Of the 5.5 million people who bought private health insurance plans through HealthCare.gov, 40 percent may end up either having their coverage canceled or their premium subsidies reduced or eliminated, unless they provide missing information about their income or immigration status within the next 90 days. The Department of Health and Human Services says it is now reaching out to those people by phone, e-mail, and regular mail, asking for missing information. If you are one of them, here's what you need to know.
The missing information falls into two basic categories:
- How much money you made in 2014. This is the largest group, affecting 1.2 million people. If you fail to provide documents verifying your 2014 income, you could end up having your premium subsidies cut back or eliminated midway through the year.
- Your citizenship or immigration status. About 460,000 people must show documentation verifying they are U.S. citizens, and about 505,000 need to provide information about how long they’ve been in the U.S. and what kind of visa they have. People with missing information about their immigration or citizenship status could see their health plans canceled, because people not “lawfully present” in the U.S. aren’t eligible to purchase coverage from HealthCare.gov.
How did this happen?
In order to figure out what applicants were eligible for, HealthCare.gov needed lots of information about their incomes, citizenship, and immigration status. In most cases (as it turned out, about 60 percent of them) the website could automatically double-check and verify the information the applicants supplied against various government databases such as tax and Homeland Security records.
But when HealthCare.gov couldn’t match up applicants with the databases, or found inconsistencies between the government’s records and the information the applicants supplied, the applicants were, in most cases, cleared to go ahead and get health coverage but given 90 days to supply the missing information, such as pay stubs, visas, and citizenship papers. (Here's a complete list of the types of documentation the government wants.)
That is where the process broke down almost immediately. When HealthCare.gov opened for business in the fall, among the many missing pieces of planned functionality was a way for applicants to electronically upload copies of requested documents. Instead, they were instructed to mail paper copies to a service center in Kentucky operated by Serco, a government contractor. All those documents had to be manually processed and in many cases, those familiar with the process have told me, documents came in with no identifying information, making it difficult if not impossible to attach them to the correct application.
At some point during open enrollment, HealthCare.gov got its upload feature but, conceded an Health and Human Services Dept. spokeswoman, “In some cases, it was difficult for people to use, or they couldn’t verify the upload once they had done it.” According to Serco documents released recently by the House Energy & Commerce Committee, by the time open enrollment ended on March 31, consumers had managed to upload only about 90,000 documents.
What to do now
If you bought health insurance through HealthCare.gov and received an e-mail, letter, or call asking for additional information, here’s what to do.
- Log in to your HealthCare.gov account and click on “Applications Details.” You should see the screen pictured above. Click on the big green "Verify" button to find out what information the government needs from you.
- Upload copies of the requested documents. Because this is done inside your account, HealthCare.gov will know it’s from you. The Health Department spokeswoman said that the upload function has been "enhanced" and is now working well.
- If you choose to mail in documentation, be sure to include the bar code that came with your notification, which will enable Serco’s clerks to attach your information to the correct application. If you can’t find the bar code, attach complete information about yourself, including your HealthCare.gov application number.
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—Nancy Metcalf
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