special events at colleges, libraries, churches and work sites.

    Singing cats, dogs, parrots — even a goldfish — are promoting the message in TV and online spots from the Ad Council.

    A big hurdle for the effort: As recently as last month, three-fourths of the uninsured didn’t know there was a March 31 deadline, according to polling conducted for the Kaiser Family Foundation. Most said they didn’t know much about the law and had an unfavorable opinion of it.

    Plus, many worry they won’t be able to afford the new plans.

    The enrollment campaign is emphasizing that subsidies are available on a sliding scale to help low-income and middle-class households pay for their insurance.

    How to enroll? Start at HealthCare.gov or by calling 1-800-318-2596. Residents of states running their own marketplaces will be directed there; people in other states go through the federal exchange.

    After March 31, many people won’t be able to get subsidized coverage this year, even if they become seriously ill.

    The next open enrollment period is set to begin Nov. 15, for coverage in 2015.

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    DEADLINE DETAILS

    There are exceptions. The big one is the Medicaid program for the poor. People who meet the requirements can sign up anytime, with no deadline.

    Also, people remain eligible for Medicare whenever they turn 65.

    If you are insured now and lose your coverage during the year, by getting laid off from your job, for example, you can use an exchange to find a new policy then. People can sign up outside the open enrollment period in special situations such as having a baby or moving to another state.

    You can choose to buy insurance outside the marketplaces and still benefit from consumer protections in the law.

    People who do that wouldn’t normally be eligible for premium subsidies. But the Obama administration says exceptions will be made for people whose attempts to buy marketplace insurance on time were stymied by continuing problems with some enrollment websites.

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    MILLIONS OF PEOPLE WON’T GET COVERED

    Some 12 million people could gain health coverage this year because of the law, if congressional auditors’ predictions don’t prove overly optimistic.

    Even so, tens of millions still would go without.

    That’s partly because of immigrants in the country illegally; they aren’t eligible for marketplace policies.

    Some of the uninsured will not find out about the program in time, will find it confusing or too costly, or will just procrastinate too long. Some feel confident of their health and prefer to risk going uninsured instead of paying premiums. Others are philosophically opposed to participating.

    Figuring out just how many of the uninsured got coverage this year won’t be easy because the numbers are fuzzy.

    The administration’s enrollment count includes people who already were insured and used the exchanges to find a better deal, or switched from private insurance to Medicaid, or already qualified for Medicaid before the changes.

    Some who sign up will end up uninsured anyway, if they fail to pay their premiums.

    The budget experts predict enrollment will grow in future years and by 2017 some 92 percent of legal residents too young for Medicare will have insurance.

    But even then, about 30 million people in the United States would go uncovered.

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    SOME ARE LEFT OUT

    A gap in the law means some low-income workers can’t get help.

    The insurance marketplaces weren’t designed to serve people whose low incomes qualify them for expanded Medicaid instead. But some states have declined to expand their Medicaid programs. That means that in those states, many poor people will get left out.

    People who fall into the gap won’t be penalized for failing to get covered.

    Some others are exempt from the insurance mandate, too: American Indians, those with religious objections, prisoners, immigrants in the country illegally, and people considered too poor to buy coverage even with financial assistance.

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    THE IRS IS WATCHING YOU

    The law says people who aren’t covered in 2014 are liable for a fine. That amounts to $95 per uninsured person or approximately 1 percent of income, whichever is higher. The penalty goes up in later years.

    A year from now, the Internal Revenue Service will be asking taxpayers filing their forms for proof of insurance coverage. Insurance companies are supposed to provide that documentation to their customers.

    If you owe a penalty for being uninsured, the IRS can withhold it from your refund.

    The agency can’t put people in jail or garnishee wages to get the money. But it can withhold the penalty from a future year’s tax refund.


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    2 Comments
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    PowerUp
    PowerUp
    10 years ago

    People, watch out, this obamacare is the biggest power grab in the US history, for starters, everything you say on the app will be matched with your tax filing, multiple heimishe people are already being audited just by signing up.

    There are many scenerio’s where it could come back to hunt you, I will list just one:

    If your self-employed, and you indicate that you made the last 3 months, let’s say an average of 5,000, so your subsidy from the federal goverment will be based on 60,000 income, if you end up making 80,000 that year, you can get a bill of several thousand dollars just for the subsidy that you are now retro-activly not qualified, there are many more examples, but its fair to say that you better be rich, or poor enough to qualify for medicaid, otherwise, this is real trouble.

    In one word, if it wasent enough till now, obamacare will give the goverment the tools to prosecute anybody successfully whenever the goverment decided so.

    You have been warned!

    10 years ago

    Stop blamin people “not knowing” about deadlines or how to do it. I see signs, billboards etc, hear radio ads and friends with televisions report seeing ads there. Our government has spent millions advertising this law.