OBAMACARE! Deadline for health insurance enrollment in Washington state extended to Jan. 15 (with tips on how to sign up)

  • By The Associated Press
  • Wednesday, December 18, 2013 12:01am
  • News
OBAMACARE!  Deadline for health insurance enrollment in Washington state extended to Jan. 15 (with tips on how to sign up)

By The Associated Press

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Washington Healthplanfinder is online at www.wahealthplanfinder.org. Or you can phone 855-923-4633 weekdays from 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Related stories:

‘5 tips for last-minute Obamacare enrollments” — http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2022474823_acalastminutetipsxml.html

“Now’s a good time to visit Healthplanfinder site (first-person experience)” — http://seattletimes.com/html/businesstechnology/2021968661_ptechinsuranceexchangexml.html

“Q&A: Answers to your most pressing questions about you and the Affordable Care Act” — https://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20130929/NEWS/309299989.

SEATTLE —

Washington residents who have started but not finished their applications for insurance through the state’s new health care exchange are getting a deadline reprieve, state officials announced Wednesday.

Anyone who begins an application before the previous deadline of Dec. 23, will get as much help as they need to finish and won’t face a real deadline until Jan. 15, said Michael Marchand, spokesman for the Washington Health Benefit Exchange.

“The most important thing I want people to do is to take the action to get that application started. We can work with them at that point,” Marchand said Wednesday.

People who have started an application on the Washington healthplanfinder website, can expect emails and letters and phone calls offering them help to finish their applications.

If they complete the application they began by Dec. 23 and pay by Jan. 15, their insurance benefits will cover them retroactively back to Jan. 1, according to the revised rules.

Cooperative insurance companies made this deadline extension possible, Marchand said.

Those who don’t start their application online, in person or on the phone before that date won’t be eligible for insurance on Jan. 1, but they will still have until the end of March to get insurance and avoid a federal government fine.

About 32,000 Washington residents have completed their applications for private insurance and made their first payment for insurance that begins on Jan. 1. Another 61,000 have done everything but made the first payment. Thousands more are still in process.

Meanwhile, the federal government has announced a break for Washington small business owners, who will be eligible for tax subsidies even though the state’s insurance exchange for small businesses won’t open until sometime next year for coverage in 2015.

The state Medicaid office is reassuring new enrollees in the free health insurance for low income people that the government isn’t going to go after their families to try to recover health costs after they die. The government does go after estates of deceased Medicaid clients to recover the cost of long-term care.

Computer problems both in Washington state and in the federal government have made it difficult or impossible for some individuals to finish their applications.

Computer glitches are being resolved all the time, however, and Marchand encouraged people to return to their applications and try again.

“The next five days are going to be really busy,” Marchand said. “I think we’ve seen a 16 percent increase in volume just from yesterday to today, which is great.”

In addition to enrolling online, Washington residents can sign up for health insurance in person or on the phone.

Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler said there are a few other options for people who want to sign up for insurance in time for Jan. 1 coverage:

— If your insurance company cancelled your plan and offered an alternative, take the alternative with the understanding that you can keep that new plan for a month or two and sign up for something else in January or February.

— Call your insurance company, an agent or a broker and they can help you sign up for insurance. If you are eligible for a government subsidy, the agent or broker will help you get it. The consumer does not pay a fee for this service; insurance companies pay commissions to brokers who bring them business.

Kreidler, who spoke from Washington, D.C., where he was meeting with insurance commissioners from across the nation, said he was less worried than his colleagues from other states, because Washington has a functioning exchange.

Since Oct. 1, more than 150,000 people have entered their information in the exchange and found out they were eligible for free health insurance through Medicaid.

Before health care reform went into effect, an estimated 1 million Washington residents did not have health insurance.

Officials at the exchange were expecting a spike in completed enrollments in December. Their goal is to have 130,000 people buy private insurance in time to have coverage on Jan. 1, but unless they turn around most of the applications begun so far, that goal will not be met.

More in News

Smoke vents from the rear car deck doors as firefighters battle a vehicle fire aboard the ferry MV Coho upon its afternoon arrival in Port Angeles on Thursday. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Crews evaluated after RV fire on Coho ferry

Combined training helped during incident, deputy chief says

Staff favors denial for rezone

Proposal would pave way for Dollar General Plus

Clallam Transit considering proposal for Narcan at Gateway center

Board members want time for more discussion before next meeting

Turns restricted during roundabout construction

Drivers at the intersection of state highways 104 and 19… Continue reading

Bridge closures canceled for May 17, May 18

Hood Canal bridge closures originally scheduled for this weekend have… Continue reading

Roxanne Pfiefer-Fisher, a volunteer with a team from Walmart, sorts through sections of what will become a slide during Wednesday’s opening day of a community rebuild of the Dream Playground at Erickson Playfield in Port Angeles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Volunteers flock to Dream Playground to start build

Group effort reminds organizers of efforts in 2021, 2002

Lawsuit over pool ban is planned

Lawyers say they’re suing city of Port Townsend, YMCA

Peninsula Behavioral Health adds 3 programs

Services help those experiencing psychosis, provide housing

Michael Anderson of Gibsons, British Columbia tries his hand at flying a kite in the gusty winds of Point Hudson on Monday afternoon. Anderson was on the last leg of an RV vacation around the Olympic Peninsula with his wife and dog and planned on spending the next two nights at the Point Hudson Marina RV Park before they head home. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Let’s go fly a kite

Michael Anderson of Gibsons, British Columbia tries his hand at flying a… Continue reading

Residents against store proposal

Hearing examiner meeting set Thursday

Jefferson County wants to increase curbside service for trash

Congestion at transfer station increasing costs, manager says

Port of PA to replace John Wayne Marina ramp

Boat launch will include components from Port of Friday Harbor