Senate health committee leader proposes state fee on healthcare.gov plans

by Dave Ranney, KHI News Service

The chairwoman of the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee has introduced a bill to allow the state to collect a 3.5 percent fee on health insurance policies sold to Kansans through the federal government’s online marketplace, healthcare.gov.

Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a Republican from Shawnee, said the fee would generate between $18 million and $24 million annually.

The money, she said, would be deposited in a fund that would be used to offset costs associated with the state’s Medicaid program and its implementation of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

“We are doing this not because of the budget hole,” Pilcher-Cook said Wednesday, referring to the Legislature’s ongoing debate over how to fill a more than $400 million gap in the state’s budget for next fiscal year, which begins July 1.

“We are doing this because of the increased costs that Obamacare has put on the state, and because of the costs of our managing Medicaid,” she said.

The fee, Pilcher-Cook said, would be retroactive, dating back to Jan. 1, 2015, and would be paid by the insurance companies currently selling plans on the marketplace.
“Whether that (fee) is passed on to the customer would be up to the insurance companies,” she said.
The fee, Pilcher-Cook said, would be collected by the Kansas Insurance Department.
The marketplace was established as part of the Affordable Care Act to provide access to health insurance plans for individuals and businesses. Nearly 100,000 Kansans purchased insurance through the marketplace for 2015.

Senate Bill 309, introduced Tuesday, will be the subject of a hearing tentatively scheduled for 1 p.m. Thursday at the Statehouse.

In Kansas, three companies sell plans on the state’s federally administered online marketplace: Coventry Health Care of Kansas, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas.

Federal law allows states to assess fees on plans sold through state-administered marketplaces. Whether states would be allowed to do the same with plans sold on federally administered sites — like the one in Kansas — remains to be seen.

Pilcher-Cook she was unaware of any other state having done what she’s proposed.

Also unclear is whether the federal government will allow the state to collect a fee on marketplace plans that it wouldn’t collect on those sold outside the marketplace or offered by employers.

“I don’t know if we can charge a fee on one and not the other,” said Sen. Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican and chair of the Senate Ways and Means Committee’s subcommittee on social services. “I don’t think we can, but we’ll see. I suspect that’ll be addressed in the hearing.”

Mary Beth Chambers, a spokesperson for Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, said the company will oppose Pilcher-Cook’s initiative.

“While new taxes that result in higher premiums for Kansas are never ideal for Kansans, we are specifically concerned about this approach because it is, ultimately, double taxation,” Chambers said. “We pay a 3.5 percent tax on our ACA-compliant plan premiums to the federal government now, so this would double that. We would be paying 3.5 percent to the feds and 3.5 to the state.”

The increase, she said, likely would be passed on to consumers.

Also, Chambers said, marketplace insurers are required to offer identical plans — both in coverage and cost — to their individual and small-group customers. Adding 3.5 percent to the marketplace plans, she said, would force a corresponding increase on premiums sold outside the marketplace.

Sen. Laura Kelly, a Topeka Democrat and the Senate health committee’s ranking minority member, panned the proposal.

“This would be just one more tax on the poor, because we all know the insurance companies are going to turn around and build this into the premium,” Kelly said.

Consumers who buy insurance through the marketplace can be eligible for tax credits or subsidies, based on their income, that help cover the cost of insurance. Eighty percent of enrollees in Kansas received federal subsidies in the form of tax credits.
Lawmakers and other state leaders including Gov. Sam Brownback have resisted expanding the state’s Medicaid program to include all Kansans with annual incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level: $16,105 for an individual and $32,913 for a family of four.

Rep. Barbara Bollier, a moderate Republican from Mission Hills and a member of the House Health and Human Services Committee, said Pilcher-Cook’s plan for offsetting some of the state’s Medicaid costs was ill-conceived.

“She’s wanting to rob Peter to pay Paul,” said Bollier, a retired anesthesiologist. “These are people who, for the most part, are getting a discount from the federal government on their health insurance — and now we’re going to charge them because they’re getting a discount? Because they’re getting insurance?

“If we’re really concerned about the money, then let’s bring in some real money,” she said. “Let’s expand Medicaid.”

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Two Bonner Springs drivers injured in accident

A Dodge Grand Caravan ran a red light and hit two vehicles at 8:35 a.m. May 20 on K-7 north of 47th Street in Johnson County, according to a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s report.

The driver of the Caravan, a 67-year-old Bonner Springs woman, was injured and taken to a hospital, the report stated.

The driver of a Ford F350, the second vehicle, was also injured, according to the report. He is a 45-year-old Gardner, Kan., man.

The third vehicle was a Toyota Corolla, and the driver was injured and taken to a hospital, the report stated. The driver is a 31-year-old woman from Bonner Springs.

Sporting KC rallies for 4-2 victory over New England

Krisztian Nemeth
Krisztian Nemeth

Benny Feilhaber
Benny Feilhaber

Dom Dwyer
Dom Dwyer

Playing the team’s 100th game at Sporting Park and 200th MLS match under manager Peter Vermes, Sporting Kansas City rallied for a 4-2 victory over the New England Revolution on Wednesday at Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kan.

Juan Agudelo opened the scoring for the visitors with an early goal in the 11th minute before Sporting Kansas City responded with four straight goals in a 18-minute span.

Dom Dwyer’s well-taken goal in the 29th minute sparked the comeback followed by two goals from Krisztian Nemeth and the game-winner from Benny Feilhaber, who also earned his league-leading sixth assist of the season.

Though the Revolution’s Scott Caldwell pulled a goal back in the 64th minute, Sporting KC snapped New England’s nine-game unbeaten run to remain unbeaten both at home (3-0-3) and against Eastern Conference opponents (4-0-2) in 2015.

Sporting Kansas City – without seven players due to injury, including World Cup veterans Graham Zusi and Roger Espinoza, as well as an eighth on international duty – played all three of the team’s first-round SuperDraft picks and dressed only six players on the bench in this year’s lone match-up against the 2014 MLS Cup runners-up.

The Revolution, playing the second of three games in an eight-day span, also rested key players of their own in goalkeeper Bobby Shuttleworth and former No. 1 overall pick Andrew Farrell.

The six-goal match began with New England attacking in earnest. Diego Fagundez rattled the post with a header in the third minute, only to be ruled offside, and then sent a volley from 12 yards out narrowly wide six minutes later. The warning signals foreshadowed the breakthrough moment, which would come in the 11th minute from the foot of Agudelo. The U.S. Men’s National Team forward cut inside Kevin Ellis and held off Matt Besler prior to slipping his shot past Tim Melia for his fourth goal of the year since returning from overseas.

Sporting Kansas City wasted no time in its pursuit of the equalizer and came close on three occasions before producing the game-tying goal.

Dwyer was denied by Jose Goncalves in the 18th minute as the 2013 MLS Defender of the Year slid to block a point-blank shot with Brad Knighton out of position and then Dwyer pushed his shot wide from the top of the penalty area moments later on a chance created by Feilhaber.

Nemeth also showed off his playmaking abilities in the 28th minute with a through ball for Jacob Peterson, whose shot was smothered by Knighton for one of two saves on the night.

New England was whistled for its first foul of the match in the 29th minute and Sporting KC capitalized with a six-pass scoring sequence that included seven of the team’s 10 field players.

Nemeth clipped an entry pass to Dwyer, who took the ball off his chest while holding off Jermaine Jones near the penalty mark and spun to strike a shot with his second touch that nestled into the back of the net before Knighton could react.

With the goal, Dwyer moves into a tie with Mo Johnston in sixth place on the team’s all-time goal scoring chart with 32 career goals across all competition.

Ten minutes later, Nemeth scored the 500th regular season home goal in club history with a header inside the near post off a free kick from Feilhaber. The assist was Feilhaber’s sixth of the season, most in MLS, and Sporting Kansas City continues to lead all MLS clubs in headed goals (6), assists from set play (6) and chances created from set play (34) in 2015.

Sporting Kansas City’s decisive third goal came in the 43rd minute when referee Allen Chapman awarded a penalty kick for a foul by Goncalves on Dwyer, the third penalty won by Sporting KC and the third penalty conceded by New England in 2015 – both league highs.

Feilhaber stepped to the spot and buried the attempt against his former team for his third goal of the season. With the goal and assist on Wednesday, Feilhaber joins Zusi as the only two active Sporting KC players with 15 goals and 25 assists in their MLS careers.

The momentum carried through halftime as Sporting Kansas City stretched the lead to 4-1 just 23 seconds into the second half thanks to Nemeth’s second goal of the game.

Peterson latched onto a no-look pass from Feilhaber and subsequently picked out Nemeth running into the box with only Knighton to beat. Nemeth placed his shot beneath the goalkeeper’s outstretched leg for his team-leading fifth goal of the season, second most among all MLS newcomers.

New England – which hadn’t given up four goals since July 2014 and is now tied with Sporting KC as two of the league’s top scoring teams – would cut the deficit to 4-2 in the 64th minute. Second-half substitute Charlie Davies cut the ball back from the endline to set up Caldwell for a first-time finish.

Melia improves to 2-0-1 as a starter this season and made two saves on the night, first thwarting Kelyn Rowe in the 24th minute and then claiming a free kick from Chris Tierney in the 82nd minute. His counterpart made the game’s final stop in the 84th minute, coming off his line to deny Sporting KC rookie Connor Hallisey his first professional goal in the one-on-one situation.

Sporting Kansas City will now travel to Seattle to take on the reigning Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup champions and Supporters’ Shield holders at 9 p.m. on Saturday. The match will air live on KMCI-TV 38 the Spot locally and on SKCTV across the Midwest with coverage beginning at 8:30 p.m.
– Story from Sporting KC