What with all the ObamaTax Exchange "glitches," it's hardly surprising that we'd see this:
"Insurers are getting faulty and incomplete data from the new U.S.-run health exchange, which may mean some Americans won’t be covered even after they sign up for an insurance plan."
That may not be as big a deal as you'd think, since it appears that very few people have actually been able to purchase a plan in the first place. The bigger problem is going to be that, once they (theoretically) fix all the problems, how likely is it that those who are successful in signing up will have actual coverage on place on January 1?
Yeah, that's pretty much what I thought, too.
[Hat Tip: FoIB Holly R]
UPDATE: Quelle surprise:
"The healthcare.gov website was taken down over the weekend for scheduled maintenance and more improvements. Today, the problems are the same, a web site that doesn't work."
No kidding.
"Insurers are getting faulty and incomplete data from the new U.S.-run health exchange, which may mean some Americans won’t be covered even after they sign up for an insurance plan."
That may not be as big a deal as you'd think, since it appears that very few people have actually been able to purchase a plan in the first place. The bigger problem is going to be that, once they (theoretically) fix all the problems, how likely is it that those who are successful in signing up will have actual coverage on place on January 1?
Yeah, that's pretty much what I thought, too.
[Hat Tip: FoIB Holly R]
UPDATE: Quelle surprise:
"The healthcare.gov website was taken down over the weekend for scheduled maintenance and more improvements. Today, the problems are the same, a web site that doesn't work."
No kidding.