Reminds me of that movie "Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came" It was such a big hit it lost over four million dollars. |
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Then there's this story out of Oregon... Don't be misled by the headline, "Oregon facing pressure...", no one is facing any pressure whatsoever; if they were, Obama and company would already be serving time at Guantanamo Bay. These stories continue to show up on the Internet and nothing is ever done about it. ~ Norman E. Hooben
Oregon facing pressure, probes over dysfunctional ObamaCare website
Despite
receiving $160 million in taxpayer money, Oregon's ObamaCare website has yet to
properly sign up a single person for health care.
And
there could be consequences. An Oregon legislator has gone to the FBI. Top
officials have resigned. The state is investigating. And there could be a
federal probe as soon as Thursday.
It wasn't supposed to be like this. With a strong high-tech
community in Portland and a progressive reputation, Oregon was an early,
enthusiastic adopter of the Affordable Care Act. The state has been working
toward a health care exchange since 2002 and was one of the first states to
pass a law creating one.
More than $300 million in federal dollars have come to Oregon
from taxpayers all over the country, in the form of grants with names like the
"Early Innovator Grant." Oregon ranks third among all states in
grants to implement the ACA, despite being near the middle in population.
Still, the website doesn't work.
"It's like a car that has no tires, no engine, no steering
wheel -- the doors are locked and you can't get in," said Rep. Greg Walden
R-Ore., who has scheduled a press conference in his home state on Thursday to
make a "major announcement about Cover Oregon."
Sixteen states created their own health insurance exchanges,
including websites where residents can go to shop for health insurance. The
federal government runs the exchange for the remaining states at HealthCare.gov.
Oregon is still enrolling residents in health care plans, but
using a disjointed process with parts of the website that work. Over 100,000 Oregonians
have enrolled, the state claims, including 35,247 in private plans,
"While we are making progress on the website, we will
continue to use the hybrid process until we have a fully functioning
website," Ariane Holm, a spokeswoman for Cover Oregon, said in a
statement. Cover Oregon refused an interview request.
At a press conference on Jan. 30, Gov. John Kitzhaber, a
Democrat, said 25 percent more Oregonians now have health insurance.
"It's a remarkable story, and it's a story worth
telling," he said, according to The Oregonian newspaper.
State Republicans dispute those numbers, however, arguing tens
of thousands of enrollees were in the state's Medicaid plan before Oct. 1, when
the website was scheduled to be operational. The state says they don't know how
many Cover Oregon enrollees didn't have health insurance before Oct. 1.
Kitzhaber has ordered a state review of Cover Oregon to
determine what went wrong.
The state was one of the first nine states to create an exchange
by law in 2011, and received national attention with a $10 million ad campaign
including the folksy "Live
Long in Oregon."
But the ad campaign masked problems from the start, said Patrick
Sheehan, a former Oregon state legislator who sat on the state's Legislative
Audit, Information Management and Technology Committee. The state didn't hire
the right people, were too ambitious trying to build a national model and
didn't use proven, existing software, he said.
"The website was where everyone was supposed to go to
compare plans, to bring costs down," he said.
Sheehan said he went to the FBI in 2012 and passed on
information he received that state officials lied to the feds about the
website's progress in order to keep the grant money flowing. The FBI, citing
Department of Justice protocol, refused to comment.
The failure is surprising because there was oversight built into
the system. There were managers at Cover Oregon and the Oregon Health
Authority, and experts at the Oregon Department of Administrative Services and
the state's Legislative Fiscal Office. The state hired a Virginia company to
provide additional oversight. There were also federal officials supposedly
looking on.
Sheehan said Carolyn Lawson, who oversaw much of the development
of the health insurance exchange and resigned in December, controlled the flow
of information and suppressed those who raised red flags. Lawson could not be
reached for comment.
Another top official, Rocky King, resigned Jan. 1
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By the way... Did you know this?:
So do you REALLY want to run for president? I was trying to find out your qualification. of course you would have much more than obama!
ReplyDeleteAll the qualifications that I need are documented on my birth certificate.
ReplyDelete