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If Supreme Court strikes federal exchange subsidies, health law could unravel

Healthcare.govBy Julie Rovner
Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Exactly what would happen to the Affordable Care Act if the Supreme Court invalidates tax credits in the three dozen states – including Kansas – where the federal government runs the program?

Legal scholars say a decision like that would deal a potentially lethal blow to the law because it would undermine the government-run insurance marketplaces that are its backbone, as well as the mandate requiring most Americans to carry coverage.

In King v. Burwell, the law’s challengers argue that Congress intended to limit federal tax credits to residents of states running their own insurance exchanges. Currently only 13 states and the District of Columbia operate exchanges on their own; another 10 are in some sort of partnership with the federal government. Federal officials run the rest.

The court is slated to hear the case in early 2015. Should it find that subsidies in federally run exchanges are not allowed, “I don’t think there are any rosy scenarios,” said Timothy Jost, a law professor at Washington and Lee University and a supporter of the law. “It’s a complete disaster.”

The immediate impact is that the Internal Revenue Service would stop paying subsidies to those in federally run exchanges. In 2014, more than 4.6 million people were getting those subsidies, but the number may grow to as many as 13.4 million by 2016, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the foundation).

Most of those who lose subsidies would no longer be required by the “individual mandate” to have insurance, because they would fall into an exemption in the law for those who have to pay more than 8 percent of family income for health insurance premiums.

“Since a lot of people can’t afford insurance without the tax credits, you’re looking at a lot of people shedding coverage,” said Nicholas Bagley, a law professor at the University of Michigan.

Those who hang on to their coverage and pay the entire premium without help “are likely to be sicker on average than the people who shed their coverage because they’re the ones who need insurance the most,” he said.

Indeed, the insurance industry, through its trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans, argued in a legal brief for a related case that the elimination of the federal exchange subsidies could seriously undermine those markets, creating an insurance death spiral.

“When healthy individuals opt out of the individual insurance market, those who are left are, on average, less healthy (and therefore prone to higher-than-average medical expenses),” AHIP said in its brief. “A sicker pool of consumers results in higher premiums, which causes an additional relatively healthy subset of participants to drop out, which in turn results in a further increase in premiums.”

Eliminating subsidies for individuals also would eliminate the so-called “employer mandate” that seeks to require larger firms to provide coverage. That’s because the employer mandate merely requires employers to pay a fine if their employees obtain subsidies on the exchange. If there are no subsidies, there are no employer fines and, effectively, no mandate.

Meanwhile, said Jost, “hospitals that have started to have some real relief from uncompensated care are right back taking care of uninsured people.” That problem could get worse because some people who had coverage in the old, unreformed individual market might have to drop it due to cost.

So what could be done? Some argue that states that rely on the federal government to run their health exchanges could establish their own marketplaces. But legal experts say that’s problematic as well.

“The practical obstacle is that creating an exchange is not child’s play,” Bagley said. “An exchange has to be a governmental entity or a nonprofit entity. They’ve got to be able to carry out a variety of functions,” including working with consumer assistance groups and overseeing compliance with the law’s requirements.

While some have suggested that states could create a “virtual” exchange on paper and contract with the federal government to run it, Bagley said the law on the subject is pretty explicit. “States would have to do more than just the bare minimum,” he said.

Timing and financing would also pose practical problems. The final deadline for states to apply for federal funding to establish an exchange has passed. And a decision from the Supreme Court is likely to come in late June of next year, which is after another deadline (June 15) for states to use their own funds to establish an exchange in time for the 2015-16 open enrollment season.

The political obstacles are potentially even bigger. In six states, even if a governor wanted to establish an exchange for his or her state, the state legislature has specifically taken away that authority, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Georgia became the seventh state earlier this year.

“What that means is that in many of these states that don’t have exchanges, state legislatures will have to get involved,” said Bagley. And many of those legislatures “are full of new members after the midterm elections who specifically campaigned against the ACA.”

Still, some say the predictions of doom are overblown.

The main thing an anti-subsidy ruling would do is force Congress back onto the playing field to reopen the law, said health economist Tom Miller of the American Enterprise Institute.

“Congress will step in,” he said. “We’re going to have the kind of political give and take which was abbreviated and artificially truncated when the law was passed. It’s not a pretty process, but that’s why we have a government and we elect people.”

Julie Rovner is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Police: Kansas man charged in home burglaries

ArrestLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lawrence police have arrested a 53-year-old man who they say stole video game systems and three pounds of chicken during a series of home burglaries.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports  Ricky McConnell was being held at the Douglas County jail on Wednesday morning. He is charged with three counts of aggravated burglary and two counts of attempted theft.

Sgt. Trent McKinley says officers caught McConnell in a Lawrence home on Tuesday. He says they found McConnell hiding behind a door with three video game consoles, 42 video games and the bag of chicken. McKinley says McConnell is linked to other burglaries in the area.

Online jail records didn’t indicate an attorney for McConnell. He is being held on $40,000 bond.

Fire at pet business causes $60K in damages

FIre

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A weekend fire that led to the evacuation of more than 20 dogs from a Lawrence pet care business also caused $60,000 in damages.

The Lawrence Journal-World  reports that the Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical department has deemed the fire accidental. In a press release, the department confirmed the fire at Christal K-9 was caused by an electrical malfunction of a box fan.

Twenty-one dogs were saved from the building when emergency responders arrived. Officials said one dog died at the scene and a second dog died from its injuries on Sunday. Several other dogs remain in treatment.

The business provides grooming, training and boarding services for pets.

Driver hospitalized after Brown County semi crash

KHPHORTON- A semi truck driver was injured in a semi crash just before 4 p.m. in Brown County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2000 Freightliner semi driven by Galleon Lee Null, 63, Council Bluffs, Iowa, was driving southbound on U.S. 73 one mile east of Kansas 20.

The truck left the roadway, entered the south ditch and overturned.
Null was transported to KU Medical Center.
The KHP reported he was not wearing a seat belt.

Mo. woman hospitalized after car is pulled into a ditch

ambulance  mhpMODENA – A Missouri woman was injured in an accident just before 12-noon on Tuesday in Mercer County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2006 Suzuki Aerd driven by Brenda K. Sinclair, 48, Princeton, was northbound on Route A one mile north of Modena.

The vehicle’s passenger side tires dropped off the road. The vehicle was pulled into a deep ditch and overturned. The vehicle then returned to the road, skidded across on its roof and entered the west ditch.

Sinclair was transported to Memorial Hospital in Trenton.
The MSHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Mizzou rallies to defeat Southeast Missouri State

riggertMizzouCOLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Johnathan Williams III laughed when asked what coach Kim Anderson told him at halftime Tuesday.

“He got on me a little bit,” the Missouri forward said. “And I think I kind of needed that. . And I think I did do better in the second half. I want to say thanks to Coach Anderson for pushing me.”

“You’re welcome,” Anderson responded.

Williams III scored 18 points and grabbed 11 rebounds to lead Missouri past Southeast Missouri State 65-61 after trailing 30-24 at the break. The sophomore played with a brace on his right knee but otherwise showed no ill effects from soreness that limited him to just 7 minutes of playing time against Chaminade in the Maui Invitational.

The Tigers (4-3) took their first lead of the game with just 3:55 remaining on a 3-pointer by forward D’Angelo Allen. Keith Shamburger then hit his own 3-pointer with 17.2 seconds remaining to give Missouri a 63-58 advantage.

After the Redhawks’ J.J. Thompson answered with a basket from long range, Tramaine Isabell converted two free throws with 7.7 seconds remaining to end the threat.

Jarekious Bradley scored 12 points and Thompson added 11 to lead Southeast Missouri State (3-4), which fell to 0-8 all-time against Missouri.

The Redhawks made their first four shots from the field and used a 9-0 run late in the opening half to take a 30-19 lead before Missouri scored the final five points heading into the break.

“We need that emotional leader, and right now we don’t have that established,” Anderson said. “We can’t just wait around and just think we’re going to turn it on. That’s not going to happen.”

Southeast Missouri State then held on for most of the second half before Allen’s 3-pointer provided the Tigers with a 57-55 lead. Freshman Montaque Gill-Caesar set up the lead change with two 3-pointers of his own on the Tigers’ previous two possessions.

Gill-Caesar, who entered the night leading Missouri with 13.7 points per game, scored 13 of his 15 points after the break. Shamburger finished with 11.

Missouri played without sophomore Wes Clark, who didn’t join the Tigers on the bench. Anderson said, without elaborating, that the guard was suspended indefinitely for violating team rules. Clark started the team’s first six games, averaging 9.2 points and a team-high 32 minutes per game.

Namon Wright started in Clark’s place after scoring 21 points on 7-of-7 shooting against Chaminade. A freshman from Los Angeles, Wright scored four points.

While both teams shot about 50 percent from the field, they struggled from the free throw line, as Southeast Missouri State converted 5 of 14 attempts while Missouri finished 13 of 23. Williams went only 8 of 14.

“Bottom line, it’s free throw shooting,” Redhawks coach Dickey Nutt said. “We had our chances — and I don’t take anything away from them — but it’s hard to swallow that. But we’ll move on.”

TIP-INS

Southeast Missouri State: The Redhawks fell to 1-19 against current members of the Southeastern Conference, with their only win coming at Arkansas during the 1924-25 season.

Missouri: In addition to Clark’s absence, freshman Jakeenan Gant continued to sit out while the school reviews his eligibility.

DEFENSIVE SETBACK

Southeast Missouri State limited Alabama A&M on Saturday to 31.3 percent shooting (15 of 48) — including 1 of 12 from 3-point range — the second-lowest field goal percentage by an opponent in coach Dickey Nutt’s six seasons with the Redhawks. Missouri shot 22 of 44 from the field, including 8 of 15 from long range.

QUOTE OF THE NIGHT

“Sometimes we’re a little too cool for school,” Missouri coach Kim Anderson said. “I’ll be honest with you. That’s a habit we have to break.”

UP NEXT

Southeast Missouri State hosts Southeastern Louisiana on Saturday.

Missouri plays at Oklahoma on Friday.

— Associated Press —

Kansas State pulls away from Omaha in second half to win 84-66

riggertKStateMANHATTAN, Kansas (AP) — Kansas State scored its fewest points in Bruce Weber’s three-year tenure to close the Maui Invitational, so he wasn’t particularly excited to see Nebraska-Omaha, who knocked off Marquette on the road, in the Wildcats’ first game since the tournament.

However, a near-career high performance from Nino Williams and a season-high 23 assists aided Kansas State (4-3) in its first home game in two weeks.

Williams had 19 points and Marcus Foster added 16 points as Kansas State beat Nebraska-Omaha 84-66 in the first-ever meeting between the two schools on Tuesday night.

It is already the fourth 80-point game for the Wildcats. They only surpassed the mark twice during the 2013-14 season.

C.J. Carter had 22 points to pace the Mavericks, who were held to their lowest score of the season.

Nebraska-Omaha (3-3) overcame two nine-point leads just after halftime, but 10 points from Foster in the first eight minutes of the second half never allowed the Mavericks to close within six points through the remainder of the game.

A 3-point play from Marcus Tyus closed Kansas State’s lead to 56-48 with 11:19 left, but Williams scored nine of Kansas State’s next 13 points to open a 69-50 lead.

“We were pretty good defensively,” Weber said of the stretch. “We turned them over, got some easy baskets off of it and were in the right spots. That first 10-12 minutes of the second half, we were pretty solid and we extended (the lead) to six to 10 and to 15 and kept it going.”

The Wildcats won the rebounding battle 43-25, which led to 38 points in the paint and substantial foul trouble for the Mavericks.

Forward Jake White was out for Nebraska-Omaha and his replacement Tre’Shawn Thurman and starter Mike Rostampour both picked up two early fouls.

“Like I told our team, `There are some things you can control and some things you can’t,” Nebraska-Omaha coach Derrin Hansen said. “One of those things we can’t control is that they can bring bigger bodies than anyone we’ve played. Whether that be Marquette, Nebraska or whoever, that hurt us tonight.”

It didn’t start well for the Wildcats, as they didn’t lead until a Jevon Thomas 3-pointer with 7:32 left in the first half.

Nebraska-Omaha opened up a 16-10 lead with 11:29 left in the first half, shooting nearly 50 percent during the stretch.

However, the Mavericks’ largest lead opened up the floodgates for Kansas State.

After struggling through his first six games, Justin Edwards followed a Foster basket with a spinning layup through traffic that aided a 12-3 first-half scoring run. He also knocked in his second 3-pointer of the season.

“We didn’t play to our potential like we should have,” Carter said of letting their foot off the gas pedal. “The first we did, but they’re a great team. For a six-minute stretch, like coach said, we just fell apart.”

The Mavericks trailed 37-31 at halftime, but Carter’s 14 first-half points kept them in range after making only four shots in the final six minutes.

Williams led the Wildcats with eight points in the first half, including the first five points of the game.

TIP-INS

Nebraska-Omaha, who was picked sixth in conference preseason polls, leads the Summit League in points per game, field goals made per game, 3-point percentage and total rebounds.

Kansas State is now 36-0 in December home games, dating back to a 76-66 loss to Rutgers Dec. 28, 2004.

STAT LINE

Jevon Thomas reached double figures for the first time in his Kansas State tenure, scoring a career-high 12 points. The performance surpassed a nine-point outing at Kansas on Jan. 11.

UP NEXT

Kansas State will go to Tennessee on Saturday.

Nebraska-Omaha will play at Air Force next Monday.

— Associated Press —

Educator bucks Missouri speaker, continues work

Jones
Jones

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – A Missouri education panel tasked with reviewing the state’s learning standards for schoolchildren is bucking House Speaker Tim Jones and keeping an appointee he removed.

Members voted 7-5 Tuesday to keep Columbia schools language arts coordinator Nick Kremer. Jones earlier that day sent him a letter saying he doesn’t have the required 10 years’ experience.

The work groups are reviewing the national Common Core education standards currently in place. Some lawmakers pushed for the review hoping it would mean replacing the Common Core.

Those standards have been a magnet for critics who say they take away state control over education.

Chair Keri Skeeters calls Kremer’s removal a disruption to the group’s work to review English standards. The groups have been meeting since September.

CDC: Circumcision benefits outweigh risks, insurers should pay

CDC logoMIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. health officials say the benefits of circumcision outweigh the risks, so parents of baby boys should consider it and health insurers should pay for it.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released draft guidelines on circumcision and said it will receive public comments for the next 45 days before finalizing them.

These are the first federal guidelines on circumcision. The CDC started working on the guidelines about seven years ago, when a cluster of influential studies in Africa indicated circumcision might help stop the spread of the AIDS virus.

Circumcision involves cutting away foreskin around the tip of the penis. Germs can grow underneath the foreskin, and CDC officials say the procedure can lower a male’s risk of sexually-transmitted diseases, penile cancer and even urinary tract infections.

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