Public Hearing - January 13, 2014

    


       1      JOINT HEARING BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE
              SENATE STANDING COMMITTEE ON HEALTH
       2      AND THE SENATE STANDING COMMITTEE ON INSURANCE

       3      -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PUBLIC HEARING
       4
                           NEW YORK STATE OF HEALTH:
       5
                         A DISCUSSION ON IMPLEMENTATION
       6      -----------------------------------------------------

       7                       Legislative Office Building
                               Hamilton Hearing Room B
       8                       172 State Street
                               Albany, New York  12247
       9
                               January 13, 2014
      10                       10:00 a.m. to 2:45 p.m.

      11
              PRESIDING:
      12
                 Senator Kemp Hannon
      13         Chairman, NYS Senate Standing Committee on Health

      14         Senator James L. Seward
                 Chairman, NYS Senate Standing Committee on Insurance
      15

      16      PRESENT:

      17         Senator Greg Ball

      18         Senator Neil D. Breslin

      19         Senator Simcha Felder

      20         Senator Martin J. Golden

      21         Senator Ruth Hassell-Thompson

      22         Senator William J. Larkin, Jr.

      23         Senator Jack M. Martins

      24         Senator Gustavo Rivera (RM)
                 Senate Standing Committee on Health
      25







                                                                  2
       1
              SPEAKERS:                               PAGE  QUESTIONS
       2
              Donna Frescatore                          10       26
       3      Executive Director
              New York State of Health
       4
              Mary Morse                                82       96
       5      Owner
              Kwik-Kut Manufacturing
       6
              Pamela Reese Finch                        82       96
       7      Public Relations Consultant
              Sole Proprietor
       8
              Nick Fitterman, M.D., F.A.C.P.           102      129
       9      Internist
              Sole Practitioner
      10
              Andrew Kleinman, M.D.                    102      129
      11      Plastic Surgeon
              President-Elect of the Medical Society
      12           of the State of New York

      13      Patricia McLaughlin, M.D.                102      129
              Ophthalmologist
      14      Sole Practitioner

      15      Dan Colacino                             133      154
              Vice President
      16      Rose and Kiernan, Inc.

      17      Eric P. Nevins                           133      154
              President
      18      EP Nevins Insurance Agency, Inc.

      19      Jack Smith                               133      154
              Executive Vice President
      20      William A. Smith & Son Insurance Agency

      21      Bob Carey                                158
              Account Executive
      22      Otsego County Chamber of Commerce

      23      Lacey Clarke                             158
              Deputy Director
      24      Freelancers Union Insurance

      25







                                                                  3
       1
              SPEAKERS (Continued):                   PAGE  QUESTIONS
       2
              Mark Eagan                               158
       3      President & CEO
              Albany-Colonie Regional
       4           Chamber of Commerce

       5      Maurice Isaac                            158
              Employee Benefits Program
       6           Administrator
              Delaware County Chamber of Commerce
       7
              Sean Doolan, Esq.                        180      184
       8      Attorney with Hinman Straub              187      191
              Representing Blue Cross/Blue Shield      195      197
       9           of New York

      10      Paul Macielak, Esq.                      180      184
              CEO, President, and Chairman of          187      191
      11           the Board                           195      197
              Health Plan Association
      12

      13      Elisabeth Benjamin                       215      227
              Vice President of Health Initiatives
      14      Community Service Society of New York

      15      James Lytle                              215      227
              Attorney                                 232      237
      16      Representing Coalition for
                   New York State Public Health Plans
      17
              Mark Scherzer                            215      227
      18      Attorney                                 232      237
              Representing Health Care for
      19           All New York/New Yorkers for
                   Accessible Health Coverage
      20

      21                            ---oOo---

      22

      23

      24

      25







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       1             SENATOR HANNON:  Would you take your seats,

       2      please.

       3             SENATOR SEWARD:  Good morning, everyone, and

       4      welcome to the joint hearing of the Senate Committee

       5      on Health and the Senate Committee on Insurance.

       6             I'm very pleased to be joining the Chair of

       7      our Health Committee in the Senate, Senator Hannon,

       8      and some of his Committee members.

       9             I'm Senator Jim Seward, Chair of the

      10      Insurance Committee in the Senate, and we have a

      11      number of our members here as well.

      12             We are here this morning to take testimony on

      13      the current status of the implementation of the

      14      New York State Health Insurance Exchange, as well as

      15      the impact of the federal health-care reform, what

      16      that impact is having on individuals, families,

      17      small businesses, even providers and payers, here in

      18      New York State.

      19             And as we listen to testimony and get the

      20      current status of, not only the exchange, but the

      21      impact of the federal health-care reforms, we hope

      22      to be looking at possible State options for filling

      23      any gaps and providing any assistance, particularly

      24      those who may be negatively impacted, in terms of

      25      both their coverage as well as their health care.







                                                                  5
       1             Let me say that, at the outset, that in my

       2      estimation, when it comes to the exchange, I think

       3      New York is doing a good job when compared,

       4      certainly, to the federal exchange.

       5             Now, I want to say that I appreciate the job

       6      that Donna Frescatore and her team is doing, and

       7      appreciate the work of her staff.

       8             They have been very helpful and responsive

       9      when my office has called with constituent concerns.

      10             With that said, there are a number of issues,

      11      however, that have come to my attention that warrant

      12      further discussion.

      13             I also have a number of questions that still

      14      need to be answered, that were not answered in

      15      response to the letter that Senator Hannon and

      16      I sent back in November.

      17             Specifically, I have concerns with those

      18      individuals, sole proprietors, and many small

      19      business owners who have seen their policies

      20      canceled as a result of the federal law.

      21             I have seen numbers here in New York that say

      22      that, reportedly, over 100,000 individuals and

      23      policies have been impacted with these cancellations

      24      here in New York.

      25             What is happening to these individuals in







                                                                  6
       1      terms of their coverage and health care?

       2             I've also heard from a number of my

       3      constituents, that tell me that the cost of

       4      obtaining a new policy is significantly more than

       5      they were paying previous to these changes, and, in

       6      many cases, is simply not financially feasible for

       7      them to continue coverage.

       8             We've also heard from constituents who have

       9      actually signed up on the exchange, but to this day,

      10      have no verification, no card.

      11             What are they to do if they need to go to the

      12      hospital or another provider for their health care?

      13             Most of these individuals are sole

      14      proprietors or work for small businesses.

      15             So I'd like to explore whether or not there

      16      is any way that the State can assist these

      17      individuals.

      18             And, of course, there are many other concerns

      19      regarding other aspects of the federal

      20      health-care-reform law as well.

      21             And I look forward to hearing everyone's

      22      testimony here today.

      23             Senator Hannon.

      24             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you, Senator.

      25             I'll concur with what you've said, and just







                                                                  7
       1      note that this -- the statute we're dealing with,

       2      the Affordable Care Act, is probably one of the most

       3      major policy initiatives we've seen in our lifetime,

       4      and, has a number of different aspects.  Many of the

       5      aspects have focused on the mechanical problems

       6      involved.

       7             I would hope that we would get beyond, and

       8      start to get beyond, those mechanical problems,

       9      important as they may be for people who don't have

      10      coverage, and start to look at what the overall

      11      purpose has been of ObamaCare, what populations are

      12      currently being served, what populations have been

      13      missed.

      14             And I'm not talking the national debate.  I'm

      15      talking here in the state.

      16             We as a Senate have twice expanded

      17      Child Health Plus.  We helped establish

      18      Family Health Plus.  We established Healthy NY.

      19             We've looked towards a wider set of coverages

      20      for everybody, and the question will be:

      21             Has that been achieved, or, are there steps

      22      that the State needs to take, to make sure that both

      23      patients are well-treated, well-covered;

      24             And, the providers, there's enough of them,

      25      that they're accessible;







                                                                  8
       1             That the drugs that are -- people expect, in

       2      terms of their modern medical needs, are taken care

       3      of.

       4             So those are the things that try to widen the

       5      concept of where we're going; not making it a

       6      political debate, but looking at it as a policy

       7      initiative.

       8             Thank you.

       9             Sir?

      10             SENATOR SEWARD:  Senator Breslin.

      11             SENATOR BRESLIN:  Thank you very much.

      12             I would concur totally with Senator Hannon

      13      that this is a -- an apolitical discussion today to

      14      probably the most important piece of health

      15      legislation in the last 70 years, and that we should

      16      look to:

      17             How it's being achieved in a successful way;

      18             Who we're leaving behind;

      19             Are the providers sufficient?  Are they being

      20      taken care of, are they being supported?

      21             And I think that this type of hearing can

      22      have tremendous success if we look at it in a very

      23      objective direct way.

      24             SENATOR HANNON:  Senator Rivera.

      25             SENATOR RIVERA:  Thank you, Senator Hannon







                                                                  9
       1      and Senator Seward as well.

       2             SENATOR BRESLIN:  And me.

       3             SENATOR RIVERA:  And, of course, Neil as

       4      well.

       5             Thank you, Neil.

       6                  [Laughter.]

       7             SENATOR RIVERA:  I'm -- as a Ranking Member

       8      in the Health Committee in the Senate, I can say

       9      that I've have a very good working relationship with

      10      Senator Hannon, and I think that this is a perfect

      11      example of the type of work that can be done when

      12      you are asking questions about how policy actually

      13      impacts the people of the state of New York.

      14             There are certainly things that the

      15      implementation of the Affordable Care Act in

      16      New York demonstrates can be done well, as far as,

      17      how care actually gets to folks, how folks can get

      18      covered.

      19             And I think that there's definitely a lot of

      20      successes that we are going to discuss today.

      21             There's also challenges as well.

      22             And I think that, as we have -- as we have

      23      been leading in the nation, as it relates to the

      24      implementation of the Affordable Care Act, and how

      25      to make sure that people get taken care of all







                                                                  10
       1      across the state, we should continue to do so.

       2             And the conversations that we're going to

       3      have today will, hopefully, lead us down that path.

       4             So, I'm looking forward to the conversations

       5      that we will have today, both, about the successes

       6      that we've already had, but also about the

       7      challenges that we face, going forward.

       8             Thank you, Senator.

       9             SENATOR SEWARD:  Well, thank you all for your

      10      comments, and let's get started.

      11             And our first panel, representing the

      12      New York State of Health, is the executive director,

      13      Donna Frescatore.

      14             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Good morning,

      15      Chairman Hannon, Chairman Seward, other honorable

      16      Members of the Committee.

      17             SENATOR HANNON:  Would you pull the mic

      18      closer to you?

      19             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Sure.

      20             Thank you.

      21             I'm Donna Frescatore, executive director of

      22      New York State of Health.

      23             As you all know, New York State of Health is

      24      New York's official health-plan marketplace under

      25      the federal Affordable Care Act.  It's a place where







                                                                  11
       1      New Yorkers can shop for, compare, and enroll in

       2      health insurance.

       3             Since the market's launch in October, well

       4      over a quarter of a million people have enrolled in

       5      affordable health care through New York State of

       6      Health.

       7             Thank you for inviting me here today to tell

       8      you about the success of -- the successful launch of

       9      our marketplace, and the many New Yorkers who are

      10      already receiving affordable health-insurance

      11      coverage through the market.

      12             As you know, in April of 2012, Governor Cuomo

      13      issued Executive Order 42, establishing a

      14      state-based health-insurance exchange in accordance

      15      with the federal Affordable Care Act.

      16             The order set in motion an intensive 18-month

      17      planning and implementation process that included

      18      the input of over 200 individuals across 5 regional

      19      committees in our state, the completion of 15 policy

      20      studies, and extensive collaboration between our

      21      marketplace, our state Medicaid program, and our

      22      colleagues at the Department of Financial Services.

      23             In June of 2012, the Department of Health

      24      contracted with Computer Sciences Corporation, or,

      25      "CSC," to be the single systems integrator







                                                                  12
       1      responsible for building and operating the state's

       2      marketplace.

       3             We developed an adaptive and flexible system

       4      that has proven that it allowed us to identify

       5      issues as the system was being built, and to quickly

       6      make changes and corrections when they were needed.

       7             On January 31st of 2013, just about a year

       8      ago, New York State of Health issued an invitation

       9      to all health insurers licensed in New York to be

      10      part of our state marketplace.

      11             That invitation went well beyond the federal

      12      requirements for health plans that participate in

      13      the exchanges.

      14             It required insurers to offer standardized

      15      products, it required the products at each metal

      16      tier, and, out-of-network benefits were required if

      17      the insurer was providing such benefits outside of

      18      the exchange.

      19             On October 1st of 2013, we launched

      20      New York State of Health's website.

      21             As reported, today, there have been over

      22      2.5 million unique visitors to the site, and they

      23      viewed 57 million pages on that website.

      24             The traffic to the website remains high, and

      25      it's operating smoothly, with an average response







                                                                  13
       1      time of less than 3.8 seconds when a consumer

       2      requests a next page or action on the website.

       3             Although the volume remains extraordinarily

       4      high, it was even higher in our initial days of

       5      implementation, and that resulted in some

       6      problematic wait times for consumers.

       7             Our technical team responded quickly,

       8      quadrupling the website's processing capacity, and

       9      project leadership stayed on site to direct and

      10      oversee implementation of these corrective actions.

      11             As a result, on October 5th, just days later,

      12      the website performance improved dramatically, and

      13      it remains at those levels.

      14             Our call center was also very busy.

      15             Between October 1st and December 24th of

      16      2013, our trained representatives answered over

      17      350,000 calls.

      18             As the deadline for applying for January 2014

      19      coverage approached, call volume more than doubled,

      20      from an average of 5500 calls answered every day, to

      21      over 15,000, often at a rate of 1500 to 1600 calls

      22      answered every hour.

      23             To address the increased wait times for

      24      customer service, and to provide better service to

      25      our consumers, the customer service center is poised







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       1      to add representatives to the phone lines in January

       2      and February of this year, as we approach the

       3      March 31st enrollment deadline.

       4             New York State Health is committed to

       5      improving customer interactions and meeting the

       6      needs of potential enrollees.

       7             To date, 75 percent of applications have been

       8      submitted by consumers directly through the website;

       9      I think a testimony to how the website is working

      10      smoothly.

      11             The rate -- remaining 25 percent of

      12      applications were submitted by telephone or with the

      13      help of a trained assister.

      14             And these assisters include about

      15      570 navigators, over 2500 certified application

      16      counselors, and over 3900 licensed insurance brokers

      17      in New York who have been certified to work with

      18      New York State of Health.

      19             Regardless of the type of assister, each must

      20      adhere to strict policies and procedures related to

      21      privacy and security of data related to the people

      22      they're helping.

      23             Forty-eight organizations serve as navigators

      24      throughout state, and bring with them

      25      95 organizations, including thirteen chambers of







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       1      commerce, and each individual has completed a

       2      three-day training course that's conducted in

       3      person, and a written examination.

       4             Like our navigators, our certified

       5      application counselors, who are generally employees

       6      of hospitals, federally qualified health centers, or

       7      health plans provide, provide in-person assistance

       8      to individual consumers.

       9             While these counselors must meet the same

      10      certification requirements, they are -- they do not

      11      receive grant payments from New York State of Health

      12      or the department.

      13             Finally, recognizing the very important role

      14      that licensed insurance brokers play in

      15      New York State in advising small businesses, and,

      16      recognizing the assistance that they can provide to

      17      individuals as we enroll more people directly in

      18      insurance in New York, we have worked extensively

      19      with the Department of Financial Services and broker

      20      organizations to develop an 8-hour

      21      continuing-education course, where licensed

      22      insurance brokers can choose to work with the

      23      individual marketplace, the small-business

      24      marketplace, or both.

      25             Regardless of how consumers apply for







                                                                  16
       1      coverage, securing personal data is critical.

       2             In building and deploying the marketplace,

       3      the Department of Health has implemented advanced

       4      security controls and processes, based on the

       5      National Institute of Standards and Technology's

       6      guidelines, as well as other regulatory,

       7      administrative, technical, and physical safeguards.

       8             These security and privacy controls enable

       9      New York State of Health to monitor and continually

      10      protect the privacy of information it is required to

      11      collect on behalf of the enrollee.

      12             Strong encryptions protect communications to

      13      and from the website, and, in addition to standard

      14      computer protections in place, which include

      15      anti-virus and anti-malware implementation, the

      16      website uses both network- and host-intrusion

      17      provision mechanisms -- prevention mechanisms to

      18      detect and prevent malicious activity.

      19             The marketplace always encourages consumers

      20      to protect their personal identification

      21      information.

      22             In September, prior to opening the

      23      marketplace, New York State of Health issued an

      24      alert to consumers, advising them that they should

      25      never be charged a fee for assistance to enroll in







                                                                  17
       1      the marketplace, that they should only provide

       2      information to people they know are certified by the

       3      marketplace to help them, and that no one from the

       4      marketplace will ever contact them unless they've

       5      requested assistance.

       6             Any report of potentially inappropriate

       7      activity will be fully investigated by

       8      New York State of Health, in conjunction with the

       9      Department of Financial Services, when appropriate.

      10             New York State of Health has also established

      11      an approval process for those wishing to use the

      12      name or logo on their materials or advertisements.

      13             New York's health-plan marketplace is a

      14      leader in the nation, and health insurance

      15      enrollment through New York State of Health has

      16      grown steadily and significantly since first opening

      17      October 1st, reaching about 294,000 enrollees as of

      18      just midnight yesterday.

      19             But, today, I'd like to tell you a little bit

      20      more about the New Yorkers who have enrolled in

      21      health insurance effective January 1, 2014, and the

      22      types of coverage they've enrolled in.

      23             At the close of business on December 24th,

      24      which was the deadline for enrolling for January 1st

      25      coverage, 230,624, to be exact, people had enrolled







                                                                  18
       1      in the individual marketplace through

       2      New York State of Health.

       3             The enrollments include New Yorkers from

       4      every county of the state, with the largest

       5      percentages from Kings, Queens, Suffolk, Manhattan,

       6      Nassau, Westchester, Erie, and Monroe counties.

       7             Of the individual enrollment, the majority,

       8      66 percent, were in qualified health plans; so those

       9      are individuals who are qualifying for private

      10      coverage through a QHP, as we've come to know them.

      11             Sixteen health insurers are currently

      12      certified to offer QHPs through the marketplace,

      13      ensuring that consumers all throughout our state

      14      have access and choice to different health plans.

      15             Each of the 16 health plans received

      16      enrollment for January 2014 coverage.

      17             Additionally, all of our qualified health

      18      plans, consistent with federal requirements and with

      19      state laws and regulation, cover a whole range of

      20      benefits, and, each of the networks must meet

      21      pre-established criteria in order for the QHP to be

      22      certified on the exchange.

      23             So, QHP networks must include all types of

      24      providers necessary to deliver the services,

      25      including hospitals, choice of primary-care







                                                                  19
       1      physicians, choice of specialty physicians in each

       2      specialty type, and essential community providers,

       3      such as qualified health centers, among others.

       4             In the event a health-plan member who has

       5      enrolled through a QHP demonstrates that they have a

       6      need to see a provider that is not part of their

       7      health-plan's network, the health plan must approve

       8      a referral to an out-of-network provider, and the

       9      member will be responsible for only the amount of

      10      cost share they would have paid had they used a

      11      network provider.

      12             That is a protection through the marketplace

      13      that currently exists for HMOs in our state, and,

      14      through the marketplace, has been extended to all

      15      types of insurers.

      16             We continuously work with other divisions

      17      within the Department of Health to assess the

      18      incremental demand that new enrollment is going to

      19      place on our delivery system; in particular, our

      20      primary-care system.

      21             As we conduct that analysis, we will take

      22      into consideration the important actions taken by

      23      our State Legislature, including the Primary Care

      24      Services Corp -- Corporation -- Corp, I'm sorry,

      25      loan-repayment program, the Doctors Across New York







                                                                  20
       1      programs, and the Health-Force Retraining

       2      Initiatives, all of which play a critical role in

       3      making certain that all New Yorkers can access

       4      primary care.

       5             Of the individuals that enrolled in a

       6      qualified health plan, as of December 24th:

       7             53 percent are female, 47 percent are male;

       8             30 percent are under the age of 35;

       9             16 percent are between the ages of 35 and 44;

      10             23 percent between the ages of 45 and 54;

      11             And 31 percent are over age 54.

      12             So that gives you a glimpse into the age

      13      distribution in our very first month of enrollment.

      14             Nearly 50 percent of the individuals who

      15      enrolled through the marketplace for January 2014

      16      coverage were uninsured at the time of their

      17      application.

      18             And that rate of uninsurance, it is higher

      19      for those who receive financial assistance through

      20      New York State of Health.

      21             And speaking of financial assistance, as

      22      projected, about 68 percent of individuals and

      23      families who have enrolled in coverage for January

      24      received assistance in either -- the form of either

      25      federal tax credits or cost-sharing credits;







                                                                  21
       1             50 percent eligible for both the tax and

       2      cost-sharing credits;

       3             And 18 percent eligible for tax credits only.

       4             The remaining 32 percent of individuals who

       5      obtained coverage for January 2014 either had

       6      incomes too high to qualify for financial assistance

       7      under the federal law, or, they chose not to ask for

       8      assistance.  Nevertheless, they have benefited from

       9      the, approximate, 53 percent reduction in individual

      10      premium rates as compared to the rates that were in

      11      effect in 2013.

      12             We require every health plan that offers

      13      products on the exchange to offer products at the

      14      four level -- premium levels -- I'm sorry, plan

      15      levels:  Platinum, Gold, Silver, and Bronze.

      16             Three variations of the Silver plan are

      17      available, under the federal law, for people with

      18      incomes below 250 percent of federal poverty level.

      19             Catastrophic plans are also available through

      20      the marketplace for people under 30.

      21             I'm pleased to tell you today that for,

      22      January 2014:

      23             17 percent of individuals enrolled chose

      24      Platinum plans.

      25             12 percent enrolled in Gold plans;







                                                                  22
       1             12 in Silver plans;

       2             39 percent in Silver plans with cost-sharing

       3      reductions that actually raise the level of benefit

       4      and lower their out-of-pocket costs;

       5             And, 18 percent in Bronze plans.

       6             Only 2 percent of enrollees, thus far, have

       7      selected catastrophic coverage through the

       8      marketplace.

       9             Early results for the first month of coverage

      10      under New York State of Health show that it has been

      11      effective in reaching all New Yorkers in all areas

      12      of the state, at all income levels, and at all ages.

      13             As predicted, New Yorkers are receiving real

      14      savings through their marketplace enrollment.

      15             Senator Hannon earlier mentioned the

      16      important role of Child Health Plus for children in

      17      our state, and we would concur that New York State

      18      has clearly been a leader in covering children.

      19             So we're proud to say this morning that, as

      20      of close of business on December 24th, an additional

      21      16,750 children enrolled in Child Health Plus

      22      through the marketplace.

      23             And, in fact, today, that number has even

      24      increased further, and I'm pleased to tell you that

      25      about 22,000 children, as of midnight last night,







                                                                  23
       1      have joined our Child Health Plus program.

       2             We think that's truly an accomplishment.

       3             The majority of these children are in

       4      families that qualify for some subsidies under our

       5      state Child Health Plus coverage, because their

       6      incomes are at or below 400 percent of federal

       7      poverty level.

       8             And, enrollment of children will remain a

       9      priority for New York State of Health as we go

      10      forward.

      11             Turning now for a minute to the small

      12      business marketplace, New York State of Health was

      13      one of the only state marketplaces that successfully

      14      launched an online marketplace on October 1st of

      15      2013.

      16             Our marketplace gives employers a new option,

      17      and the flexibility, to select the contribution

      18      rates, the plan options, that they desire for their

      19      employees.  And it also let's them choose to have a

      20      defined contribution program, where they will

      21      contribute a predictable amount each month towards

      22      coverage, and their employees have flexibility to

      23      choose a plan that best meets their needs.

      24             Small businesses in every county of the state

      25      elected to provide coverage through the small







                                                                  24
       1      business marketplace in January.

       2             In January, over 5,000 employees and

       3      dependents were enrolled through New York State of

       4      Health, and enrollment continues for coverage

       5      effective both in -- February 1st and March 1st.

       6             Platinum-level plans were the most popular

       7      choice among our small businesses.

       8             38 percent of them selected a Platinum plan;

       9             28 percent selected Gold.

      10             24 percent selected a Silver plan;

      11             And 10 percent selected Bronze.

      12             New York has built, truly, a one-stop

      13      shopping for individuals applying for

      14      health-insurance coverage in our state.

      15             As you all know, effective January 1, 2014,

      16      New York expanded Medicaid eligibility levels to

      17      138 percent of federal poverty level, making the

      18      state eligible for increased federal funding to

      19      subsidize both the newly-eligible Medicaid enrollees

      20      and our existing childless adults.

      21             Through December 24th, 61,625 individuals

      22      enrolled in Medicaid through New York State of

      23      Health.

      24             Since New York's eligibility levels already

      25      largely met the new federal standard, the expansion







                                                                  25
       1      affected single and childless adults whose

       2      eligibility had previously been set at 100 percent

       3      of federal poverty level under our

       4      Family Health Plus program.

       5             The new expansion population, thus far,

       6      represents about 20 percent of the 61,000-plus

       7      Medicaid enrollees who joined for January 1st

       8      coverage.

       9             In summary, the launch of New York State of

      10      Health has been an overwhelming success.

      11             We enrolled well over a quarter-million

      12      people in health insurance in less than

      13      three months, but we know that implementing the

      14      marketplace is not a one-time task.

      15             It's a continuous process of operational

      16      improvements, of ongoing training, of refining the

      17      products that stock the shelves of our marketplace,

      18      and, with working one-on-one with consumers and

      19      their representatives when they need help or have

      20      questions.

      21             Each and every day, the New York State of

      22      Health team works to identify and implement

      23      modifications that will improve the consumer's

      24      experience.

      25             Many of them have already been implemented,







                                                                  26
       1      and others are planned in the upcoming weeks and

       2      months.

       3             I know that I speak for the entire

       4      New York State of Health team when I tell you that

       5      we are proud of what's been accomplished, and we are

       6      committed to ensuring that New Yorkers have access

       7      to affordable, comprehensive health-insurance

       8      coverage, and, have the consumer experience they

       9      expect and deserve.

      10             Thank you, and I am happy to answer your

      11      questions.

      12             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you very much,

      13      Ms. Frescatore.

      14             And, I know we've heard from our two Rankers,

      15      Senator Breslin and Senator Gustav [sic] -- but

      16      the -- what -- what I'd like to also acknowledge

      17      that we have with us, Senator Marty Golden, and

      18      Senator Bill Larkin, Senator Jack Martins,

      19      Senator Greg Ball, and, Senator Hassell-Thompson has

      20      joined us as well.

      21             I had just a few questions for you, and then

      22      we'll get -- we'll have some others join in as well.

      23             You mentioned the term "enrolled," in terms

      24      of the numbers of individuals and others who have

      25      actually enrolled.  I assume that means, through







                                                                  27
       1      your process at the exchange.

       2             And, can you walk us through, you know, the

       3      entire process, you know, enrollment --

       4             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Sure.

       5             SENATOR SEWARD:  -- and then through that

       6      final step of someone actually walking into a

       7      provider's door, whether it be a pharmacist or other

       8      provider?

       9             And the reason I ask that question, is that

      10      we have -- I've had constituents who have contacted

      11      me, both, on the Medicaid managed-care enrollee, who

      12      had no card or verification.  This individual needed

      13      insulin, and so they couldn't wait, obviously, when

      14      January 1 rolled around, and that was a difficulty.

      15             Thankfully, your -- you know, your staff was

      16      able to intervene in that one particular case, and,

      17      they're continuing on a fee-for-service basis until

      18      that gets straightened out.

      19             And I had another constituent, on the private

      20      side, who had signed up with an insurance company,

      21      a John Vasalu [ph.] from Cobleskill, who -- he

      22      enrolled on November 18th, but he had not received

      23      any kind of verification, a card.  He talked to his

      24      carrier that he had signed up with.  They had not

      25      heard from the State.







                                                                  28
       1             And, his plight was highlighted in the

       2      "Albany Business Review" at this -- earlier this

       3      morning, and, lo and behold, he -- about an hour

       4      ago, he called me and told me he had just received a

       5      call -- that he had received, at least over the

       6      telephone, a call, with his ID number, and that they

       7      would be mailing it today.

       8             So, I think we need to hear from -- these are

       9      impressive numbers, in terms of enrollees, but what

      10      happens after the enrollment period, in terms of

      11      someone actually having coverage, to.

      12             Go out and receive services that are needed?

      13             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Certainly.

      14             So, individuals and small businesses can

      15      elect to apply for coverage through the website, and

      16      about 75 percent of individuals chose that route to

      17      apply;

      18             Or, with the assistance of a navigator or an

      19      insurance broker, or, in the case of individuals,

      20      with a certified application counselor.

      21             Once their application is processed, and

      22      individuals get an instantaneous response on what

      23      they're eligible for, and what their tax credits

      24      will be, if they qualify, they can go on to select

      25      their health plan.







                                                                  29
       1             The marketplace then sends a transaction to

       2      the insurer that the individual selected, and that

       3      begins the process of effectuating coverage at the

       4      insurer.

       5             All of the insurers, as of Friday, had issued

       6      invoices, and most have been issuing identification

       7      cards to individuals who enrolled for January

       8      coverage, for weeks now, if not months.

       9             We had, of course, a very large volume of

      10      enrollments on December 23rd and 24th, the closing

      11      days, and some of those invoices and ID cards

      12      were -- were -- followed behind that enrollment.

      13             We're glad, certainly, Senator Seward, that

      14      your experience with New York State of Health was

      15      good when you reported those cases.

      16             Obviously, not everyone would get reported to

      17      us.

      18             So what we've done with the insurance

      19      companies, is we've worked with them, to make

      20      certain that they are issuing identification cards

      21      and invoices timely, and, that there are systems in

      22      place to work with the health plan and the providers

      23      that are affiliated with them, to make certain that

      24      anyone who applied for coverage in time for January,

      25      and pays their invoice, timely, has coverage







                                                                  30
       1      retroactive to January 1st.

       2             SENATOR SEWARD:  Do you have a number -- you

       3      have the numbers, that you provided us, in terms of

       4      the enrollment through your process.

       5             Do we have numbers in terms of who's actually

       6      paid their premium and actually have coverage as of

       7      today?

       8             DONNA FRESCATORE:  You know, as a protection,

       9      really, or a safeguard, to consumers, we worked with

      10      the insurers that participate in the marketplace,

      11      and have agreed upon, what I think about as a

      12      rolling 10-day period to pay your invoice, a grace

      13      period, which we would typically have in New York.

      14             And so, for many, the very first payment due

      15      date that came up would have been January 10th, just

      16      last Friday.

      17             But, we will have that kind of information as

      18      we move forward.

      19             What we want to make certain is, that if

      20      there's been a delay in an individual getting their

      21      invoice, through no fault of their own, that they

      22      have the same 10-day protection to be able to pay

      23      for their premium, and that their coverage is

      24      retroactive.

      25             SENATOR SEWARD:  You know, under the --







                                                                  31
       1      shifting gears, under the federal legislation, as

       2      I understand it, the exchange is slated to be

       3      financially self-sustaining by January 1st of 2015.

       4             Is that an obtainable goal, do you feel, here

       5      in New York?

       6             DONNA FRESCATORE:  You're correct.

       7             The federal law and the Governor's executive

       8      order requires the exchange or marketplace to be

       9      self-sustaining in January 2015.  And I think that

      10      will be part of the upcoming discussions about state

      11      fiscal-year budgets.

      12             SENATOR SEWARD:  The -- I wanted to just --

      13      just a question on the relationship between the

      14      navigators and our agents and brokers.

      15             The -- as I understand it, perhaps you could

      16      share with us, if my understanding is correct, that

      17      the navigator is only referring someone to an agent

      18      or broker only upon request.

      19             And my thought is, would a navigator be able

      20      to make such a referral if they thought an

      21      individual or a small business's circumstances, you

      22      know, let's say, we're beyond, you know, the scope

      23      of their, you know, working knowledge, and perhaps

      24      they feel that they would need additional expertise

      25      of an agent or a broker?  Would that be allowed?







                                                                  32
       1             Because I think -- the reason I stress that,

       2      is many individuals, small businesses, they have had

       3      ongoing relationships with agents and brokers who

       4      have been there advisors over the years, and,

       5      particularly, and with this is -- we're on uncharted

       6      waters here with this change that we're seeing, in

       7      the -- with the federal health-care changes.

       8             And it would seem to me that some -- the

       9      navigators are great in terms of the extent that

      10      they can go, but I'd like to see an -- a more

      11      seamless role here for the agents and brokers.

      12             Could you just describe how you see that

      13      relationship, and, the ease of a navigator turning

      14      an individual or a small business, "a client," shall

      15      we say, over to an agent or a broker.

      16             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Sure.

      17             As part of the planning process and some of

      18      the policy work that we did around the very

      19      important role of insurance brokers in our insurance

      20      markets today, we wanted to be very careful not to

      21      disrupt some of those relationships that had

      22      pre-existed, you know, the ACA and the exchange for

      23      many years.

      24             And that's why we built upon the successful

      25      continuing-education programs and the training that







                                                                  33
       1      was already in place for insurance brokers in our

       2      state.

       3             That said, our expectation for navigators is

       4      that, following their training, that they're able to

       5      help consumers, both individuals and small

       6      businesses.

       7             We have not prohibited navigators from making

       8      referrals to insurance brokers when either the

       9      individual or small business prefers that, or when

      10      it's in their best interests.  We obviously want the

      11      applicant to have the type of assister that they

      12      think best meets their needs.

      13             SENATOR SEWARD:  So nobody would prohibit the

      14      navigator from simply saying, Well, I think you

      15      should talk to an agent or a broker?

      16             Is that what you're saying?

      17             DONNA FRESCATORE:  I'm sorry, could you

      18      repeat that?

      19             SENATOR SEWARD:  Nothing -- you were saying

      20      nothing prohibits a navigator from saying, I think

      21      you should be talking to an agent or a broker?

      22             DONNA FRESCATORE:  No, I'm not aware of

      23      anything that would prohibit that.

      24             Nevertheless, our expectation is, that the

      25      navigators would be able and capable of assisting --







                                                                  34
       1      of assisting all the consumers that they're required

       2      to, under their grants and under the federal rules.

       3             We have -- we have not approved standing

       4      relationships, where there's always a referral from

       5      one navigator to a particular broker.  We think it's

       6      very important that the applicant's choice of the

       7      assister they work with is part of any referral.

       8             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you.

       9             Senator Hannon.

      10             SENATOR HANNON:  A couple of different series

      11      of questions.

      12             We -- you've probably heard, or will hear

      13      later today, about individuals, especially

      14      professionals, who have found it very difficult to

      15      find plans that would be successor plans to those

      16      that were canceled last year.

      17             I mean, there was a story in

      18      "The New York Times" about lawyers and the bar

      19      association.

      20             We've received a note from the letter from

      21      the Bar Association of the City of New York, that

      22      said many of their lawyers there cannot find plans.

      23             We find different situations where

      24      replacement of drugs or the replacement of doctors

      25      is not able to be done.







                                                                  35
       1             And, so, I was very -- I really -- my

       2      eyebrows were raised when you said you had -- in

       3      your requirements to the insurers, said they should

       4      have out-of-network when -- when they offer that

       5      someplace else.

       6             And the maybe unexpected consequences of what

       7      the rules were for the exchange, was not to have

       8      out-of-network allowed in the exchange; but, rather,

       9      to cut it down for plans outside the exchange.

      10             And as I think in your testimony, you note

      11      that the places where the out-of-network is allowed

      12      is basically just in Western New York.

      13             And, so, we have problems with professionals

      14      seeking, even if they want to pay, not being able to

      15      get products for this.

      16             I think there are questions of people who are

      17      changing jobs, and are in between coverage, and

      18      because of the lag of getting coverage in New York

      19      and the exchange, that's not available; and, yet,

      20      they're waiting, 60, 30 days, for a new job.

      21             We have people moving between parts of the

      22      state, so that there are different coverage, because

      23      we do coverage by region and by county.

      24             So I'm wondering in regard to, what steps can

      25      be done to start to look at where we should go with







                                                                  36
       1      out-of-network coverage, and whether that be for a

       2      physician, hospital, or drugs?

       3             And I could go on.

       4             There's a lot of other anecdotal evidence,

       5      but, I mean, you're probably at the crux of getting

       6      those type of questions also.

       7             DONNA FRESCATORE:  So the rationale for the

       8      plan invitation, was that we didn't want consumers

       9      to have to, you know, choose between getting their

      10      tax credits or financial assistance.  And we know

      11      that 68 percent or so of the individuals have

      12      qualified, at least for January, for that

      13      assistance, and out-of-network benefits.

      14             So, thus, we thought there was sort of an

      15      equity or leveling of the outside markets and the

      16      marketplace or the exchange by having that

      17      requirement as part of the plan invitation.

      18             Each of the networks for the plans that

      19      certified for the exchange has been subjected to the

      20      very same rules that the Department of Health uses

      21      to license HMOs in the state.  And then there's the

      22      added protection of, for all types of insurers, that

      23      if the individual demonstrates they don't have a

      24      provider that meets their needs, they're held

      25      harmless on any additional out-of-pocket costs.







                                                                  37
       1             Some plans came to us, their networks weren't

       2      quite ready to be certified, because they did not

       3      have the required providers in a particular county,

       4      and those plans were not certified for offering on

       5      the exchange.

       6             You know, that said, we are aware that there

       7      are some individuals that would prefer a product

       8      with an out-of-network benefit.

       9             We think that, that in the end, that strong,

      10      quality plan networks is really the answer for most

      11      consumers who need, both, predictability in their

      12      out-of-pocket costs, need premiums that are more

      13      affordable to them, particularly through the

      14      marketplace, when their incomes will typically be

      15      below certain levels.

      16             SENATOR HANNON:  Are you saying that you feel

      17      that the current -- each of the current insurers in

      18      the exchange has a network that's adequate?

      19             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Yes, each of the -- and

      20      it's done on a county-by-county basis, each of the

      21      plan networks has been subjected to the same

      22      rigorous tests that the Department of Health uses to

      23      license an HMO in New York State, to make certain

      24      those networks are adequate.

      25             SENATOR HANNON:  What about the standards







                                                                  38
       1      that the Department of Financial Services uses to

       2      license insurers -- health insurers under their

       3      certification?

       4             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Those as well; although

       5      it's my understanding that the Department of Health

       6      HMO, because those are generally closed network

       7      products, is actually a more rigorous test.

       8             SENATOR HANNON:  Rigorous test for providing

       9      adequacy? or numbers?

      10             DONNA FRESCATORE:  As far as, in terms of,

      11      not only the number of providers in the plan

      12      network, but, also the choice of providers in the

      13      plan network, and other tests.

      14             So, in the -- in situations where a health

      15      plan could not demonstrate, to our satisfaction,

      16      that they had an adequate network in a particular

      17      county, they were not certified for the marketplace.

      18             That would be the same way that an HMO review

      19      would work, or an HMO's request for an expansion of

      20      service area, through the Department of Health

      21      process.

      22             SENATOR HANNON:  I had thought, under the

      23      executive order, that there was joint governance of

      24      the exchange, and things that were the specialty of

      25      the Department of Financial Services were done by







                                                                  39
       1      them, and things that are specialty of the

       2      Department of Health were done by them.

       3             I didn't realize that you were only using

       4      adequacy of network under the Department of Health's

       5      rules.

       6             DONNA FRESCATORE:  The -- there are areas

       7      where there was joint review of the applications.

       8             The Department of Health took the lead in the

       9      provider-network review for the applications.

      10             But I don't think that, you know, which of

      11      the agencies conducted the review has in any way

      12      impacted the adequacy of the networks available to

      13      the people who enroll through the marketplace.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  Okay, thank you.

      15             We'll continue to look at that.

      16             Let me ask you, since you got into numbers,

      17      I just wanted to go through some of the numbers

      18      here, because I wasn't aware, until this morning.

      19             You talked about, the total number enrolled

      20      in an individual coverage in New York is 230,624,

      21      and you said 66 percent of them went into qualified

      22      health plans.

      23             So that would be 152,211, if any

      24      non-Common Core math works.

      25                  [Laughter.]







                                                                  40
       1             SENATOR HANNON:  So that's 152,000 that are

       2      going into non-Medicaid.

       3             I presume the rest of the individuals, this

       4      other 78,000, are going into Medicaid?

       5             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Some portion of -- those

       6      numbers are for the people who enrolled by

       7      December 24th.

       8             SENATOR HANNON:  I'm just taking it from your

       9      statement.

      10             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Yeah.

      11             So, there's a portion of those individuals

      12      who -- I think your math is absolutely correct.

      13             So, within the 230,624, about 68 percent of

      14      them are individuals who enrolled in qualified

      15      health plans, either with or without financial

      16      assistance.

      17             There's a percentage of those individuals who

      18      were children who qualified for CHP, because the

      19      marketplace is, likewise, enrolling children in the

      20      CHP program if that's the best option for the

      21      family.

      22             And then, the remainder, about 27 percent or

      23      so, were Medicaid.  That's the 61,625.

      24             So we have one front door where individuals

      25      apply through the marketplace.







                                                                  41
       1             And then, depending on their income, their

       2      family composition, if they're eligible for

       3      Medicaid, they're enrolled in our state Medicaid

       4      program.  If their children are eligible for CHP,

       5      they're enrolled in CHP.

       6             And if they're eligible to enroll in a QHP,

       7      whether they get tax credits or cost-sharing

       8      credits, or not, they're enrolled into a QHP

       9      product.

      10             That's really the seamless front end that we

      11      had envisioned throughout our entire planning

      12      process for the state.

      13             We don't say to someone --

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  I'm trying to get at some of

      15      the numbers.

      16             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Okay.

      17             SENATOR HANNON:  So that -- we agree that

      18      152,211 went into qualified health plans, which is

      19      non-Medicaid.

      20             DONNA FRESCATORE:  That's right.

      21             SENATOR HANNON:  And then you also, later in

      22      your statement, said, half of those never had

      23      insurance before, or -- I'm sorry.  You said half of

      24      those were uninsured.

      25             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Half of the individuals







                                                                  42
       1      were uninsured.

       2             SENATOR HANNON:  Who went into the private

       3      plans were uninsured.

       4             DONNA FRESCATORE:  That's right.

       5             SENATOR HANNON:  So we've now offered, so

       6      far, about 70 -- insurance, for people who had

       7      previously been uninsured, to 76,000 people?

       8             DONNA FRESCATORE:  I think that's the correct

       9      logic for the math.

      10             The percent of people who qualified for

      11      Medicaid, that were uninsured at the time of

      12      application, was slightly higher, but, that's a

      13      separate number.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  So, my interesting point to

      15      you would be, this state had CHP,

      16      Family Health Plus, and Healthy NY.

      17             And the last time I could find numbers for

      18      Healthy NY, we had about 170,000, according to their

      19      annual report in 2010.

      20             170,000 were enrolled in Healthy NY.

      21             Now, that's individuals and group.

      22             But, my point and my contrast is, that was a

      23      significant number of people who had received

      24      insurance in this state, and I contrast that with

      25      the 76,000 we've just gotten now under the ACA.







                                                                  43
       1             DONNA FRESCATORE:  So my understanding of the

       2      most recent Healthy NY enrollment would be that

       3      there were about 88,000 people who bought as

       4      individuals or sole proprietors under Healthy NY.

       5             If those individuals completed the

       6      application for the marketplace, they, presumably,

       7      would respond to a question that they had insurance

       8      at the time they applied, and be part of the

       9      other --

      10             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, I'm just contrasting

      11      total numbers of enrollment: 170,000, versus the

      12      76,000.

      13             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Yeah, I think that you're

      14      applying the percentages correctly, Senator.

      15             I would point out, however, that, you know,

      16      the marketplace is truly a new option, and, not all

      17      people who will enroll in health insurance will

      18      enroll through the marketplace.

      19             Insurers and brokers will work directly with

      20      individuals, and small businesses as well, to enroll

      21      people in coverage directly.

      22             So I think that's another important component

      23      if we were to look more broadly at the number of

      24      people, and the transition of insured, from one

      25      product through another.







                                                                  44
       1             The marketplace is one piece of enrollment.

       2             SENATOR HANNON:  Okay.

       3             And in terms of the Medicaid expansion, just

       4      the way I looked at the number, where you had 78,000

       5      going into Medicaid, and you said 20 percent of

       6      those were as a result of the Medicaid expansion.

       7             So we've enrolled in the Medicaid expansion

       8      population, 15,680.

       9             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Yeah, the total Medicaid

      10      enrollment for January --

      11             SENATOR HANNON:  No, this is just the

      12      expansion population --

      13             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Right.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  -- which was the option the

      15      State took under the Affordable Care Act.

      16             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Right, so the numbers

      17      would be 20 percent of 61,625.

      18             SENATOR HANNON:  So it's even smaller than

      19      I had.  I had 20 percent of the 78,000.

      20             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Right.

      21             If -- when we think back to some of the

      22      initial projections that were done on enrollment, at

      23      full implementation, the expected number of people

      24      who would be newly eligible, because Medicaid levels

      25      were -- because Medicaid already covered hundreds of







                                                                  45
       1      thousands of childless -- single and childless

       2      adults in New York, those projections were, that

       3      about -- at full implementation, about 75,000 or so

       4      people would enroll in Medicaid, over time.

       5             SENATOR HANNON:  One point, when I mentioned

       6      the bar association, part of their part -- analysis

       7      of the Affordable Care Act, was that their -- the

       8      definition for an "individual" had changed.

       9             Before, you could get coverage if you were --

      10      there were two people together.

      11             Now, those two people have been split into

      12      two individuals, and, the two individuals often wind

      13      up paying more than they had been paying before.

      14             Now that had been a change in the New York

      15      law, or because of New York law.

      16             And I was just wondering if you have any

      17      policy recommendations to go back to where we had

      18      been.

      19             DONNA FRESCATORE:  So my understanding is,

      20      that the way we're determining, or the definition

      21      of, "sole proprietor," for the purposes of the

      22      marketplace, is consistent with the federal rule,

      23      and that we're applying -- we're applying the rules

      24      as they're defined in that federal requirement.

      25             SENATOR HANNON:  But, still, this state, we







                                                                  46
       1      passed legislation in the year -- what'd they call

       2      them? -- RHIOs, or -- PEOs" (professional employees'

       3      organizations), that allowed people to join and

       4      still get the benefit of group rates.

       5             So I'm just wondering where the marketplace

       6      is gonna go as we try to find coverage for people

       7      who previously had it.  And these are not people who

       8      are going to get subsidized, they're not going to

       9      get tax credits, but they're still looking for

      10      products that will offer them the coverage.

      11             And the last thing I have to say is, I've

      12      looked for -- I was looking for an -- I understand

      13      it's federal, the Spanish website.

      14             You have Spanish materials, but you don't

      15      have a Spanish website.

      16             And in terms of the population of New York in

      17      need of insurance coverage, we really need to move

      18      that forward.

      19             And I wonder, at some point, will you get

      20      some good news from the federal government when they

      21      will take the rest of what you -- you can only do so

      22      much with a website.  You need their hub in order to

      23      operate.

      24             When are they going to come up with a Spanish

      25      website?







                                                                  47
       1             DONNA FRESCATORE:  We agree, that consumers

       2      should have a website that's translated into

       3      Spanish.

       4             Excuse me.

       5             We invested, you know, and focused on the

       6      technology to launch the marketplace, and, that

       7      investment has paid off, because our website never

       8      crashed.

       9             There were people who had long wait times,

      10      but, people -- it never went down entirely.

      11             And since early October, four days into it,

      12      it's been running smoothly, as evidenced by the

      13      number of people who are enrolling through the

      14      website alone.

      15             We are working on a Spanish website.

      16             And while I can't give you a specific date

      17      today, it is something that we agree that should be

      18      made available to consumers, and we'll get that

      19      done.

      20             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you.

      21             SENATOR RIVERA:  First of all, on that last

      22      point, (speaking Spanish), very much in agreement

      23      with him, as soon as we can have it, that would be

      24      excellent.

      25             First will be a brief kind of parochial, and







                                                                  48
       1      I'm sure that we'll speak later, because there is a

       2      breakdown that you have of where folks have signed

       3      up, so I'm sure that if I give you, maybe, a list of

       4      ZIP codes from my district, I could have a sense of

       5      how many folks have signed up in the Bronx?

       6             DONNA FRESCATORE:  We can get you that

       7      information.

       8             SENATOR RIVERA:  Thank you.

       9             I know that there were -- that we had a --

      10      2016, the goal was to have 1.1 million folks -- or,

      11      the projection, was to have 1.1 million by 2016.

      12             According to the numbers that we just

      13      discussed, we're about 294 grand, I think just said.

      14             So I think we're on track to be able to do

      15      that; correct?

      16             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Yeah, we believe we're on

      17      track, and maybe a little ahead of where we thought

      18      we would be, based on the projections, at this

      19      point.

      20             SENATOR RIVERA:  And as far as the population

      21      of, you know, quote/unquote, young invincibles; that

      22      35 -- "under 35" folks, according to some of the

      23      numbers that you gave, about 30 percent.

      24             So, a third of the folks that have signed up

      25      are from this -- from this younger population.







                                                                  49
       1             There's been a discussion, nationally, about

       2      the fact that there is a need for healthier

       3      individuals to be part of the exchange to make sure

       4      that it works.

       5             Is that a percentage that, for lack of a

       6      better term, is at a healthy percentage to have as

       7      the total breakdown of folks that have signed up?

       8             And, do you think that that would be -- that

       9      will make the exchange work well?

      10             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Yeah, we believe that

      11      these early results for January, for the first

      12      month -- effective month of coverage, show that

      13      there is broad awareness and interest among younger

      14      adults in signing up for coverage through the

      15      marketplace.

      16             We have, and we will continue our efforts, to

      17      reach out to younger adults, to reinforce the value

      18      of being insured, of having the, you know, security

      19      and protection that insurance affords us.

      20             And we expect that, over time, that number,

      21      that percentage, will, in fact, even increase.

      22             SENATOR RIVERA:  All right.

      23             That's all I have.

      24             Thank you.

      25             SENATOR SEWARD:  Senator Larkin.







                                                                  50
       1             SENATOR LARKIN:  Good morning, thank you.

       2             A well-prepared document.

       3             I have 309,000 people in my district.  If

       4      they didn't know anything about health or insurance,

       5      they would have said this would be an Academy Award.

       6             And I'm not being insulting, but I'm confused

       7      when I look at the state and the federal government,

       8      when we're talking about people, like, Let's go on

       9      your website.

      10             I have thousands of people who don't have a

      11      computer, don't have a website.

      12             I did a survey over this weekend.

      13             Everybody I was asking, the biggest complaint

      14      is:  I can't have the doctor I want.

      15             "Out-of-network" is not an explained

      16      situation.

      17             The other thing I think about is, Friday

      18      night, a 73-year-old colonel from the United States

      19      Army moving to Florida, said:  I got a great policy.

      20      It's $175 more than last, but my daughters are very

      21      disturbed, because I'm authorized two mammograms a

      22      year.

      23             SENATOR SEWARD:  That would be interesting.

      24                  [Laughter.]

      25             SENATOR LARKIN:  Now think about it.







                                                                  51
       1             Somebody, along the line, I understand what

       2      you're trying to do, and I appreciate it, because

       3      I believe health insurance is an necessity, not a

       4      nicety.

       5             But I'm concerned that, I think there's money

       6      being spent in wrong ways.

       7             We talked about navigators, and all.

       8             I looked at the 900 form of the society of

       9      New York, where they're paying their head guys

      10      600,000.

      11             They're going to come up to my district.

      12             That was back in September.

      13             Of course, they haven't found a way to

      14      Orange County yet.  It's too small of a county.

      15             The other thing is, is the Spanish.

      16             I have a district that has tremendous

      17      Spanish-speaking people.  Wonderful people.

      18             I have parts of three counties.

      19             Rockland County, they make up for 2,000 of

      20      the residents.  Most of them are in my district.

      21      And they're saying is that, there are inadequate

      22      numbers of persons who can translate for them.

      23             Now, you have better books than I do, but I'm

      24      telling what the people on the street are saying.

      25             Does anybody know how much we spend on







                                                                  52
       1      navigators?

       2             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Certainly.

       3             The awards for the navigator program are

       4      about $27 million a year.

       5             It supports about 570 or so full-time

       6      individuals throughout New York State.

       7             Taking, collectively, the navigators, I can't

       8      specifically to Rockland County, but I can get

       9      that -- I will get that information for you,

      10      Senator Larkin.

      11             Collectively, the navigators speak over

      12      40 different languages, and we've made available a

      13      site directory.

      14             You can get it on the website.  We understand

      15      not everyone has access to the website.  You can

      16      call and we can get it to people.  We can get it to

      17      your district offices.

      18             And that directory shows what languages are

      19      spoken at what locations, so people can see which

      20      navigators.

      21             Additionally, on language access, our

      22      customer service center is prepared to assist

      23      callers in just about every possible language.

      24             They have over 60, I think 65 or so,

      25      representatives who are Spanish-speaking.  And, they







                                                                  53
       1      use language-line services if they need additional

       2      languages or additional resources.

       3             Likewise, our materials are translated into

       4      seven different languages, including Spanish.

       5             So far, you know, the call center has handled

       6      over 20,000 calls in languages other than English.

       7      It's an important feature of the program.

       8             We know the website isn't going to be the

       9      answer for everyone, regardless of, you know,

      10      their -- of language.  It's just not an option for

      11      everyone.

      12             SENATOR LARKIN:  We realize that, but we're

      13      talking about the person on the ground.  That --

      14      that's the one person we're trying to get to.

      15             And in my honest opinion, I think our

      16      communication is not up to date as it should be.

      17             Remember, the age group, and I can speak for

      18      them, because I'm going to be 86 years old in less

      19      than 20 days.

      20             But I'm saying, I talked to many, many

      21      seniors, and they're confused.

      22             Number one, is the out-of-network.

      23             Number two, is the communications between the

      24      individual.

      25             I've had people tell me over the past month







                                                                  54
       1      that they've been on a the phone over 12 hours, over

       2      a couple of days.

       3             And there's no -- there's something missing.

       4             It could be the person that's telling me the

       5      story, versus the person who's receiving it, but

       6      something is missing there.

       7             You might not see it when you look at

       8      19 million people, but when I look at 309,000 people

       9      that I talk to frequently, not once in a blue moon,

      10      the questions are serious.

      11             Out-of-network, no communications, and lack

      12      of plans that are not adequate to the individual.

      13             And I thank you for appearing here today.

      14             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you, Senator Larkin.

      15             Senator Golden.

      16             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you.

      17             If you could put your mic a little bit closer

      18      to you, please?

      19             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Certainly.

      20             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you.

      21             The -- I think we're all a little concerned

      22      about the out-of-network issue.

      23             And, there was an article back in "The

      24      Times," back on October 18th, about a young girl

      25      that had a heart issue, 9-year-old D'Andrea.







                                                                  55
       1      Miss D'Andrea.

       2             And, she went in, and the hospital told

       3      them -- they took their insurance, and, they had no

       4      idea, the number of people that were in the

       5      operating room, and how many doctors were

       6      out-of-network.

       7             And they got additional bills for all of

       8      those out-of-network anesthesiologists,

       9      out-of-network doctors, and, it was pretty

      10      overwhelming.

      11             So, there are two areas here:

      12             One, obviously, is in the -- when there's an

      13      emergency and you're put into an emergency

      14      situation, and you're going into the emergency room,

      15      and whatever doctors are there, obviously, are going

      16      to work on you.

      17             There's also the secondary, where you can

      18      actually plan to go into a hospital, and you can

      19      actually take a look at the doctors that are in your

      20      network.

      21             But, we don't have a list of those doctors in

      22      the network, do we?

      23             And -- number one.

      24             Number two:  How do we go and take care of

      25      these different issues, when they go into an







                                                                  56
       1      emergency room, or in a planned situation, and there

       2      are doctors that go into the operating room or into

       3      the -- or the anesthesiologist, that's

       4      out-of-network?

       5             How is that being dealt with?

       6             DONNA FRESCATORE:  So, thank you,

       7      Senator Golden.

       8             The network's information for each of the

       9      plans is available.  It's on the website.

      10             We've also, since we launched New York State

      11      of Health, made a tool available to consumers, as

      12      they're applying for coverage, so that they can

      13      enter the name of the physician that they desire and

      14      they can see the affiliations with different health

      15      plans.

      16             In an emergency situation, all of the plans

      17      that are certified on the marketplace, consistent

      18      with, both, federal, and I think state rules, if a

      19      person believes they're having an emergency, they

      20      seek care, it doesn't impact their benefit, whether

      21      that hospital is participating or not participating.

      22             They're just responsible for -- there's no

      23      prior-authorization requirement from the health plan

      24      to get those services, and, those services are

      25      treated as though they're inpatient.







                                                                  57
       1             For scheduled procedures and admissions,

       2      these plans generally require the use of an

       3      in-network provider, unless the plan has approved an

       4      out-of-network referral because the plan can't meet

       5      the individual's needs.

       6             SENATOR GOLDEN:  So let me -- in an emergency

       7      situation, the network would cover it?

       8             Is that what I'm understanding?

       9             DONNA FRESCATORE:  In an emergency situation,

      10      the provider is -- would be covered.  There's no

      11      prior authorization, so we don't have people, in

      12      emergency situations, where they have to call their

      13      health plan, and ask or worry about whether they're

      14      seeing a network provider or not.

      15             SENATOR GOLDEN:  And in a non-emergency

      16      situation, where you have a hospital that's -- any

      17      one of them -- NYU, Presbyterian, any one of those

      18      hospitals, when you're going in for a serious

      19      operation, a heart operation, you can have as many

      20      as five, six, seven doctors in the room.

      21             There could be three, four, that are

      22      out-of-network.

      23             How would they know?

      24             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Again, the networks are

      25      available.







                                                                  58
       1             We always encourage a consumer to ask the --

       2      their physician whether or not they're in their

       3      health plan's network, or not.  Or, ask the health

       4      plan.

       5             And, you know, I think there have been some

       6      particular situations that have been brought to us,

       7      questioning whether or not a particular institution

       8      or a provider participates in the network.

       9             And when we've been able -- when we've looked

      10      at that network data, and, in fact, including the

      11      hospital that you raised, the facility does, in

      12      fact, participate with some of the plans.

      13             That's something we've made available to

      14      consumers while they're picking their plan, because

      15      we want them to have that information while they

      16      select.

      17             SENATOR GOLDEN:  So it would be up to the

      18      consumer, if the individual were to go have an

      19      operation, and in that operating room, we're looking

      20      at six doctors, two anesthesiologists, three nurse

      21      practitioners, and then, of course, a whole series

      22      of after-care, another series of doctors, that would

      23      come in and out of the room over a period of time?

      24             So, it would be up to the provider -- to the

      25      individual seeking that insurance, to make sure that







                                                                  59
       1      each one of those individuals were in and part of

       2      the provider that was being in the network?

       3             DONNA FRESCATORE:  It would work as it does

       4      today, in today's insurance markets, that --

       5             SENATOR GOLDEN:  I'm sorry?

       6             DONNA FRESCATORE:  It would -- we would

       7      always encourage the consumer to have a discussion

       8      with the providers, and, to determine their network

       9      affiliation.

      10             That's the same advice we give consumers

      11      today outside of the marketplace coverage.

      12             SENATOR GOLDEN:  So it would be up to the

      13      consumer to make sure they understood, how many

      14      doctors and how many people were going to be in the

      15      operating room, and how many in after-care, and what

      16      your PT would be after that, and how that would be

      17      taken care of, which could involve as many as

      18      25 people?

      19             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Right.

      20             And that information is also available

      21      directly from the health plan on their website.

      22             It should be available from the health plan's

      23      customer service staff as well, can answer very

      24      specific questions about particular doctors or

      25      physical therapists and their participation.







                                                                  60
       1             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Now, what about these larger

       2      hospitals, some of them take one or two plans, three

       3      plans, and then you have other networks that,

       4      other -- hospitals that take many plans?

       5             Is there any -- anything in process to try to

       6      get these hospitals to take more plans?  Or is it --

       7      how does that work out?

       8             If you have two hospitals that only take

       9      two plans, that, obviously, limits the amount of

      10      people that can go into those hospitals that deal

      11      with acute cases.

      12             Do we have any way of working with that?

      13             DONNA FRESCATORE:  The criteria for approving

      14      the plan -- or, certifying the health-plan networks

      15      has a requirement for hospitals.

      16             And, depending on the location, I mean,

      17      there's some counties in the state where there may

      18      be only one hospital.

      19             In other areas, such as in your district, the

      20      requirement in the number of hospitals is higher.

      21             But, the agreements between health plans and

      22      providers are private contracts, as they are today,

      23      and, they are negotiated and changed from time to

      24      time.

      25             Also, as you look at the network composition







                                                                  61
       1      of each of the plans and the marketplace, it was not

       2      our intention, ever, that they be exactly the same;

       3      but, rather, that there be some variation in the

       4      networks, and, that consumers would have a choice,

       5      often at different price points.

       6             SENATOR GOLDEN:  The -- just, again, on

       7      D'Andrea, Miss D'Andrea, I think they call that

       8      "balance billing," right, where the out-of-network

       9      makes up the difference on what they were not paid

      10      for because they were out-of-network.

      11             Are there other states dealing with the

      12      balanced billing?

      13             And, is the federal government have an

      14      approach on balanced billing?

      15             And, what are we going to do here in the

      16      state of New York, with balanced billing?

      17             Or, do we have a plan to do anything with

      18      balanced billing?

      19             DONNA FRESCATORE:  You know, I'm not certain

      20      that I'm the best person to answer that question.

      21             I think that -- I'm not aware that the

      22      federal government has a policy on that.

      23             I think there are some other states that have

      24      processes when there is a balanced bill from a

      25      provider that's out-of-network.







                                                                  62
       1             SENATOR GOLDEN:  So they would still be

       2      allowed to get their dollars, if they had not done

       3      their homework.

       4             Those out-of-network doctors would be able to

       5      make up that balance by charging the individual,

       6      out-of-pocket.

       7             Correct?

       8             DONNA FRESCATORE:  In an out-of-network

       9      situation, yes.

      10             The individual would file a claim to the

      11      insurer, and there may be an unpaid balance from

      12      that bill.

      13             But I'm not -- I don't know I'm not the

      14      person to speak to, you know, a survey of the other

      15      state policies on that.

      16             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Do we have a lot of doctors

      17      today starting to opt out of Medicaid and opt of

      18      this affordable plan -- affordable health-care plan?

      19             DONNA FRESCATORE:  You know, we've -- we

      20      collect network data for the marketplace.  We do --

      21      we've changed that to be quarterly, and with the

      22      goal of collecting information from the health plans

      23      on a monthly basis, as we move forward here.

      24             And there are some changes, as there are

      25      today, in the usual course of business, from month







                                                                  63
       1      to month, in the provider network.

       2             But, thus far, what we've seen, you know,

       3      overall, is that while there's some adds and some

       4      subtracts, that all of the networks exceed all of

       5      the adequacy standards that were set forth at

       6      certification.

       7             SENATOR GOLDEN:  I see a number of doctors,

       8      it's in Manhattan; specifically, New York City, they

       9      opt out.  They have their own special concierge

      10      plans today, but you never seen that in the outer

      11      boroughs or in Upstate New York.

      12             I see a number of doctors now starting to opt

      13      out in my community.

      14             I see that as a problem, coming forward.

      15             You don't see that as a problem here in the

      16      state?

      17             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Well, you know, we will --

      18      I don't know that I foresee network adequacy as a

      19      problem, but, that is -- we will be collecting

      20      information quarterly, and then monthly, to be able

      21      to see if there's changes in the number of

      22      physicians or specialists available to consumers

      23      when they enroll in the marketplace coverage, going

      24      forward.

      25             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Businesses:  The --







                                                                  64
       1      Senator Hannon had pointed out the number of

       2      businesses across the state.

       3             I think, in your testimony, it's around

       4      5,000 businesses have joined.

       5             Are these businesses -- which program are

       6      they choosing?

       7             And, are they -- is there a savings here on

       8      these small businesses?

       9             And, why is the number so low on small

      10      businesses?

      11             DONNA FRESCATORE:  The small businesses

      12      are -- represent businesses from all over our state.

      13             The small-business marketplace is an option

      14      for small businesses.

      15             They still can purchase insurance directly

      16      from an insurer, or with the assistance of a broker

      17      and the outside market.

      18             There are savings to small businesses through

      19      the State, through the small-business marketplace,

      20      because it's the only point of access for

      21      small-business tax credits.

      22             So, small businesses that meet the federal

      23      requirements, they have fewer than 25 employees, an

      24      average wage of $50,000 or less, not including the

      25      owner's wages, and, that contribute 50 percent







                                                                  65
       1      towards the cost of coverage, can qualify for tax

       2      credits when they buy through the small-business

       3      marketplace.

       4             We expect, over time, that more -- that the

       5      enrollment through the small-business marketplace

       6      will increase because of the tax credits that are

       7      available, and, because the flexibility that's built

       8      in, to -- for the employer to make different choices

       9      about what they contribute, and what plans their

      10      employees have access to.

      11             SENATOR GOLDEN:  God forbid any of these tax

      12      credits expire, we'd be in serious trouble.

      13             But if you can make it available us to, for

      14      the small businesses, to the Committee Chairmen, the

      15      number of businesses, the plans they're choosing,

      16      and the outreach that's being made to small

      17      businesses, and trying to develop that plan.

      18             Last question, and then I'm going to --

      19      because there's other Senators here that want to ask

      20      some questions.

      21             I wanted to go into the website, just for a

      22      real -- two brief questions.

      23             Has there been any attacks on the websites,

      24      and is there any breach?

      25             And, who is liable for that breach?







                                                                  66
       1             DONNA FRESCATORE:  No, the website is

       2      monitored constantly for any particular -- for any

       3      possible intrusions.

       4             There have been no breaches to the website,

       5      and there's been no known attacks.

       6             SENATOR GOLDEN:  And who would be responsible

       7      for a breach?

       8             DONNA FRESCATORE:  We would -- there's

       9      certainly policies and procedures, as well as

      10      federal requirements, about notification in the

      11      event of a breach.

      12             Those are governed by such regulations as

      13      HIPAA.

      14             But, again, we have not seen any breaches,

      15      and there's no known attacks on the website.

      16             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you very much.

      17             DONNA FRESCATORE:  It is monitored

      18      constantly.

      19             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you for your

      20      testimony.

      21             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you, Senator Golden.

      22             Senator Martins.

      23             SENATOR MARTINS:  Hi, how are you?

      24             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Hi, Senator.

      25             SENATOR MARTINS:  Good morning.







                                                                  67
       1             Thanks for your testimony here today.

       2             My questions center around, really, two

       3      topics:

       4             One:  The number of people who have applied,

       5      the number of people who constitute the pool of

       6      eligible individuals or families who would qualify

       7      for coverage;

       8             And, then, the costs that you spoke to in

       9      your testimony.

      10             How many individuals in New York State lost

      11      coverage last year?

      12             DONNA FRESCATORE:  That's not -- that's not

      13      data that we have.

      14             I can walk you through the information that

      15      we do have.

      16             Prior to implementation -- prior to the

      17      enactment of the Affordable Care Act, New York had

      18      already standardized its individual markets;

      19      meaning, specifically, our individual direct-pay

      20      market and our Healthy NY market.

      21             And we know that, while enrollment

      22      fluctuated, from time to time, in those programs,

      23      that, prior to the Affordable Care Act, the total

      24      enrollment between the two was about 100,000.

      25             So, that's the, approximate, 88,000 or so







                                                                  68
       1      that Senator Hannon referenced earlier;

       2             And, an additional 12,000 or so in our

       3      individual direct-pay markets.

       4             Because the -- because of the way the tax

       5      credits are structured under the federal law, and

       6      because we've seen the individual rates in 2014

       7      decrease, on average, 53 percent from their 2013

       8      levels, those individuals, through the marketplace,

       9      have affordable options to purchase coverage.

      10             And, in fact, we see throughout the state,

      11      many consumers who had coverage, perhaps through

      12      Healthy NY, seeing pretty significant reductions in

      13      their premiums, from the combination of those

      14      two factors: the premium rates going down, and,

      15      their ability to access tax credits.

      16             SENATOR MARTINS:  I understand, but my point

      17      is broader even than that.

      18             You know, when we had this national and state

      19      discussion over providing affordable care to

      20      everyone, there is a great deal of discussion over

      21      the number of individuals and families that did not

      22      have coverage, who would be able to, as a result of

      23      these efforts, obtain coverage.

      24             And, I want to have a sense from you, as to

      25      where we are with regard to those efforts.







                                                                  69
       1             Whether those numbers continue static, or

       2      whether we've actually been able to provide coverage

       3      to individuals and families who previously did not

       4      have coverage.

       5             And, how many people today, had coverage,

       6      that no longer have coverage as a result of the

       7      changes that have been put in place?

       8             Because we do have people who are now without

       9      coverage, who did have coverage as recently as a few

      10      months ago; correct?

      11             DONNA FRESCATORE:  What I can tell you is

      12      that, through the marketplace, of the 230,000 people

      13      that enrolled, about half of them were uninsured.

      14             So, we are certainly reaching people who did

      15      not have insurance, through enrollment in QHPs, as

      16      well as our enrollment efforts in our state Medicaid

      17      program, where a higher percent -- higher than --

      18      slightly higher than 50 percent of people were not

      19      insured.

      20             Because our small-business market in New York

      21      was not standardized prior to the ACA, and some

      22      15,000 or so different products were out there,

      23      I don't have -- we don't have data that shows how

      24      many of those policies were not compliant with the

      25      Affordable Care Act.







                                                                  70
       1             SENATOR MARTINS:  Do you have an estimate as

       2      to how many individuals in New York were uninsured

       3      prior to the rollout of the Affordable Care Act in

       4      New York?

       5             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Based on census data that

       6      was part of the modeling work that was done by the

       7      Urban Institute on behalf of the state, there were

       8      about 2.7 million uninsured New Yorkers.

       9             Of those, the expected enrollment, I think

      10      this number was mentioned earlier by one of the

      11      Senators, we expect that 1.1 million people will

      12      enroll through the marketplace by the end of 2016;

      13      by December 31, 2016.

      14             So that then gives you some numbers about the

      15      total number of uninsured and what the expected

      16      enrollment is three years out, which we consider

      17      full implementation.

      18             SENATOR MARTINS:  So that "2.5 million"

      19      figure is probably still about accurate now, isn't

      20      it?

      21             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Yeah, I don't know that

      22      there has been any significant change, based on, you

      23      know, census data, to that number, so I think it's

      24      fair as an estimate of the uninsured.

      25             SENATOR MARTINS:  You've used the statistic,







                                                                  71
       1      "53 percent of reduction in premium rates," as

       2      compared to those in effect in 2013.  You've used

       3      that a couple of times so far.

       4             And, I just need some clarity on that

       5      because, what's the baseline?

       6             What are we comparing, when you compare, or

       7      you say, that there's a "53 percent reduction"?

       8             Because I have heard from a significant

       9      number of individuals from my district who have

      10      complained about premium increases.

      11             Now, naturally, I expect I'm going to hear

      12      from people who are complaining about increases, and

      13      I'm not necessarily going to hear from people who

      14      have gotten decreases.

      15             But, is that based on a comparison of

      16      equivalent coverages, or -- or year to year?

      17             Because, as Senator Larkin mentioned earlier,

      18      there are coverages that are now provided that, in

      19      the past, perhaps an enrollee would not need, and so

      20      the baseline for coverage has increased; thereby,

      21      the cost increasing.

      22             That "53 percent" figure is based on, I'm

      23      assuming, comparable coverage, year to year, even

      24      though, last year, that person may have opted not to

      25      have the coverages; correct?







                                                                  72
       1             DONNA FRESCATORE:  It is based on comparable

       2      coverage.

       3             The 53 percent average reduction is the

       4      comparison of the individual direct-pay premium

       5      rates in effect in 2013, compared to the individual

       6      premiums in effect for 2014, for comparable

       7      benefits.

       8             SENATOR MARTINS:  So if we had individuals

       9      who did not choose to have the extensive coverages

      10      that are currently afforded under this initiative,

      11      they would see their premiums increase, not

      12      decrease?

      13             DONNA FRESCATORE:  The 53 percent is a

      14      comparison of the standardized products that were

      15      sold in New York to individuals, to what's available

      16      today in the individual market.

      17             So, it's apples to apples.

      18             SENATOR MARTINS:  No, I understand, but it

      19      doesn't take into account the fact that there are

      20      fewer options available to individuals, because the

      21      baseline for coverage has actually increased;

      22      thereby, forcing them to purchase coverages that

      23      they would not have had to have covered or to have

      24      used last year; therefore, their actual premiums,

      25      money out of their pocket, has actually increased.







                                                                  73
       1             Have you seen instances of that?

       2             DONNA FRESCATORE:  My understanding is, that

       3      for individuals who are purchasing prior to the --

       4      prior to 2014, on the individual market, those --

       5      the products they were buying in the standard

       6      market -- standardized marketplace were very

       7      comparable to the products that are available to

       8      them today.

       9             Because there are so many, over

      10      15,000 products, pre-Affordable Care Act, that were

      11      sold in the small-business market, it is more

      12      difficult to do that kind of comparison, because

      13      it's not really a -- it's not really an

      14      apples-to-apples comparison because, just of number

      15      of different products that were in the

      16      small-business marketplace.

      17             SENATOR MARTINS:  You know, what are -- in

      18      your view, what are the challenges you have, going

      19      forward?

      20             You know, we've heard a lot today about all

      21      of the positives, as they are.

      22             What are the challenges, and what are the

      23      pitfalls, and what were the hurdles, that you didn't

      24      foresee, and you didn't tell us about this morning?

      25             SENATOR LARKIN:  Good question.







                                                                  74
       1             DONNA FRESCATORE:  I think that our -- our

       2      challenges are what they've been, really, since we

       3      began this process; and that is:

       4             To continue our outreach and education

       5      efforts to New Yorkers throughout the state;

       6             To continue to improve the customer

       7      experience, on the website, when people call our

       8      customer service center, when they work with one of

       9      our sisters.

      10             And it's -- as I said earlier, it's an

      11      ongoing process.  You know, implementation on

      12      October 1st, in many ways, was the start of our

      13      marketplace, and, it's a continual improvement

      14      process that we are fully committed to implementing.

      15             SENATOR MARTINS:  One last point:

      16             I think -- earlier you said that, policies,

      17      insurance cards, numbers, would be -- identification

      18      numbers, would be issued after someone paid their

      19      premium, right, and that most of these insurers had

      20      not sent out notices for payment until January 10th.

      21             Is there a backlog now?

      22             I mean, is this a significant concern?

      23             Because, if they didn't get their notices for

      24      payment until the 10th, this was rolled out

      25      January 1st, they have, I'm assuming, a certain







                                                                  75
       1      period of time to pay.

       2             Are we dealing with a widespread lack of

       3      information being provided to individuals with

       4      regard to, access to health insurance, access to the

       5      policies that they have, access to identification

       6      numbers?

       7             And is there something that can be done to

       8      expedite that?

       9             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Just as a point of

      10      clarification, all invoices were sent out by the

      11      10th, based on information reported by the health

      12      plans.

      13             Many of the plans had been sending invoices

      14      throughout the course of the last several weeks or

      15      months, as they received enrollment information from

      16      the marketplace.

      17             So, I just wanted to be clear about that.

      18             Is there safeguards to consumers?  People

      19      have ten days from when they receive their invoice

      20      to make their payment, and make their coverage

      21      retroactive.

      22             Most of the health plans have ways to

      23      confirm, for providers, that individuals are

      24      enrolled in their plans.  Some of those processes

      25      are telephonic, some are electronic systems; and,







                                                                  76
       1      so, those usual processes are in place.

       2             And, again, we will work, and the health

       3      plans will work, with anyone who enrolls and pays

       4      their premium by the due date.  And we're going to

       5      be flexible there, to ensure that they have coverage

       6      during the month of January if that's what they

       7      would want to have.

       8             SENATOR MARTINS:  Thank you.

       9             SENATOR SEWARD:  Senator Hassell-Thompson.

      10             SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Yes, thank you.

      11             Just one quick question.

      12             There was -- there was some conversation a

      13      little earlier about the role of the facilitator --

      14             SENATOR RIVERA:  Navigators.

      15             SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  -- navigators.

      16      I'm sorry.  And I think that that was part of the

      17      question.

      18             Are they, in effect, facilitators, or -- or,

      19      really, how does that role play out?

      20             Let me give you an example of what I mean.

      21             Many have us, as electeds, understanding

      22      the -- the immigrant population in our districts in

      23      the Bronx, for instance, most of us did outreach to

      24      many of our organizations, particularly our clergy

      25      and other not-for-profit groups, in an attempt to







                                                                  77
       1      explain this process to them.  And we invited

       2      navigators, and others, to explain the program and

       3      how it worked.

       4             But I -- but I didn't see any kind of

       5      outreach efforts by the State, for instance, to

       6      reach out, particularly to our Medicaid population.

       7             And I'm wondering if some of that may account

       8      for why the registration in some them is a little

       9      slower; or, is that an automatic system?

      10             In other words, you have a list of all the --

      11      all of the Medicaid-eligibles, and so that,

      12      automatically, they're sent information.

      13             But what do they do with that information?

      14             How do you ensure that they understand the

      15      choices that are available to them?

      16             Who's doing, that, to enhance your ability to

      17      reach some of the hard-to-reach in our communities?

      18             DONNA FRESCATORE:  So, thank you, Senator.

      19             The role of the navigator is to actually act

      20      on behalf of the individual, and help them submit

      21      their application.

      22             So, the navigators, the expectation, and what

      23      they provide to individuals in the community, is

      24      more than just presentations with basic information

      25      about how to enroll or where to go to enroll.  We







                                                                  78
       1      actually expect them to accept the application.

       2             In fact, a number -- a good percentage of

       3      applications are handled by navigators, as insurance

       4      brokers are assisting individuals as well.

       5             We also have had outreach in communities.

       6             I think that we have been in many

       7      communities, if not most, throughout New York State

       8      with informational types of forums.

       9             We're always happy to engage with you on

      10      those kinds of activities, on a local level.

      11             We've met with many community organizations.

      12             We have met with faith-based leaders in

      13      different communities throughout New York, as well

      14      as consumer organizations.  And we --

      15             SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  But the question

      16      is who initiated that?

      17             I mean, is that an expectation that the

      18      community initiates that?  Does the navigator, you

      19      know, initiate that?

      20             And when you say that they do this as a

      21      process with the individuals, how do they access the

      22      individual?

      23             The individual, obviously, is not going to

      24      pick up the phone and call them, because they don't

      25      know they exist.







                                                                  79
       1             So, you know, how does that work?

       2             DONNA FRESCATORE:  So it -- I think it's --

       3      you know, I think, certainly, it's our

       4      responsibility in the marketplace to initiate the

       5      community outreach, but we also are receptive to

       6      others in the community who may want to organize

       7      outreach.  And we will -- we are happy to

       8      participate in that when we can be helpful to that

       9      effort.

      10             The navigators do community presentations.

      11             They are in libraries in communities, in

      12      health centers throughout communities.

      13             They're in a variety of different locations

      14      where people in the community live and work and

      15      conduct, really, their daily business and

      16      activities.

      17             So, a navigator would be present there.

      18             They're available by appointment, to meet

      19      with individuals and process their application for

      20      them.  Or, they can, you know, meet in a community

      21      location as well, and assist consumers.

      22             So that's really the very important role that

      23      navigators play in our community.

      24             And we welcome the opportunity to work in

      25      communities, along with you as well, to help spread







                                                                  80
       1      the word.

       2             SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.

       3             Thank you, Chairmen.

       4             SENATOR SEWARD:  I know Senator Golden has a

       5      follow-up.

       6             SENATOR GOLDEN:  One quick backup question.

       7             I just had to go back to the D'Andrea

       8      situation again.

       9             And, really, as I sit here and I process

      10      this:  If you have to be able to get six, seven,

      11      eight doctors, medical professionals, into a room,

      12      and you have hospitals that only have one or two

      13      plans, and, other hospitals, the networks that have

      14      four or five, six plans, isn't there a situation

      15      that we fear, that we see in other nations, where we

      16      have a backup, where you can actually have to be

      17      able to get each one of these doctors into that

      18      operating room at a specific date, that are

      19      in-network, and how many of those doctors are not

      20      in-network within those hospitals?

      21             So doesn't that really create a scheduling

      22      issue for us and for the state of New York?

      23             DONNA FRESCATORE:  I think that it's -- you

      24      know, you raise an important point, Senator Golden,

      25      that, you know, it's -- and one of the reasons that







                                                                  81
       1      we -- you know, we believe that, really working in

       2      collaboration with health-care providers and with

       3      health plans, we need to build very strong, very

       4      robust networks, so that consumers have the

       5      protection and the assurance that, when they need a

       6      medical service, that they're seeing a physician or

       7      other health-care provider that's affiliated with

       8      their plan.

       9             We think that in -- you know, in the end, we

      10      understand, again, and we are aware, that there's

      11      interest in out-of-network benefits.

      12             But we think that the really best answer for

      13      most consumers, is to have a plan that has a very

      14      robust health-plan network, where they have

      15      assurances that the provider's in the network, and

      16      they know what their out-of-pocket corresponds are

      17      going to be before the service is rendered.

      18             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Well, it works only the --

      19      if you're not in an acute situation in one of the

      20      larger hospitals that take care of the more serious

      21      issues that are presented to families and to

      22      individuals.

      23             And what you're going down to are, hospitals

      24      that -- doctors that are all hospital employees,

      25      then you don't have that problem.







                                                                  82
       1             But in the larger sense of, New York City,

       2      and around the state of New York, where you have

       3      these expert doctors and hospital facilities,

       4      getting these people into -- or all of these people

       5      into an operating room in a timely fashion for

       6      somebody that needs an operation next month, say,

       7      I think is going to definitely present a scheduling

       8      situation here, not only in this state, but across

       9      the nation.

      10             Any further comment on that?  No?

      11             DONNA FRESCATORE:  No, I don't think so.

      12             SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you.

      13             SENATOR SEWARD:  Well, thank you very much,

      14      Donna -- Ms. Frescatore.

      15             DONNA FRESCATORE:  Thank you.

      16             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you.

      17             Obviously, we're gonna have lots of

      18      conversations.

      19             SENATOR SEWARD:  Our next panel are

      20      consumers, purchasers of health-insurance coverage;

      21      and that is:

      22             Mary Morse, who's owner of

      23      Kwik-Kut Manufacturing, a fine small manufacturing

      24      facility in Mohawk, New York;

      25             As well as Pamela Reese Finch, a public







                                                                  83
       1      relations consultant.

       2             Who would like to go first?

       3             MARY MORSE:  Can you hear me?

       4             SENATOR SEWARD:  Yes.  Just keep close to the

       5      mic.

       6             MARY MORSE:  All right.

       7             Good morning.

       8             It's still morning.

       9             Okay, I would like to thank today's --

      10      Senator Seward for inviting me here today.

      11             I am a small-business person, probably

      12      smaller than most.

      13             I own a manufacturing company, as there are

      14      still manufacturers left in New York State.

      15             We have been in the village of Mohawk since

      16      1955, and the company was actually started in the

      17      1940s.

      18             I have provided these little red booklets for

      19      you, so you can learn a little bit about the

      20      company, and some -- there's also mentioned in

      21      there, a few of the other issues that New York State

      22      businesses are facing, in addition to the

      23      health-care issue.

      24             I've been looking forward to 2014 about like

      25      putting a stick in my eye.







                                                                  84
       1             There's a lot of changes coming down,

       2      especially in taxation.

       3             There's two benefits, in all the years of our

       4      company, that we have received from the State of

       5      New York:

       6             One is the Empire Zone, which was for

       7      manufacturers, which you may or may not know is

       8      sunsetting this year.  And, my company did receive

       9      benefits from that, which we no longer will.

      10             The other one that was, I feel, a little bit

      11      of a Godsend for my employees was Healthy NY.

      12             I have kind of a unique situation with

      13      employees.

      14             I have three full-time employees, and

      15      five employees that are retired and part-time

      16      people.

      17             I had a couple of employees that were

      18      actually on Family Health Plus.

      19             Back in 2009, they got canceled from that

      20      because their son had the nerve to turn 18.

      21             So, because their family became smaller,

      22      their income was higher, and they no longer had

      23      Family Health Plus.

      24             So Healthy NY, you know, was available.

      25             I didn't have any other plan in my business,







                                                                  85
       1      so, I actually let the employees pick which plan

       2      they wanted through the Healthy NY plan, and they

       3      chose a plan that was a non-prescription plan.

       4             But other than not having prescriptions,

       5      I would compare it to any of the Gold plans that are

       6      offered on the exchanges today.

       7             They had excellent health-care coverage.  The

       8      coverage they picked was through Excellus.  They

       9      could use it anywhere up in our area.

      10             And, I contributed half towards their

      11      premium, and deducted the other half from their

      12      paycheck.

      13             At the time, in 2009, the premium for that

      14      policy was $176.

      15             The -- in 2013, the premium was $226, which

      16      I think you will agree is one of the smallest

      17      increases of anything in that amount of time.

      18             I also had another employee who was retired,

      19      worked for me part-time, and he chose the Healthy NY

      20      plan, which he contributed -- he paid the full

      21      premium.

      22             When I had to tell these -- with the

      23      Affordable Care Act coming along, and I had to tell

      24      the employees that they were canceled.  We received

      25      a cancellation notice.







                                                                  86
       1             And, the next thing I got was, which is in

       2      your folder, is the policy that was the replacement

       3      policy for their Healthy NY policy.

       4             This policy now was $100 more a month.  It

       5      was loaded with co-pays.  It's loaded with

       6      out-of-pocket deductibles.

       7             And, not only that, one small paragraph below

       8      all the rates was, "If you do not have" -- the

       9      policy did not include pediatric dental.

      10             So if they did not have a dental policy

      11      somewhere else, this policy was null, void, and a

      12      moot point.

      13             Well, I don't, for the life me, know where

      14      someone who is a single person, who is 60 years old,

      15      and never been married, would have a pediatric

      16      dental plan someplace else.

      17             So, that meant that that policy went by the

      18      wayside.

      19             The next thing that I -- because I am under

      20      the 50 employees and I am not required to offer

      21      health insurance, after speaking with my accountant,

      22      and, you know, considering what was best for my

      23      employees, I had to take the route of not offering

      24      health insurance anymore.

      25             I had to just cut them loose and send them







                                                                  87
       1      out on their own to the exchanges; and, so, that is

       2      what they did.

       3             I have two employees who signed up for --

       4      who -- you know, the other part of my businesses,

       5      these are people who make $10 an hour, and the

       6      maximum number of hours they work is 32.

       7             We're only open 32 hours.

       8             So that's not a very large paycheck to be,

       9      you know, trying to take home.

      10             The only plan that they -- after they went

      11      in, a couple of the employees received almost the

      12      entire full subsidy that is available.  That's --

      13      that's their income is.

      14             And so, after they received, you know, their

      15      subsidy notification, as was spoken about, they went

      16      in and selected their plans.  And the only plan that

      17      they could afford is a Fidelis Medicaid-based plan.

      18             I -- you know, I'm very, very fearful for

      19      their situation, because I think that this plan

      20      has -- it also has very high deductibles, a lot of

      21      out-of-pocket expense.

      22             There's a lot of doctors and hospitals that

      23      are not accepting Fidelis down around us.

      24             So, on a day-to-day basis, of people who are

      25      relatively healthy, they will be perfectly fine, but







                                                                  88
       1      if they have a major medical issue, I am very, very

       2      concerned about them.

       3             The other gentleman who was retired, he has a

       4      cancer situation, where he has to go yearly for a

       5      colonoscopy, and usually ends up, for the last

       6      five years in a row, has actually had surgery every

       7      year.

       8             The plan he had with Healthy NY, he loved it.

       9      He never had to pay any money out-of-pocket.  He

      10      could go see his specialist.  He could make timely

      11      appointments.

      12             Now he has -- you know, he's also out on his

      13      own now.

      14             He is not a destitute person, by any means.

      15      He has a good pension from where he retired from.

      16             So, he took -- but he's not a person, of

      17      course, who likes to spend more money than he needs

      18      to, so he selected a plan that was also around

      19      300-and-some dollars a month, also loaded with a lot

      20      of co-pays, also loaded with, you know, high

      21      deductibles.

      22             And he has, at this point in time, although

      23      all three of these people were signed up on time,

      24      I haven't -- didn't check with them today, but as of

      25      Thursday, none of them had their insurance cards.







                                                                  89
       1             He's had to cancel -- he canceled his

       2      colonoscopy, he's canceled his appointment with his

       3      cancer doctor, because he felt that he couldn't

       4      really go do that without an insurance card.

       5             I did make a phone call to Little Falls

       6      Hospital, the head of Little Falls Hospital, which

       7      is in the Bassett network, which he would be going

       8      to Bassett, and when I asked that gentleman, what is

       9      their procedure for the people who may be coming in

      10      without their medical cards, he told me that they

      11      plug their social security number into a computer

      12      and that will tell them if they're covered or not.

      13             So he probably could have gone ahead and done

      14      that, but, you know, he didn't think he could.

      15             The other side issue of this, looking at it

      16      from a business perspective, is, I have -- because

      17      of this, there's no way that I could have kept a

      18      health-care plan in my business and afforded to pay

      19      for half of the employees' medical insurance, but

      20      mostly because they could not have afforded to pay

      21      half, their half, because, if I had had a group

      22      plan, they would not get a subsidy.

      23             They might end up with a tax credit, but a

      24      tax credit means you're waiting to maybe get more

      25      money back on your income tax, maybe in -- well, if







                                                                  90
       1      you file in January, maybe in April.  Or if you file

       2      in April, maybe three months after that.

       3             These are people who need money day by day,

       4      week by week, you know, to live on.

       5             So, it was a very hard decision for me.

       6             Now my business has lost a tax credit that

       7      I got for contributing towards my employees' health

       8      insurance.

       9             I feel that I -- and I have taken what I did

      10      contribute toward their health insurance and added

      11      it into their paycheck, because I just felt -- which

      12      I know a lot of small businesses would not, but

      13      I felt that was kind of their money, and it was

      14      already an expense.

      15             So by adding that into their paycheck, now

      16      I'm paying more workers' comp, I'm paying more

      17      disability insurance, I'm losing a tax credit.

      18             They're losing -- they're paying more taxes

      19      because their -- before their payment was pre-tax in

      20      their paycheck, and now it's not.  You know, now

      21      they've got more money in their paycheck.

      22             So, it kind of remains to be seen what

      23      happens next year with this, now that their pay is

      24      up.

      25             Their subsidy's gonna go down, so, where is







                                                                  91
       1      all that, you know, working out?

       2             And, you know, my hope in coming here today,

       3      is that, New York State, which I have to give a lot

       4      of credit for in the health-insurance market,

       5      because there was Healthy NY, and there is

       6      Child Health Plus, and, you know, what's going to

       7      happen, you know, with this down the road?

       8             And my hope would be, that something could be

       9      worked out for some kind of a subsidy for either --

      10      you know, if there was some kind of a subsidy for me

      11      to go back into offering them health care, I would

      12      tell them to drop their lousy plans and, you know,

      13      get a better one, you know, right away.

      14             But what's killing the price of the plans is,

      15      these are three people who, they didn't -- none of

      16      them took a prescription.  They didn't want a

      17      prescription plan.  They don't need pediatric

      18      dental.

      19             You know, as one of the gentlemen said,

      20      there's a lot of things in this health care that we

      21      have to pay for that no one's ever going to use.

      22             So, that's kind of my 25 cents.

      23             I'm up, inflation.  Used to be two.

      24                  [Laughter.]

      25             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you, Mary.







                                                                  92
       1             I know I had a couple of questions, but why

       2      don't we have Ms. Finch make her statement, and then

       3      we'll see if any of the Senators have questions.

       4             PAMELA REESE FINCH:  Thank you very much for

       5      the opportunity to be here.

       6             Can you hear me alright?

       7             SENATOR HANNON:  Move closer to the mic.

       8             PAMELA REESE FINCH:  I appreciate the chance

       9      to share my opportunity in dealing with the federal

      10      forum issue; and, in particular, New York's health

      11      exchanges.

      12             For more than a decade I've been a sole

      13      proprietor.

      14             I specialize in public relations and advocacy

      15      services, and, I live in Upstate New York, with my

      16      two children.

      17             Four years ago, despite making some pretty

      18      big changes that would ensure my family's coverage,

      19      I lost my health insurance.

      20             Since that time, I have looked into different

      21      options; and, so, like a lot of people, I was really

      22      excited to see what would become available through

      23      the exchanges.

      24             I think what's really important for this

      25      discussion is the fact that the term "affordable" is







                                                                  93
       1      relative to your situation and your circumstances.

       2             When I come here and speak today, I'm pretty

       3      much in the same boat as your community's barber or,

       4      you know, your local hairdresser: the average

       5      middle-class-family income.

       6             When you first look at the prices through the

       7      exchange, some of the premium numbers can be

       8      deceiving and look relatively low.

       9             What people don't understand is that there is

      10      a greater need now for cost-sharing.

      11             So, while some of the plans may offer, for

      12      example, some of the figures I pulled on the Bronze

      13      level, had the lowest level at $233, which doesn't

      14      look bad until you put it in perspective, that

      15      you're paying $100 to see your specialist, that

      16      you're paying $50 for your primary-care visit.

      17             So, in essence, you may be paying less in

      18      your premiums, but you're still paying the same

      19      thing that you were before the federal health-care

      20      reform.

      21             I know that when I looked, in my situation,

      22      because I am a relatively healthy individual, to

      23      purchase health insurance, I would actually be --

      24      pay more than what I currently paid for my regular

      25      out-of-pocket costs.







                                                                  94
       1             I'm not saying that I'm opposed to the idea

       2      of high co-pays or deductibles.

       3             I do feel that personal responsibility is

       4      something that's necessary for us all to achieve

       5      affordable coverage.

       6             But I'm saying, in terms of dollars and

       7      cents, when we look at this from a purely business

       8      perspective, if you're asking me to make the

       9      decision between my son's braces or paying my

      10      self-employment taxes, the health-insurance coverage

      11      may be at the shorter end of the list.

      12             When you're looking at people like me, what

      13      we're really looking for is ways to reduce the

      14      overall health-insurance cost.

      15             I heard a lot of discussion earlier today

      16      about the out-of-network people wanting to be able

      17      to see physicians who are not part of their network.

      18             I know that I did look at the website, and in

      19      order to apply for the plans that were available,

      20      I would have to change my doctor; and, frankly, if

      21      I could find a plan that fit into my budget, I'd be

      22      happy to do that.

      23             For me, it's more about getting access to the

      24      basic coverage.

      25             For people who have insurance, and I think







                                                                  95
       1      that it was mentioned earlier, there are some kinds

       2      of safeguards in place, whether -- you know, that

       3      will allow them to receive their medical care.

       4             And I know this isn't what everybody wants to

       5      hear, but I think, right now, our focus has to be on

       6      giving everyone basic affordable coverage, versus,

       7      making it cheaper for those who already have it.

       8             One of the other things I would like to see,

       9      as a health-care consumer, is a little bit more,

      10      I guess, predictability, in terms of billing.

      11             Because I self-pay for all of my employments,

      12      I've had the rather eye-opening experience of really

      13      seeing what my providers charge.

      14             The problem with that is, I only get the

      15      information after the fact.

      16             Recently, I went to what was a 10-minute

      17      visit to my primary-care physician, to take care of

      18      a sinus infection, which ultimately cost $283, plus

      19      $80 for the generic medicine.

      20             Meanwhile, my gastroenterologist charged $110

      21      for a 15-minute follow-up.

      22             From a consumer's perspective, this type of

      23      disparity makes it very hard to budget or get any

      24      kind of a real grasp on your health-insurance cost.

      25             And I know that, from my perspective,







                                                                  96
       1      I would like to see some type of transparency in

       2      knowing beforehand how much I'm going to be charged

       3      for that particular visit.

       4             When I meet with my own clients, I know

       5      I discuss the job, the expectations, and the costs

       6      beforehand.

       7             Likewise, when I take by car to have the

       8      tires put on it, I know that my mechanic charges

       9      $95 an hour for labor.

      10             What I would like to see, as a consumer,

      11      especially one who pays for my services

      12      out-of-pocket, is some kind of upfront pricing.

      13             As I said, that's my experience, but, it very

      14      much mirrors what I've been told by many other of my

      15      colleagues of sole proprietors in my community.

      16             We appreciate the accessibility that's been

      17      made from the health-insurance exchange, but right

      18      now, what we'd like to see is things that still make

      19      it a little bit more affordable.

      20             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you very much.

      21             I wanted to go back to Mary Morse's

      22      testimony.

      23             And we really do appreciate both of you

      24      coming here and sharing your real-life experiences

      25      which you're going through at the moment.







                                                                  97
       1             I just wanted to clarify, in terms of what's

       2      happened to your employees who have gone out on the

       3      exchange to seek coverage on their own.

       4             Now, they are paying over $300 a month.

       5             Is that with the subsidies?

       6             MARY MORSE:  No.

       7             The one that is paying over $300 a month is

       8      not getting any subsidy.

       9             SENATOR SEWARD:  I see.

      10             MARY MORSE:  He receives a good pension.

      11             He's -- actually, he's a Remington retiree.

      12             And the other two are getting almost the

      13      maximum subsidy.  They're the ones on the

      14      Fidelis plan, and they still pay -- they still pay

      15      over $100 a month, even with the subsidy taken off.

      16             I'm not sure what the total amount was with

      17      the -- I believe it was still almost $400 a month,

      18      you know -- well, no.  It would have been 350,

      19      because they're actually two -- two people on the

      20      same policy, because they're a husband and wife.

      21             SENATOR SEWARD:  Did you personally, either

      22      of you, deal -- go on the exchange and go through

      23      that process?

      24             MARY MORSE:  I did not.

      25             PAMELA REESE FINCH:  I did.







                                                                  98
       1             SENATOR SEWARD:  You did?

       2             PAMELA REESE FINCH:  Yes, I did.

       3             SENATOR SEWARD:  And what was your

       4      experience?

       5             PAMELA REESE FINCH:  The website itself was

       6      relatively easy to use.

       7             It was quite a bit more time-consuming than

       8      I had expected, but I was able to comprehend the

       9      information.

      10             Uhm, it's not as bad as what I've heard the

      11      federal government's website would be.

      12             I think our state did a good job with ours.

      13             SENATOR SEWARD:  Yeah.

      14             Did -- have either of you, or through -- your

      15      employees, did they work with a navigator or an

      16      agent or a broker?

      17             MARY MORSE:  No, nope, all of my employees

      18      actually went through the website, and said they --

      19      you know, they had a very good experience with it.

      20             Actually, they even -- because we need

      21      broadband better in this state --

      22             SENATOR SEWARD:  That's another important

      23      issue.

      24             MARY MORSE:  -- one of them was doing it from

      25      home.  And, probably, they -- I think they got







                                                                  99
       1      bounced off about three or four times because of

       2      their Internet service, not because of the site.

       3      And they said it was very, very easy to go -- once

       4      you logged in, they said you had your log-in, and

       5      they could go back in.  Or if -- and the other

       6      gentleman said, a couple of times, he had to go get

       7      more information.

       8             And they all had very, very good experiences

       9      with the website, I will say that.

      10             SENATOR SEWARD:  As I understand both of your

      11      statements, just as policymakers, to the best of our

      12      capabilities and abilities under this federal law,

      13      if we were able to develop a product or process that

      14      would -- kind of like the old Healthy NY product,

      15      have access to that, and qualified under the federal

      16      legislation, that, you would see that as a very

      17      attractive option?

      18             MARY MORSE:  Absolutely, uh-huh.

      19             PAMELA REESE FINCH:  Yes.

      20             MARY MORSE:  I think it's just -- you know,

      21      it's just one more thing to help business out a

      22      little bit.

      23             I -- I -- because I know a lot of business

      24      people, I've actually asked around what a lot of

      25      them were doing about the health care.







                                                                  100
       1             One business person that has been in business

       2      his entire life, and, you know, from his parents, on

       3      down, he's in his early 50s, and told me the other

       4      day that, for the first time in his life, he has no

       5      health insurance.

       6             He had a plan through one of the chamber of

       7      commerces.  That, that plan, you can't have that

       8      plan anymore.

       9             So, he said that it increased, you know,

      10      four times what he was paying, and he's a single

      11      person.

      12             And that's -- that's the story that you hear

      13      out there.

      14             Other business people have gone to the

      15      high-deductible plans.

      16             And I know one employer has had a

      17      high-deductible plan, and he actually pays so much

      18      of his employees' out-of-pocket expense, until they

      19      get into the -- get into anything else.  And he says

      20      it comes out cheaper for him than it did when he was

      21      paying their premiums.

      22             He just pays their bills.

      23             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you.

      24             Any other questions?

      25             SENATOR MARTINS:  I just have one.







                                                                  101
       1             SENATOR SEWARD:  Senator Martins.

       2             SENATOR MARTINS:  Ms Morse, thank you very

       3      much for your testimony.

       4             MARY MORSE:  Sure.

       5             SENATOR MARTINS:  I just want to follow up on

       6      a point you made.

       7             You said something, and I'm going to

       8      paraphrase, that you think they'll be okay, but if

       9      they need insurance, they may be in trouble, or

      10      something along those lines.

      11             MARY MORSE:  Well, I -- you know, I just

      12      think that looking at the Fidelis plan, you know,

      13      just to use that as an example, which is a

      14      Medicaid-based plan, there's a lot of hospitals and

      15      doctors that do not accept that plan, especially,

      16      you know, I'm from, like, the Utica area, you know,

      17      up around there.

      18             They -- I made them check with their doctor,

      19      and their doctor does accept the plan, so they were

      20      okay that they could keep their doctor.

      21             But, when I -- just looking at, you know,

      22      $2,500 out-of-pocket, if you're already -- you know,

      23      if they already are giving you all this subsidy, and

      24      they know that you don't have a lot of money, where

      25      are you getting $2,500 out of your pocket?







                                                                  102
       1             SENATOR MARTINS:  Yeah, but I just wanted to

       2      point out, and I think you would agree, that a

       3      hope-and-pray is not an alternative.  It's not an

       4      appropriate health-insurance alternative for what

       5      we're talking about here.

       6             MARY MORSE:  Yes.

       7             SENATOR MARTINS:  You were here for the

       8      testimony we heard previously, weren't you?

       9             MARY MORSE:  Uh-huh, yes.

      10             SENATOR MARTINS:  And you were able to listen

      11      to how great the system is, and how wonderful this

      12      rollout has been.

      13             MARY MORSE:  Uh-huh.

      14             SENATOR MARTINS:  But if I've heard anything

      15      from both of you, it's that your experiences have

      16      been just the opposite, and it's raised far more

      17      issues than it has answered.

      18             So, I appreciate your testimony here this

      19      morning.

      20             Thank you.

      21             MARY MORSE:  Thank you very much.

      22             PAMELA REESE FINCH:  Thank you.

      23             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you very much.

      24             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you for being here.

      25             Our next panel will be physicians:







                                                                  103
       1      Dr. Nick Fitterman, Dr. Andrew Kleinman, and

       2      Dr. Patricia McLaughlin.

       3             Dr. Kleinman, since you're the

       4      president-elect of the state medical association,

       5      I'll let you go first;

       6             And, Dr. McLaughlin, you can go next;

       7             And, Dr. Fitterman, since you're from that

       8      small little health-care system.

       9             DR. ANDREW KLEINMAN:  Thank you very much,

      10      Senator.

      11             My name is Andrew Kleinman.  I'm a practicing

      12      plastic surgeon in Rye Brook, New York.  And, I am

      13      president-elect of the Medical Society of the State

      14      of New York.

      15             SENATOR HANNON:  Could I just ask one

      16      short-term, so we don't have a lot of waiting time

      17      in the waiting room, could you not read, but maybe

      18      sum up the core points that you want to address?

      19             DR. ANDREW KLEINMAN:  I am.  Certainly.

      20             Basically what I -- I really want --

      21      I appreciate this opportunity to speak, and I have

      22      to say that I think the State has done a very good

      23      job in what it's done so far, in terms of rolling

      24      out the exchange.

      25             Also, I have to say Donna Frescatore and her







                                                                  104
       1      staff have been very open to dialogue with us right

       2      from the beginning.

       3             So, I really think they have done a very good

       4      job, as far as they can go.

       5             We remain committed to work with them in

       6      order to make this work.

       7             Some of our members, politically, were in

       8      favor of this, some weren't, but the bottom line is,

       9      it is here, and we want to make this work.

      10             The problem that we have, is that having

      11      access to insurance coverage is not exactly the same

      12      as having access to health care, and that's where

      13      our problem -- our problems really lie.

      14             Basically what has happened, is that, with

      15      the rollout of this, there have been networks of

      16      physicians listed on the websites of the various

      17      insurance companies.

      18             Now, first of all, it's very hard to find

      19      those lists because you can't access it directly

      20      from the website of the New York State of Health.

      21             You have to go into the individual carriers.

      22             Then when we looked at the lists, we saw a

      23      number of inaccuracies.

      24             And we actually did a survey of our

      25      physicians, and, basically, of the people who







                                                                  105
       1      answered the survey, one-third said that they

       2      weren't going to participate in the plan.

       3      40 percent said they didn't know if they were on the

       4      plans or not.

       5             So we have actually recommended to

       6      physicians, go onto the websites and see if you're

       7      on the plans.  And some of them have a great deal of

       8      difficulty even finding out if they're on the plans.

       9             We actually have started calling around to a

      10      number of the physicians who have been on the plans,

      11      and a number of them have said they are definitely

      12      not on the plans.

      13             Some are in the plans because they have an

      14      "all products" clause in one of their you contracts,

      15      or they're in a rental network.  But the ones that

      16      are in rental networks that can't opt out, even

      17      though they're listed on the plan, have said that

      18      they are going to be opting out.

      19             So, therefore, although on paper it looks

      20      like the networks are adequate, in reality, the

      21      networks indeed might not be adequate.

      22             Also looking on the website, we actually have

      23      found a few physicians who aren't even in

      24      New York State, and haven't been in New York State

      25      for the past year or so.







                                                                  106
       1             We did a survey of neurosurgeons in

       2      Suffolk County.

       3             One lives in New Jersey, and has for a while;

       4      one lives in Albany, and has for a while; so,

       5      therefore, they've been included in multiple

       6      networks, and they're not.

       7             The -- one of the problems with having

       8      physicians participate, is that, although we can't

       9      ask directly how much do the networks pay, the

      10      physicians supposedly can.

      11             The physicians, in a lot of cases, are having

      12      a very hard time finding out what the reimbursement

      13      is.  Although there are laws in New York, basically,

      14      it's been rather difficult to find out.

      15             When the physicians do find out, very often,

      16      the reimbursement is significantly lower than it is

      17      on any other network within an insurer's -- an

      18      insurer's networks.

      19             And, very often, it's significantly lower

      20      than even the Medicare rate, which, as most of us

      21      know, is already inadequate; so, therefore, it makes

      22      it very hard for a physician to remain viable and

      23      continue to participate.

      24             In addition to that, there is the

      25      "90-day grace period" rule that's going to come into







                                                                  107
       1      effect; so, therefore, physicians will be taking

       2      care of a lot of patients who actually look like

       3      they have insurance, but, in fact, haven't paid

       4      their premium.

       5             And that's a federal problem, and I know we

       6      can't do anything specific about that.

       7             We are working with the AMA and Congress in

       8      order to try to modify that.

       9             We have some suggestions on how at least to

      10      notify physicians when a patient is in that grace

      11      period.  And, if the patient does pay a premium

      12      60 days after the due date, that, at that point,

      13      rather than starting over the 30 days again, if we

      14      could have reimbursement done a little sooner.

      15             I think what we're asking for is, basically,

      16      to, essentially, make it so the networks are

      17      adequate, the networks are accurate.

      18             And I think one of the things that we would

      19      like to see, is that, in the exchange, a physician

      20      actually has to have a contract with the insurance

      21      company.

      22             That way, when a patient calls a physician

      23      and says, "I'm in X network," the physician will say

      24      they take it.

      25             I think one of the problems right now, having







                                                                  108
       1      a lot of physicians on the networks who really

       2      aren't going to be participating in those plans, is

       3      that, if you as a patient go onto the website and

       4      say, "Oh, my physician's there; so, therefore, I'm

       5      going to sign up for this plan," and then it turns

       6      out that's inaccurate, or, as soon as the patient --

       7      as soon as the physician finds out, the physician

       8      signs -- you know, basically, opts out of that

       9      contract, a patient has, essentially, picked a plan,

      10      that they can't see their own physicians.

      11             The other thing that I think we do want to

      12      ask for, is some out-of-network coverage.

      13             And, Senator Hannon, we do support your

      14      recent bill -- the number is in here somewhere --

      15      requiring companies to offer out-of-network

      16      coverage.

      17             And I think it's important to offer

      18      out-of-network coverage in the exchange as well,

      19      especially with the very limited networks that these

      20      companies are going to have for the exchange.

      21             I think it's very important for a patient to

      22      have the ability to go out-of-network.

      23             And we think that one of the reasons that

      24      almost all of the companies -- in fact, downstate,

      25      I think Oxford is the only one that offers







                                                                  109
       1      out-of-network at all, and they're only doing it on

       2      the small-business exchange.

       3             Nobody is giving it on the individual

       4      exchange.

       5             I think part of it is to try to coerce

       6      physicians to have to participate in the exchange if

       7      they want to see any of these patients.

       8             So, again, I do want to say that, I think

       9      they've done a good job signing up patients.

      10             I think there will be a number of patients

      11      who continue to sign up.

      12             And our concern, is that the patients should

      13      be able to have an adequate network across all

      14      specialties, and, should be able to know who is in

      15      their network.

      16             Thank you.

      17             SENATOR HANNON:  Great summary.

      18             Dr. McLaughlin.

      19             DR. PATRICIA MCLAUGHLIN:  Good afternoon.

      20             Thank you for inviting me here today.

      21             I'd like to speak, not only as a physician,

      22      but as a small-business person, because,

      23      inadvertently, I have been hit twice in this

      24      situation, and I think my personal story will have

      25      great impact on the problems that are out there.







                                                                  110
       1             As a small business, in 2013, my office is in

       2      New York City on the Upper East Side, and I had two

       3      employees who were qualified for health insurance,

       4      and, I paid for their premiums.

       5             We had elected, Empire Blue Cross/Blue Shield

       6      called "Total Blue."  It was a high-deductible plan.

       7             And I resorted to that back in 2008 when the

       8      premium had jumped up to an astronomical number if

       9      I didn't take a high-deductible plan.

      10             So once it reached $859 a month per

      11      individual, I sought some relief.

      12             Fortunately, I had a brilliant broker, and he

      13      gave me the advice to consider one of the

      14      high-deductible plans.

      15             That same year, the premium for the same

      16      health plan, the same coverage, the same network,

      17      decreased from $859 to $300 an individual.

      18             I was thrilled.

      19             Yes, that meant my employees and me all had a

      20      $2,000 deductible.

      21             There was the option for an HSA account.

      22             I did as much investigation as I could.

      23             I found a wonderful bank who was very

      24      knowledgeable in this, had a long track record, and

      25      I set up the health-savings account.







                                                                  111
       1             I contributed, not in a health-savings

       2      account, but I did contribute towards the deductible

       3      for my employees.

       4             They did not want to open up a health-savings

       5      account, fearing that the money might be locked in

       6      there.

       7             As the years went along, this just renewed

       8      every January 1st, and I was thrilled.

       9             I never expected to get a letter at the end

      10      of September, telling me that this wonderful plan

      11      that covered everything, everything that we needed,

      12      was suddenly, because of the ACA, in the letter, not

      13      qualified, and was not going to be renewed on

      14      January 1st.

      15             Literally, the rug was pulled out from under

      16      me.

      17             Now, at the end of a calendar year, running a

      18      medical practice, and all the other issues that are

      19      involved in end-of-the-year accounting work, I was

      20      not pleased to suddenly have to start looking at

      21      spreadsheets of other available plans and

      22      contemplating the New York State exchange.

      23             I didn't want us to go in as individuals, so

      24      I wanted to keep this as a small group.

      25             When I looked at what was available, I wasn't







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       1      pleased either.

       2             When the insurance company sent me another

       3      letter in a month after the first one, rolling out

       4      what was the new concept, the new plan, I was

       5      definitely not pleased.

       6             And the reason is, my first plan, which we

       7      were paying $483 a month, last year, in the new plan

       8      would go down to $470.

       9             That's about a 2.5 percent decrease.

      10             The deductible, however, went up 20 percent,

      11      from $2,000 an individual, to $2,500.

      12             The coinsurance stayed the same.

      13             What really disturbed me, was this -- now,

      14      was an EPO plan, and that alphabet soup meant

      15      "in-network only."

      16             What further upset me, is that this EPO plan

      17      in this national insurance company, suddenly, was

      18      going to require referrals to see a specialist.

      19             In the history of this company, the EPO

      20      network did not require referrals.

      21             So, suddenly, this new plan was targeted to

      22      yet another hurdle that one had to jump.

      23             It also mentioned in that letter something

      24      that raised grave concern, that I must say I had a

      25      bit of an advantage over other, probably, claim







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       1      administrators in non-medical businesses.

       2             They were very careful to mention that, as

       3      the administrator, I needed to check to see what

       4      former doctors I had gone to in, literally, the same

       5      network -- EPO and PPO, formally, have the same

       6      network of doctors -- that I needed to check, and

       7      I needed to tell my employees to check, to make sure

       8      that the doctors we had seen were still in-network.

       9             They also went on to state that whatever

      10      drugs we were using, the medication network was also

      11      changing.

      12             That I couldn't find information to, but the

      13      network I did.

      14             So I went onto the website of the insurance

      15      company and looked at the network, starting with

      16      myself.

      17             After all, I was a participating provider in

      18      the EPO and PPO network.

      19             I wasn't there.

      20             I looked at my PCP; he wasn't there.

      21             I asked my secretary what other specialists

      22      she went to.  There were four; they weren't there.

      23             I asked the other person who worked in my

      24      office for her doctors, and they weren't there.

      25             Now, I must say that most of us were using







                                                                  114
       1      doctors within the same hospital system, but because

       2      of this change, the premium was not the issue.

       3             The network and the access was the issue.

       4             And every single one of us, including my

       5      husband who's my dependent, were losing our doctors.

       6      100 percent of our doctors.

       7             I don't think that anything should be

       8      designed to cause that destruction, besides what it

       9      did to me in chaos in my business.

      10             So I started to look at other plans through a

      11      broker.

      12             I must say, that if I did nothing, by

      13      default, the insurance company said I would roll

      14      into this plan, which should indicate that I would

      15      get the new insurance card, because they also

      16      mentioned I would have a new insurance ID.

      17             A month after that, I finally got the letter

      18      that gave a clue as to why I wasn't in that network.

      19             As per the terms of my contract, they did not

      20      feel they needed to extended to me participation in

      21      the Affordable Care network or the small-business

      22      network that was using the term "pathway."

      23             So they gave the network an actual term,

      24      "pathway."

      25             When I went to the website to look at how







                                                                  115
       1      many other ophthalmologists, a group that I'm

       2      familiar with, being that's my specialty, there were

       3      a lot of names in the ZIP code of my office.

       4             I must say, if you looked at that list, there

       5      were a few doctors who were either retired or who

       6      had moved to another state within the past

       7      six months; so, it was not refined.

       8             I think the greater thing that was

       9      disturbing, it wasn't in alphabetical order, which

      10      made it next to impossible to look at, but,

      11      I printed it out, and I must have seen at least

      12      40 to 50 names that were duplicated.

      13             So if they were counting the raw names, it

      14      just meant they were in a different office; not that

      15      you had more participating providers.

      16             Now, I think it's rather ironic, or a little

      17      short-sighted, to use a term in my own field, that

      18      if you're going to insure more individuals through

      19      the magnitude of the Affordable Care Act and the

      20      New York State marketplace exchange, why would you,

      21      as an insurance company, be looking to cut back on

      22      the participating providers?

      23             I wasn't even asked if I wanted to be in it

      24      or not.  I was just told, by my contract, I wouldn't

      25      be.







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       1             Now, on the flip side, there was another

       2      insurance company, that I had no knowledge, had put

       3      me on the exchange, and I found out about that in

       4      the third to fourth week of October, after the

       5      website became live, by a patient who had

       6      Healthy NY, who found out that he had lost his

       7      insurance and needed to search for something.

       8             And he said, "Oh, great, I see you're on the

       9      Oxford United."

      10             I said, "Really?  They never told me."

      11             And I said, "That's a little peculiar,

      12      because I don't have a contract with Oxford to start

      13      with."

      14             So after doing a little bit of checking, it

      15      turned out that that was an error.

      16             For some reason, that company decided to put

      17      the entire Oxford Liberty participating physician

      18      group into the Affordable Care Act and the

      19      exchanges, probably because, Oxford married United,

      20      my name carried over from my United contract, but it

      21      was an error.  It took about another two to three

      22      weeks before my name was removed, along with dozens

      23      of other physicians who were similarly misplaced.

      24             Now, in that time, individuals in

      25      New York State were deceived.







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       1             They may have signed up on the New York

       2      marketplace, thinking they were seeing Dr. A, B, and

       3      C, who were not there, and should not have been

       4      there, and, three weeks later, were taken off.

       5             So, yes, we do need a lot of transparency,

       6      because I think that there are mistakes in the

       7      provider networks that are unclear.

       8             I can tell you from my own personal

       9      experience, I do not relish, and would not tolerate,

      10      this limited network.

      11             I have sought out insurance through another

      12      carrier.  I'm in a pending state.

      13             They have my check; they haven't cashed it.

      14             I'm in flux.

      15             My secretary slipped and fell on the very day

      16      that this meeting was canceled last week.  She

      17      injured her hand.

      18             I didn't know what to tell her to do because,

      19      this plan wasn't official, my new plan wasn't

      20      official.  We were sort of in limbo.

      21             And I even said in my testimony, that I think

      22      it was rather negligent on the part of an insurance

      23      company, knowing they gave me notice about my plan

      24      three months ago, that it was terminated, and

      25      I received my insurance card, one of four, on







                                                                  118
       1      Saturday.

       2             No one else has received theirs.

       3             My husband should have been in that envelope

       4      also, since he was my dependent.

       5             I'm glad it came, though.

       6             I have given 20 copies of this to the

       7      staffers before this meeting, because I just brought

       8      it up with me today.

       9             Another thing that you must look at, and

      10      I beg you to look at from a physician's standpoint,

      11      the chaos that is going on right now with patients

      12      coming to us, believing that we're in networks that

      13      we don't know if we are, asking for care that we

      14      don't know if we can truthfully tell them will be

      15      covered as part of a network agreement.  Or, we

      16      can't even be transparent to say what the fee might

      17      cost them, other than give them a fair estimate of

      18      what that day's results would be.

      19             We won't know, until we've filed this claim a

      20      good four weeks from today, what the insurance

      21      company's take on this is going to be.

      22             Will it be handled as an in-network

      23      participating group, or will it be rejected because

      24      we're suddenly not in the panel?

      25             This new insurance ID card couldn't be more







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       1      deceptive to a front-desk knowledgeable person in a

       2      doctor's office.

       3             It says that I have a PPO plan.

       4             It does not mention the word "EPO."

       5             I have an EPO.

       6             It does not mention that I need a referral.

       7             It does not even give credit to the name of

       8      another person, Patricia Ann Foxman, with a phone

       9      number.  It doesn't even give her the credit of a

      10      title of M.D.

      11             I'm assuming she might have been my assigned

      12      PCP.

      13             On Saturday, after this came in, I decided to

      14      call the phone number.

      15             Lo and behold, the phone number is incorrect.

      16             It tells me it was canceled.  It gives me a

      17      new phone number.

      18             I call that phone number, I get a completely

      19      different physician's office.

      20             Now, I don't know, if I stay in this plan, am

      21      I supposed to have this particular person?

      22             Did they just put down the wrong phone

      23      number?

      24             Am I just automatically defaulted to the

      25      other PCP?







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       1             And I'm somebody who understands this.

       2             Please, for the majority of our citizens, the

       3      people that we, as physicians, who work so hard to

       4      help day in and day out, this is complete chaos.

       5             This is not fair to anyone, mostly the

       6      patients.

       7             This is detrimental to the small business of

       8      a physician's office.

       9             I am a solo practitioner.  I have a fiduciary

      10      responsibility to pay my creditors.

      11             If I have people calling up to schedule, in a

      12      plan just as mine, telling my front-desk person they

      13      have an EPO plan, how am I, as the physician, going

      14      to know if I am still the participating physician in

      15      the old PPO plans that are serving the larger

      16      corporations, the federal government, Blue Cross,

      17      the union plans, or am I in this new pathway?

      18             If the patient doesn't even have the card, if

      19      the patient doesn't even understand what "pathway"

      20      is, they wouldn't be able to tell my secretary at

      21      the time of booking the appointment what plan it is.

      22             How can I be transparent when there's such

      23      misinformation?

      24             We need so much help.

      25             I know that there's a limited time to talk







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       1      about this here, but all I would say to you is, I am

       2      so willing to work with you.

       3             Please reach out to me.  I have a very good

       4      handle on this.  I would love to tell you more of

       5      the pitfalls.

       6             But the one thing that I completely resent,

       7      and don't understand, is the complete elimination of

       8      the out-of-network.

       9             That is such an important and critical

      10      factor, especially now that I am giving you perfect

      11      evidence that these networks are not what they seem.

      12             They are very narrow.

      13             And I have had other physicians call me,

      14      because they know of my ability to understand all

      15      this, and they say, "I have a full practice.  I'm

      16      finding out I'm listed as a participating physician.

      17      I've had five new phone calls today from patients on

      18      the exchange, asking for an appointment as soon as

      19      possible."

      20             He said, "I can't fit them in.  What am

      21      I supposed to do?"

      22             I said, "Either work later, or give them the

      23      next available appointment.  And, if necessary, send

      24      them to the emergency room.  I don't know what else

      25      you can do."







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       1             There is a critical shortage happening here.

       2             And if it's not that an insurance company

       3      signed us off, it's, also, that they are paying us a

       4      fraction of the Medicare-allowed fee, where we

       5      cannot stay in business.

       6             Thank you so much for your time, and I'm so

       7      willing to answer questions for you.

       8             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, thank you very much.

       9             It actually seems that the majority of the

      10      complications that are befuddling your practice are

      11      insurance companies, and not the

      12      Affordable Care Act.

      13             DR. PATRICIA MCLAUGHLIN:  Absolutely.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  Okay.

      15             Now, I'm not going get into it, because

      16      I think you've been very clear as to the problems,

      17      but I will say one thing:

      18             As a sponsor of at least two bills on

      19      out-of-network, that it's much more difficult than

      20      it would seem, and especially because you have

      21      simply the logical objection, that if you start

      22      regulating and mandating out-of-network, what

      23      incentive will be left for physicians to join a

      24      network?

      25             Now, maybe it would be -- the incentive would







                                                                  123
       1      be if they just ran them rationally, instead of the

       2      maze that you've had to go through; but, still, that

       3      is the logistical legislative problem that we face.

       4             DR. PATRICIA MCLAUGHLIN:  Yes, but --

       5             SENATOR HANNON:  I thank you very much, and

       6      we still have to go to your co-panelist.

       7             Doctor.

       8             DR. NICK FITTERMAN:  Thank you.

       9             I'm Nick Fitterman.  I'm a practicing

      10      internist.  I've been practicing for 22 years,

      11      beginning of my career in private practice, and,

      12      most recently, employed by a large health-care

      13      system in our state.

      14             I am here representing the New York State

      15      American College of Physicians, the largest medical

      16      specialty group in the state, with over

      17      13,000 members.

      18             I want to thank Senators Hannon and Seward

      19      for sponsoring these hearings.

      20             Again, as previously said, thanks to staff,

      21      Donna Frescatore, and Sherry Tomaski, as they've

      22      kept their bi-directional lines of communication

      23      open.

      24             And, actually, despite all the horror stories

      25      we're hearing, thank all of the administration staff







                                                                  124
       1      for these efforts.

       2             There's no doubt that this has helped to

       3      improve the health of residents of New York State,

       4      and in a Herculean task like this, there will be

       5      road bumps; thus, the hearings today.

       6             I am not reading from prepared testimony that

       7      we've handed out to you.

       8             I'm going summarize some notes that I took in

       9      canvassing my colleagues; most importantly, in

      10      canvassing the office managers, the practice

      11      managers at many offices, as they had a lot of

      12      information on the impact of this; and on a few

      13      patient stories.

      14             I'll be brief, because you've heard most of

      15      this already.

      16             So the challenges encountered by patients and

      17      physicians fall into basically four broad domains

      18      that overlap, and you've have heard them:

      19             There's the problems with not having

      20      insurance cards and IDs;

      21             Problems with access;

      22             A problem with continuity;

      23             The problem with communication.

      24             Not having cards or ID numbers when they show

      25      up for office visits has been frustrating for







                                                                  125
       1      patients, has been a burden to the front-office

       2      staff in these offices.

       3             The offices do not have a method to go on and

       4      check enrollment eligibility.

       5             If the patients don't have their cards, and

       6      sometimes even if they do, as we heard, they may not

       7      know what the co-pay is, what deductibles are, what

       8      the fee schedules are, and it leaves both patients

       9      and the providers concerned about potential

      10      financial exposure.

      11             More importantly, it limits the capacity of

      12      the providers of the docs to help facilitate care.

      13             I hear story after story, where the doctor is

      14      saying, "Fine, come on in, let me see the patient,"

      15      but, then, to facilitate the next step, whether it's

      16      an ancillary service or referral to a subspecialist,

      17      is next to impossible.

      18             As far as access, the network is not

      19      adequate.

      20             We're hearing stories of patients getting

      21      coverage, but not being able to see physicians,

      22      either because there's an inaccuracy in the listing

      23      in the provider network, or there are not -- or the

      24      physicians in their region that are in the exchange

      25      are full.







                                                                  126
       1             And, we're hearing some stories in

       2      communities, where physicians are not able to meet

       3      the demands of patients that now are insured, that

       4      want to be seen and accepted into the practice; yet,

       5      in the same community, there are physicians ready,

       6      willing, and able to see these patients, but cannot

       7      gain access to the provider network.

       8             As far as continuity, again, as we've heard,

       9      stories of patients having to -- being assigned a

      10      PCP different from the PCP they've had for many

      11      years, despite that PCP being in the exchange.

      12             In communication, the common theme that I've

      13      heard, that we've heard, in canvassing providers, is

      14      lack of communication of the carriers to the

      15      provider, letting them know if they're in the

      16      exchange; if they're not in the exchange.

      17             For those that have gone on and accessed the

      18      site to see if they're in the exchange products,

      19      they're having difficulties dealing with the

      20      carriers in getting access into their provider

      21      network.

      22             Two quick real stories that I came across in

      23      doing homework for today's hearings, that I think

      24      will summarize this.

      25             First:  Middle-aged man, small-business







                                                                  127
       1      owner, signs up for a product on the exchange.

       2      Presents to his primary-care provider, who he's had

       3      for over a decade, with abdominal pain in the first

       4      week of January.

       5             He didn't have his card.  He didn't have an

       6      ID number yet.

       7             The staff -- the front-office staff could not

       8      figure out if he was enrolled, and, truly, in what

       9      plan, what his co-pays are, or anything like that,

      10      but the doc said, as he should, Just come on in, let

      11      me take care of him.

      12             He's got belly pain, they suspect

      13      diverticulitis.

      14             They had to shop around to four providers to

      15      find someone who would do a CAT scan, because they

      16      couldn't find out where he could get a CAT scan.

      17             Finally, he wound up in the emergency

      18      department of our local community hospital to get

      19      that CAT scan.

      20             The man was tolerating oral fluids and meds.

      21             This was an ambulatory condition.  No need to

      22      get to the ED.

      23             Second case, of a woman in her early 60s, who

      24      had a kidney transplant about three years earlier,

      25      who had a primary-care provider who had cared for







                                                                  128
       1      her for over three decades, who sent her to a

       2      tertiary care in the city for her kidney.

       3             They had been -- the transplant team there

       4      had been following her for three years.

       5             Transplant teams follow these patients very

       6      closely for the remainder of their life, or at least

       7      the life of the transplant.

       8             And, now, the provider -- her primary-care

       9      provider was in one exchange product.  The

      10      transplant center is in the another.

      11             No overlap.

      12             So she's forced to choose, who she gonna go

      13      with?

      14             I must say that these issues are not all

      15      universal, and I did hear some good stories, so, as

      16      we moved forward, including physicians having

      17      success in gaining access to plans.

      18             But in conclusion:

      19             We urge you to continue to monitor;

      20             Stress the need for an adequate and accurate

      21      network of providers;

      22             Continue to stress the need for a provider

      23      helpline for each approved plan;

      24             Ask for materials to educate physicians and

      25      offices, and the New York ACP stands ready to help







                                                                  129
       1      distribute those and spread the message;

       2             For New York State to help lead the way in

       3      the 90-day grace period, that needs revision;

       4             And, finally, thank you for allowing me to

       5      speak.

       6             SENATOR HANNON:  There's little to add.

       7             You've been very comprehensive, and very

       8      illustrative, as to some of the problems that are

       9      out there, and, really, where the oversight from the

      10      Department of Financial Services is for the plan.

      11             There's so much that we've heard before on

      12      what the exchange is doing, but none of what the

      13      exchange did is negated any of the responsibilities

      14      of the Department of Financial Services, and,

      15      there's a lot to be done.

      16             The lack of information is incredible, and

      17      it's going to result in bad patient care.

      18             SENATOR SEWARD:  I have one quick question

      19      for you.

      20             What is your experience in terms of the

      21      reimbursement levels for participation in a plan in

      22      the exchange, versus outside the exchange?

      23             DR. ANDREW KLEINMAN:  Well, for obvious legal

      24      reasons, we can't actually do a real survey,

      25      unfortunately, to find out how everybody is making;







                                                                  130
       1      however, we have had a number of physicians call to

       2      complain.

       3             And, basically, we have not heard from a

       4      single physician, even when we asked, and we sent

       5      out surveys, just to see, "How happy are you with

       6      the reimbursement?"

       7             Virtually every plan downstate -- upstate,

       8      the situation is a little bit different.

       9             But, downstate, almost every plan in the

      10      exchange is paying at a lower rate, significantly

      11      lower, than other plans in the same -- from the same

      12      company.

      13             And as I said, we have heard as low as

      14      45 percent of Medicare, in some cases.

      15             And, as those of you who have been doing this

      16      for a while know, the Medicare rate already is so

      17      inadequate, in terms of compatibility with staying

      18      in practice, that 45 percent of Medicare, basically,

      19      for most specialties, is lower than the cost of

      20      doing business, so you're actually losing money

      21      seeing those patients.

      22             And I just want to answer what Dr. Hannon

      23      kind of hypothetically --Senator Hannon, excuse me,

      24      hypothetically asked about:  What incentive would

      25      there to be in-network?







                                                                  131
       1             And I think that comes down to a lot of the

       2      crux of it.

       3             If the in-network reimbursement was adequate,

       4      most people would want to be in-network.

       5             And what has happened is, as networks pay

       6      less and less out-of-network, they can lower the

       7      reimbursement in-network.

       8             So, essentially, we think it's somewhat

       9      coercive to try to keep people in-network.

      10             So, basically, in terms of negotiating, the

      11      one thing you have when you're negotiating with an

      12      insurance company, is you can walk away.

      13             If you can't see any patients at all if you

      14      walk away, then you can't negotiate at all.

      15             DR. PATRICIA MCLAUGHLIN:  I'd like to address

      16      one other issue.

      17             I agree with the reimbursement.

      18             It personally happened to me, so I was

      19      actually relieved that I was mistakenly put on the

      20      exchange in this one company, because I would have

      21      been put out of business with the reimbursement that

      22      they were going to give me.

      23             But, if we look at the Australian system, as

      24      far as what you said about out-of-network, there

      25      is -- today, the insurance companies do not pay a







                                                                  132
       1      reasonable and customary fee.

       2             They are using the Medicare Fee Schedule, and

       3      paying a percentage of it for whatever little plans

       4      are left that are paying out-of-network.

       5             They are paying 110 percent of Medicare, to

       6      140 percent.

       7             So if a patient chooses, who's lucky enough

       8      to have one of those out-of-network plans, chooses

       9      to go to an out-of-network doctor, the patient knows

      10      that they are not going to get anywhere near the

      11      asking fee of that physician.

      12             This actually is a good thing, in a sense,

      13      because it will foster a sense of competition

      14      between physicians.

      15             So, if you are not in-network, and you are

      16      charging more than your colleague down the block,

      17      and most of the patients who are using

      18      out-of-network choose to go to that person, you will

      19      lose your practice, and you will lower your fees.

      20             Competition fosters a lower health-care cost.

      21             Please keep that in mind.

      22             Covering everything from A to Z only

      23      increases health-care costs.

      24             There are plenty of studies that state this.

      25             The cost of drugs have become astronomical







                                                                  133
       1      ever since managed care has sought to cover the cost

       2      of pharmaceuticals.

       3             You need to relook at a lot of this, but

       4      I will tell you that I am advocating for

       5      out-of-network benefits.

       6             It is essential.

       7             It will not hurt the insurance companies,

       8      especially since they have chosen to limit the

       9      amount their exposure to a high bill.

      10             It will then be between a negotiation of the

      11      patient to the doctor, and that is a good thing.

      12             Thank you.

      13             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you very much.

      14             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you very much.

      15             SENATOR HANNON:  [Inaudible.]

      16             SENATOR SEWARD:  Before we call up the next

      17      panel, I'd just like to acknowledge that we have,

      18      Senator Felder has joined us.

      19             Thank you, Senator.

      20             Our next panel are brokers and agents:

      21             Dan Colacino is vice president of Rose and

      22      Kiernan, Inc.;

      23             Erin Nevins, who's president of

      24      Nevins Insurance Agency;

      25             And, Jack Smith, who's executive VP of







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       1      William A. Smith and Son Insurance Agency.

       2             DAN COLACINO:  Good afternoon, Senator.

       3             Senator, thank you again for inviting us,

       4      appreciate that.

       5             SENATOR HANNON:  You've got to all pull your

       6      mics closer.

       7             DAN COLACINO:  Real close.  Okay.

       8             SENATOR HANNON:  Especially because, the rest

       9      of them in here, and the sound up here, it's

      10      horrible.

      11             DAN COLACINO:  Oh, okay.  All right.

      12             I'll yell as loud as I can, then.

      13             I'd thank Dr. McLaughlin for giving the

      14      brokers a nice plug in her last testimony.  We

      15      appreciate that.

      16             My name's Dan Colacino.  I work for Rose and

      17      Kiernan.

      18             I've been there -- I've been working in the

      19      insurance industry now for a little over 40 years,

      20      so, I've seen everything, from ERISA being

      21      implemented, to the Affordable Care Act.

      22             So all the upheavals in the industry, I've

      23      seen most of those.

      24             I just want to touch on a few things that

      25      haven't been really discussed much today.







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       1             We talked about the improvement in rates, and

       2      I think the improvement in rates that we've seen has

       3      been in the individual market.

       4             As Donna Frescatore had mentioned, the

       5      mandated programs in the individual market were

       6      horribly expensive.

       7             Individual rates in the individual market

       8      were the same as family rates.

       9             So, now, we've seen a significant decrease in

      10      those costs.

      11             So for people who are uninsured, unemployed,

      12      or who work for an employer who simply doesn't

      13      provide insurance, they now have affordable

      14      insurance which they didn't even have before.

      15             We'd like to compliment Donna and her staff.

      16      They've been very good in reaching out to us, and

      17      working with us, as our trade association, helping

      18      us to understand and get through some of the

      19      roadblocks that existed in the initial part of the

      20      rollout.

      21             Yes, there have been some bumps in there, but

      22      I think, right now, in general, based on what

      23      they've had to deal with, the changing regulations,

      24      and so forth, I think, all in all, things have run

      25      out pretty well.







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       1             And I can say that as a sole proprietor

       2      myself.

       3             I work for Rose and Kiernan, but I work

       4      part-time these days, so, I'm a sole proprietor, so

       5      I don't qualify for benefits.  So I had to go

       6      through the exchange to buy my own insurance, which

       7      I did.

       8             The experience was fine.

       9             I went through the marketplace in, probably,

      10      November of this year, and things went fairly well.

      11             I ended up buying off-exchange, which I think

      12      is something that we've missed.

      13             The off-exchange market, where the carriers

      14      offer the exchange-type programs, not through the

      15      exchange, but directly as another resource for

      16      people to go to, whether they're individuals or

      17      small employers.

      18             I ended up buying off-exchange because the

      19      requirements off-exchange for some of those products

      20      were a little more flexible.

      21             Although they all had to meet the same

      22      metal-level tiers, of the Bronze, Platinum, Gold,

      23      and Silver, and so forth, they had a little more

      24      flexibility in some of the designs.

      25             So I found a better product off-exchange than







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       1      on exchange, actually.

       2             Let me talk a little bit about

       3      sole proprietors, because that question had come up

       4      earlier.

       5             The sole proprietors lost a lot.

       6             As a sole proprietor, I bought my insurance

       7      through the Albany Chamber of Commerce.

       8             Sole proprietors, according to New York law,

       9      were allowed to get the group rates, with an

      10      increase factor of 15 to 10 percent, which was

      11      affordable.

      12             Now, beginning in -- January 1st of this

      13      year, of course, "sole proprietors" are now defined

      14      by the Affordable Care Act as being in the

      15      individual market, because the "group market" is now

      16      defined as "2 to 50," and soon to be "2 to 100" in

      17      2016.

      18             I think that was the biggest impact.

      19             There's no evidence that ever showed that

      20      sole proprietors are a higher risk than any employer

      21      of two or three, so I think sole proprietors have a

      22      legitimate place in the group market.

      23             Although, the Affordable Care Act does make

      24      mention of the group market size, and I think that's

      25      what we went by, trying to follow the







                                                                  138
       1      Affordable Care Act guidelines, I think there's

       2      ample opportunity for the State to look at

       3      legislation that would make -- roll our marketplace

       4      back and allow the sole proprietors to enjoy group

       5      benefits as well.

       6             We did that before; we allowed sole

       7      proprietors to enter the group market a number of

       8      years ago, and legislation was written that way, and

       9      it also allowed a little bit of a markup for the

      10      carriers to do so.

      11             I don't see any reason why we can't do that

      12      again.

      13             The states are the place where

      14      experimentation are supposed to happen in the

      15      insurance marketplaces.

      16             And New York already had a viable market.

      17             I think the Affordable Care Act itself is one

      18      that had the biggest impact on us, and it wasn't

      19      necessarily a positive impact because of some of the

      20      requirements.

      21             And I think somebody mentioned earlier, you

      22      were able to buy an insurance product without

      23      prescription drugs.

      24             You can't do that now in the individual or

      25      small-business market, and you have to meet







                                                                  139
       1      essential health benefits or else you pay the

       2      individual penalty.

       3             I think there's some opportunity here for us

       4      to at least negate some of the impact on the

       5      sole-proprietor market, and allow them to buy

       6      insurance through the group market as well.

       7             And I think with legislation we can do that

       8      one.

       9             I don't think we'd lose any cost -- any

      10      revenue-sharing from the federal government.

      11      I don't think we'd lose any grants by doing so.

      12             I think it's something we need to seriously

      13      look at during this session.

      14             I also want to talk about, we haven't talked

      15      it be much at all, the small-business tax credit,

      16      because that did come up.

      17             That's something that I think, the

      18      anticipated amount of money to be spent on the

      19      small-business tax credit was probably in excess of

      20      3 or 4 billion dollars.

      21             I doubt that we've even hit $1 1/2 billion in

      22      small-business tax credits nationally.

      23             I think that's because the people don't

      24      understand how the small-business tax credit works,

      25      even though the IRS has on their website, something







                                                                  140
       1      that says "Three simple steps."

       2             There aren't three simple steps to

       3      determining whether you have a small-business tax

       4      credit.  It takes more than that.

       5             It's not that complex that it can't be

       6      understood, but I think the communication of it and

       7      the understanding of it is something that's been

       8      lacking.

       9             Part of my days off, if you will, have been

      10      spent instructing employer -- brokers on being able

      11      to be certified to sell in the small-business and

      12      the individual exchange.

      13             So that's -- I've spent a lot of time talking

      14      to brokers about how they can use the small-business

      15      tax credit, help them understand it better, to help

      16      their clients.

      17             We haven't seen a lot of activity in the shop

      18      market.

      19             I'll be honest, I've taught over 400 brokers

      20      in the shop and the individual marketplace in

      21      certification classes.

      22             I don't think I've talked to anyone who's put

      23      anybody through the shop at this point.

      24             Individual exchange, certainly, that works.

      25             I think a lot of them are defaulting to







                                                                  141
       1      the -- selling the business directly with the

       2      carrier as opposed to going through the shop.

       3             The shop offers some advantages.

       4             The small-business tax credit that Donna

       5      mentioned earlier certainly is one of them.

       6             And I think the opportunity to offer multiple

       7      carriers and multiple plans is something for

       8      employers that's offered through the shop, that you

       9      won't get if you sell directly with a carrier.

      10             But I think most of us, right now, are

      11      concerned about the complexity of trying to sell

      12      through the shop.  I don't think it's well

      13      understood.

      14             Donna and her staff have agreed to work with

      15      us, to run some seminars through the next part of

      16      2014, so we can get our people more comfortable with

      17      selling through the shop and using that as well.

      18             Finally, I think you did ask in some of your

      19      testimony, about whether the State made the right

      20      choice when they adopted not to allow carriers to

      21      maintain the same plans that were canceled.

      22             And I think they absolutely did.

      23             And I think the timing of that -- the

      24      legality of it being questionable on a federal

      25      level, in the first place, but the timing of it was







                                                                  142
       1      such, that there was no time for any carrier to get

       2      any communication, any rate filings on plans that

       3      had, thus, been discontinued.

       4             So I think we absolutely did make the right

       5      decision, in deciding not to extended those plans

       6      that had been canceled, going into 2014.

       7             We had enough of a road -- we had enough road

       8      bumps in 2014 -- January 1st of 2014 without that.

       9             I think that would have added to the

      10      confusion.

      11             I think we made the right move by not doing

      12      so.

      13             With that, thank you very much for your time.

      14             ERIC P. NEVINS:  Hi, my name is Erin Nevins.

      15             I am the owner, founder, and president of my

      16      own insurance agency here in Albany, from

      17      EP Nevins Insurance Agency.

      18             I'm also the president-elect of the

      19      National Association of Health Underwriters local

      20      chapter for my industry, as well as a member of the

      21      board for the state legislative board for that

      22      organization.

      23             Dan actually taught me through that process,

      24      and I am certified to sell in the New York State

      25      exchange, as well as with small businesses and







                                                                  143
       1      individuals and sole proprietors.

       2             What I would like to say is, I thank you very

       3      much for the opportunity to be here and speak to you

       4      candidly about what is going on.

       5             I think that brokers have a unique

       6      perspective that really encompasses almost

       7      everything that you heard here today.

       8             Brokers assist members in purchasing

       9      insurance.

      10             They work with the providers to ensure that

      11      the providers are participating for these members.

      12             And, we help people with their carriers when

      13      there's issues that arise from their insurance

      14      carriers.

      15             So, the one group of people that actually

      16      physically touch almost every piece of health

      17      insurance are brokers and agents.

      18             I represent a vast number of individuals,

      19      sole proprietors, chambers of commerce that are

      20      county wide, as well as small businesses, and that

      21      is my specialty with employee benefits.  The health

      22      insurance is a large portion of that.

      23             I daily speak to sole proprietors and small

      24      businesses that are very concerned and very upset

      25      about the loss of their previous coverage, from a







                                                                  144
       1      few points:

       2             Cost:  Not just monthly premium costs, but

       3      out-of-pocket costs as well;

       4             And then, also, their access to networks.

       5             I just want to go back to, Senator Martins,

       6      you had mentioned something in one of your exchanges

       7      with a panelist, about the decrease of insurance

       8      costs and the increase in the individual market.

       9             And I want to make a distinction, that,

      10      routinely, before 2014, individuals that had no

      11      affiliation through a business or a

      12      sole proprietorship to -- into the group market, the

      13      pricing for individual insurance in our state was

      14      extremely high.

      15             The average cost about $900 a month for an

      16      individual in the upstate market.

      17             Downstate, of course, is more.

      18             What has happened is, we have adopted the

      19      ERISA language that dictates that sole proprietors,

      20      and small businesses that are husband/wife joint

      21      ventures, have now been forced to now be in the

      22      individual marketplace, so, you have increased their

      23      pricing to decrease the individual marketplace.

      24             There's a true distinction about what makes

      25      up that individual market previous, and going







                                                                  145
       1      forward.

       2             And I wanted to make that point to you,

       3      because it is a true distinction.

       4             We have -- my agency has spent a long period

       5      of time educating employers and sole proprietors

       6      about high-deductible health plans, consumer-driven

       7      health plans, how to use their insurance to the best

       8      of their ability in an economical way, while also

       9      putting funding arrangements alongside of it to be

      10      able to afford their out of-of-pocket costs.

      11             Those plans in 2013 that we were selling had

      12      a 675,000-provider-strong in-network network; now,

      13      totally inaccessible to all of these people that

      14      were routinely enjoying that network.

      15             I'm not even talking about the out-of-network

      16      capability.  I'm talking about the in-network.

      17             So, that was a real big hit to that market

      18      segment, and, it's hurt every day, because they call

      19      our office and they're very upset about it, when

      20      they're trying to select new plans that only

      21      incorporate, maybe, 23 county service areas with

      22      very limited providers, as well as limited

      23      prescription drugs at this point.

      24             The cost of those plans that we have been

      25      selling and educating and pouring all of our energy







                                                                  146
       1      and time into routinely cost about $150 a month in

       2      the small-group market/sole proprietor cost.

       3             They have risen to a 50 -- or, a 100 percent

       4      increase, to $300, which doesn't sound like much,

       5      but you have also increased their out-of-pocket

       6      liabilities on the deductibles and out-of-pocket

       7      maximums.

       8             So, it's not just the premium that has

       9      increased for these people that were going along

      10      satisfactorily for the last two or three years, that

      11      have really been adjusting their incomes to pay for

      12      their out-of-pockets in a different way.

      13             Now they're being hit by the premium as well

      14      as increased out-of-pockets.

      15             So, network accessibility and costs

      16      associated with the premiums, as well as the

      17      out-of-pockets, has been a big, huge impact to these

      18      people.

      19             I have a husband-and-wife doctor practice in

      20      Dutchess County, engaged in a legitimate business,

      21      that are now considered to be in the individual

      22      marketplace, and are totally upset and insulted that

      23      they cannot have a national network that they

      24      previously had had or out-of-network capability.

      25             And, the language in ERISA goes back to







                                                                  147
       1      stating that, "husband and wife."

       2             And I don't understand why that has happened,

       3      but, just because you're married doesn't mean you're

       4      not actively participating in a business.

       5             So, that has been a big, huge problem for

       6      that region, as well as broker compensation.

       7             You know, we touch so many people.

       8             We educate people.  We help them with claims

       9      resolutions.  We help them pick a plan.  We help

      10      them understand the plan.

      11             We do so many things for so many people, and

      12      we are compensated by insurance companies, not by

      13      the individuals or the constituents that we

      14      represent.

      15             But, as this whole thing has unfolded for

      16      2014, routinely, we are no longer compensated on

      17      certain products, we are no longer compensated on

      18      market segments, of which we were previously

      19      compensated.

      20             So all of these sole proprietors and

      21      husband-wife joint ventures, if they move to an

      22      insurance company that does not compensate for

      23      individual plans, we lose compensation, but they're

      24      still our clients.

      25             So we're trying to run our businesses and







                                                                  148
       1      continue to be a resource.

       2             We have always been a resource for these

       3      people, especially now when things are so

       4      complicated and confusing, and they really are

       5      relying on us to assist them.  And now we have to

       6      say, Well, I can't help you with this, but I can

       7      help you with this.

       8             Of course, we're not going to say that,

       9      because we would never practice that way, but, you

      10      know, over time, we will have to adjust our business

      11      plans to not broker for certain market segments, and

      12      that leaves a gaping hole for those people.

      13             Navigators are great, and they're doing what

      14      they were asked to do, which is to enroll people.

      15             But, brokers and agents are more than just

      16      enrollers.  We are consultants to these people.

      17             SENATOR HANNON:  We have to hear from

      18      Mr. Smith.

      19             ERIC P. NEVINS:  Oh, I'm sorry.

      20             Well, I thank you.

      21             SENATOR HANNON:  You were great.

      22             I've been trying to cut in, but you didn't

      23      even take a breath.

      24             ERIC P. NEVINS:  Sorry.

      25                  [Laughter.]







                                                                  149
       1             ERIC P. NEVINS:  Well, I appreciate the

       2      opportunity.

       3             SENATOR HANNON:  I had asked before that

       4      people not read.

       5             I didn't realize you were so passionate that

       6      you'd speak longer.

       7             ERIC P. NEVINS:  Sorry.

       8             SENATOR HANNON:  No, everything you said was

       9      very [inaudible].

      10             ERIC P. NEVINS:  I put some information in

      11      your packets.  Please feel free to reach out.

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you.

      13             JACK SMITH:  Thank you.

      14             I'm Jack Smith.  I'm executive vice president

      15      of William A. Smith and Son.

      16             We're a third-generation insurance firm in

      17      the Mid-Hudson Valley.  We've got offices in

      18      Newburgh, Montgomery, and Poughkeepsie.

      19             We work with people on, not only their home

      20      and auto and business insurance, but also on their

      21      health insurance.

      22             We've got about 1,000 health-insurance

      23      clients that are clients of ours with, say, their

      24      business insurance, but, also, we have a

      25      relationship with the Orange County Chamber of







                                                                  150
       1      Commerce.  We're a joint-venture partner with them

       2      to provide health-insurance advice and sell product

       3      to their constituents.

       4             So, what I'm going to talk about comes from

       5      that experience.

       6             Much of what I would have normally have said

       7      has already been covered, so I'll try to keep it

       8      pretty short.

       9             And, I'm also on the board of directors of

      10      the Independent Agents and Brokers Association of

      11      the State of New York, and speaking on behalf of our

      12      members as well.

      13             A couple of things that I just want to

      14      reiterate, they've already been touched on, but, the

      15      loss of out-of-network coverage is tremendous in our

      16      area.  A large number of our clients would normally

      17      go to New York City for various procedures.

      18             Sloan-Kettering comes to mind, you know,

      19      frequently, when somebody finds out they have

      20      cancer.

      21             And, you know, with the removal of the

      22      out-of-network coverages, they can't do it, you

      23      know, and that's when -- when we have to tell people

      24      that, when we're explaining to them what the

      25      differences are between exchange and non-exchange







                                                                  151
       1      products and networks, and so forth, and they find

       2      that out, that they feel like they've been let down.

       3             You know, I would say, from the standpoint of

       4      our government, whether it be federal or state,

       5      I think your constituents feel let down that they

       6      lost this.

       7             And it's important that, through the

       8      legislation that I know has been introduced, or is

       9      in the process of being introduced, that that be put

      10      back in, because it's extremely important for

      11      people, you know, not only for a situation like

      12      cancer, but, also, you know, look at somebody whose

      13      child is in college, and maybe is going to school in

      14      the University of Connecticut, or someplace like

      15      that.

      16             If they don't have network coverage, they've

      17      now got to come back to New York State to seek

      18      treatment, because they can't see a doctor in

      19      Connecticut or Massachusetts or Maine or

      20      North Carolina, or wherever they might be going to

      21      school.

      22             You know, that hasn't really been talked

      23      about at all, but that's, you know, important as

      24      well.

      25             You know, also, if you look at business







                                                                  152
       1      owners who might spend part of the year, or a couple

       2      months of the year, in a different state, again, if

       3      their doctors -- if they don't have out-of-network

       4      coverage, they're now losing the ability to seek

       5      treatment when they're somewhere else, though they

       6      are residents of New York and they pay taxes in

       7      New York, but they're -- you know, they're losing

       8      that ability.

       9             The "sole proprietor" issue has been

      10      discussed.

      11             Again, that's -- we've seen that time and

      12      time again with our chamber clients.

      13             It's a huge dilemma and it really does need

      14      to be fixed.

      15             I won't reiterate what's already been said.

      16             You know, the price of insurance and net cost

      17      I think is something that often gets confused.  And,

      18      while premiums, in some cases, may go down because

      19      of these higher deductibles and out-of-network

      20      costs, their total cost of health care has not gone

      21      down, and I think that's, you know, a big issue.

      22             People are trying to reduce premiums by

      23      increasing deductibles and other out of -- you know

      24      costs, the cost-share mechanism, and so they're

      25      really not decreasing their cost of insurance and







                                                                  153
       1      health care when you take all of that into account.

       2             I would say that the shop exchange, the

       3      small-business exchange, has not been a great

       4      success so far, and because of the reasons that have

       5      already been discussed.

       6             Again, we're working with, you know, several

       7      hundred to a thousand employers, and I think we've

       8      placed one person in the shop exchange, one small

       9      business.

      10             So, that really has not, you know, made an

      11      impact thus far, and I don't think that was the

      12      intent.

      13             I think the intent is for that to make an

      14      impact, and for us to be able to place businesses

      15      there, so that it does create more coverage for

      16      employers.

      17             And, you know, I would say, while the

      18      Health Department has done a great job with the

      19      exchange in the small amount of time that they had,

      20      and the website is phenomenal, there's still work

      21      that needs to be done on the back end, which is the

      22      transmission of data from the exchange to the

      23      carriers.

      24             And that's, I think, some of the issues that

      25      we're having, relative to people not having their







                                                                  154
       1      ID cards, and, when we try to call a carrier on

       2      behalf of a client, and they can't answer our

       3      questions because they don't even know they're one

       4      of their insureds yet, you know, I think that's

       5      probably a technology issue, which I'm sure will be

       6      handled down the road, but, you know, that is an

       7      impediment at this point in time.

       8             And, really, that's all I have to offer,

       9      because everything that I wanted to talk about has,

      10      really, already been talked about by so many people

      11      today.

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  That's the disadvantage of

      13      going third.

      14             JACK SMITH:  Yeah.

      15             SENATOR SEWARD:  Just two quick questions.

      16             The low shop participation, shop-exchange

      17      participation, could you just summarize, you know,

      18      why that -- in your view, why that is occurring?

      19             JACK SMITH:  In our opinion, there's

      20      two reasons.

      21             Number one, it's difficult to navigate in a

      22      logical way as a broker for a client.

      23             And what I mean by that is, in so many lines

      24      of insurance now, there are things called

      25      "comparative rating," where we can put data in for







                                                                  155
       1      one client and see multiple carriers' information,

       2      and then we can talk them through what's what.

       3             That doesn't exist.

       4             I think that's a fairly easy fix, and I think

       5      that would help.

       6             As was discussed already, the tax-credit

       7      benefits I think are probably confusing, and may not

       8      be, you know, fully understood.  And, some people

       9      just aren't qualifying for them.

      10             I know, in our case, you know, some of the

      11      people that we've tried to see if there was a way

      12      for them to utilize that, it just hasn't worked out

      13      where it's been better and they would want to buy

      14      one of those plans, because they would then be

      15      losing their out-of-network coverage.

      16             So it's kind of that twofold purpose.

      17             And the out-of-network coverage is also a

      18      huge consideration about buying a plan in the shop

      19      exchange, because if it doesn't exist, they don't

      20      want to, you know, lose what they had.

      21             SENATOR SEWARD:  Yeah, it's just -- the

      22      product doesn't stack up very well, as compared,

      23      yeah.

      24             Just one final question, in terms of the --

      25      your experience with these -- with the navigators,







                                                                  156
       1      have you had any experience there?

       2             You know, they -- they do the three-day

       3      training, and, without a background check, without

       4      any educational background requirements, but they do

       5      have the three-day training and they do pass an

       6      exam.

       7             What has been your experience, if any, with

       8      these navigators -- with navigators?

       9             Who I think have an important role to play,

      10      in terms of outreach, but when it comes right down

      11      to it, in terms of really advising someone, you

      12      know, I think the agents and brokers are in a much

      13      better position to do that.

      14             But, can you -- have you had any experience

      15      that you can share with us, briefly, in terms of:

      16             Have they overstepped their bounds in any

      17      way?

      18             Or, do you think it's a -- have you had any

      19      referrals from the navigators?

      20             JACK SMITH:  I know, in our situation, we've

      21      had no experience with navigators.

      22             ERIC P. NEVINS:  I personally have.

      23             I do broker a large countywide chamber of

      24      commerce, and at the onset of this, my chamber

      25      president was approached by another group that had







                                                                  157
       1      solicited to be the navigator for that region.  Had

       2      not won the reward yet, but was already meeting with

       3      our chamber of commerce, my client.

       4             And, once they did actually receive their

       5      award, so, we know who they are.

       6             We've -- we've given many different

       7      conferences and forums for all of the chamber

       8      members.

       9             They've attended every one of them and taken

      10      lots of notes.

      11             And at the onset, I think a lot of brokers

      12      were upset.  They thought that navigators would be

      13      overstepping and taking business from them.

      14             And, actually, it's turned out to be quite

      15      the opposite, where we've had some of our clients

      16      mosey on over and take a peek at them, and then

      17      we're told, "Uh, I think you need a broker," and

      18      then referred right back to us.

      19             So, I don't know that they are trained well

      20      enough.

      21             I know they know the process on how to enroll

      22      somebody, but I don't know that they're trained well

      23      enough to understand, and how to explain differences

      24      in carrier networks, prescription-drug formularies,

      25      and I could go on and on.







                                                                  158
       1             I don't think that -- I think that they are

       2      just there to specifically get people enrolled.

       3             As far as educating them, I don't think

       4      that's part of their task, and I -- so that's ours.

       5             DAN COLACINO:  Yeah, my experience has been

       6      mostly with hospital-based navigators.  I think they

       7      were formerly Medicaid-facilitated enrollers, and

       8      they moved over, so they were kind of familiar with

       9      how the Medicaid program worked, and so forth.

      10             So, we've actually, when we had to refer

      11      individuals to a navigator, we would send them to

      12      the hospital-based navigators.

      13             And I think they had that -- they had a head

      14      start on everybody else because, again, they were

      15      Medicaid facilitators and enrollers, and they

      16      understood the process to start with.  And we're

      17      more comfortable than sending them to

      18      community-based people right now.

      19             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you.

      20             Thank you very much for appearing.

      21             SENATOR HANNON:  Thanks.

      22             ERIC P. NEVINS:  Thank you.

      23             SENATOR SEWARD:  Our next panel are

      24      small-group insurers:

      25             Bob Carey, who's an account executive of







                                                                  159
       1      Otsego County Chamber of Commerce;

       2             Leslie [sic] Clarke, deputy director of

       3      Freelancers Union Insurance;

       4             Mark Eagan, president and CEO of the

       5      Albany-Colonie Regional Chamber of Commerce;

       6             And, Maurice Isaac, who's employee benefits

       7      program administrator of the Delaware County

       8      Chamber of Commerce.

       9             And we're going ask Mr. Eagan to lead off

      10      this panel.

      11             MARK EAGAN:  Good afternoon.

      12             I'm Mark Eagan, president and CEO of the

      13      Albany-Colonie Regional Chamber.

      14             We have a membership of 2200 businesses that

      15      come from throughout the Capital Region, and they

      16      employ about 110,000 area residents.

      17             Appreciate the opportunity, and I commend you

      18      for hosting the hearing today, and I appreciate the

      19      opportunity to share a little bit of the feedback we

      20      received, particularly from the small-business

      21      community, within the limitation of the

      22      Affordable Care Act in New York.

      23             I guess I'd start by making just a couple of

      24      comments about the exchange itself, for businesses

      25      who look to use the exchange.







                                                                  160
       1             And I would say that, that the first piece of

       2      feedback, for those who wanted to, quote/unquote,

       3      shop the exchange, we received quite a bit of

       4      feedback that they thought it was difficult to

       5      window-shop, because they had to go in and set up an

       6      account.  And I think a lot of them had concern, if

       7      they set up an account, were they going to almost be

       8      sort of trapped within the portal.

       9             So I think, just as some suggestions on how

      10      it can be improved, going forward, if it was easier

      11      to see what's available without having to set up an

      12      account and go through that formality.

      13             Within our membership, we have a lot of

      14      businesses who gather -- gain health insurance

      15      through our organization, so, some of my comments

      16      will be respective to those folks, and others will

      17      be businesses who just gather health insurance from

      18      a lot of different places, and feedback that we've

      19      received.

      20             First, from the sole proprietors, those who,

      21      you know, are independently employed, who get

      22      coverage through us:

      23             Many of them were really shocked and angered

      24      when they learned that they were no longer

      25      considered a business in buying health insurance







                                                                  161
       1      when they went to purchase insurance, with the

       2      Affordable Care Act.

       3             As you folks know, they are now classified as

       4      an individual.

       5             And many of them, you know, called our office

       6      and complained, and said, you know:  We believe the

       7      only reason we were asked to now buy as an

       8      individual, is we're helping to subsidize insurance

       9      for other individuals.  We worked hard to create a

      10      business, and we'd like to be able to continue to

      11      purchase as a business.

      12             Obviously, when they went to buy it on the

      13      individual exchange, most of them experienced

      14      significant increases in their premiums.

      15             The other piece that we heard from our

      16      sole proprietors, was things that they would

      17      discovered as they went through the process, and one

      18      of them that we got several calls about was, no

      19      out-of-network coverage.

      20             So, whether they're out of state, whether

      21      they have their children away at college, they

      22      weren't sure how that worked.

      23             And these are, either, they did it through

      24      the exchange or they continued to get insurance

      25      through our organization.







                                                                  162
       1             Also, as you know, we have some new insurance

       2      carriers that are offering coverage in New York.

       3             And we're getting some feedback from the --

       4      where a business says they've checked to see, was

       5      their current provider going to offer that

       6      insurance.

       7             It appeared so, yes, when they went to a

       8      website and looked, but then when they actually

       9      called it -- the office, they said they don't accept

      10      that coverage.

      11             So I don't know if that's still just part of

      12      rollout, but that's a frustration that we're hearing

      13      from our sole props.

      14             From the small-business community, those who

      15      are from 2 to 50 employees, really what we

      16      discovered, if they were getting insurance through

      17      us now, we mapped them with our carriers to the

      18      product that was closest to what they currently had.

      19             As you know, none of the products remained,

      20      you know, 100 percent as is.

      21             And we realized that almost all of those

      22      businesses, wherever they were suggested, wherever

      23      they were mapped to, navigated to, that was the

      24      coverage they continued to keep.

      25             So it -- from what we can tell, most of those







                                                                  163
       1      businesses didn't even explore looking at the -- the

       2      exchange, going to the website or the marketplace.

       3             I don't know if it's because it's the first

       4      year and they're not sure what the impact would be

       5      for them or what the benefit would be for them or

       6      their employees, but it appears most, if they were

       7      able to maintain the status quo, that was the route

       8      that they elected to do.

       9             So with that, those are my comments, Senator.

      10             Thank you.

      11             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you.

      12             Who would like to go next?

      13             MAURICE ISAAC:  Yes, I'll go next, Senator.

      14             I'm Maurice Isaac, with Mang Insurance

      15      Agency, and I'm the benefits administrator for the

      16      Delaware County Chamber.

      17             And I kind of just wanted to go through my

      18      experience, you know, since the exchange opened.

      19             I completed the CE course the Saturday, on

      20      September 29th, so I could be one of the first

      21      agents eligible for the exchange.

      22             I still did not receive my invitation till

      23      October 4th, four days after the exchange opened,

      24      even though I qualified and passed all the exams.

      25             In trying to set up my broker's account, it







                                                                  164
       1      took five complete days of trial and error with the

       2      exchange before I could get that satisfied.

       3             And I got -- finally on the 9th, I got a

       4      "Congratulations, your brokerage account is open,"

       5      with various technical problems.

       6             With the chamber, I've got -- I think,

       7      through the two chambers, I have approximately

       8      90 self-employed sole proprietors, that all of their

       9      are plans were canceled, so I had to set up meetings

      10      throughout the next three months with them.

      11             With them at the help desk, sometimes we

      12      waited 45 minutes to reach someone, while the client

      13      was sitting with me, because it said -- you know,

      14      when you needed help.

      15             There was times where we waited 20 minutes,

      16      and the person who answered stated they couldn't

      17      help us, we needed to be transferred.  And, again,

      18      we waited another 20 minutes, with the client

      19      sitting there with us.

      20             The help desk has stated at times, that, you

      21      know, We would get back to you within 48 hours.

      22             We never heard from them.

      23             When I called back, the help desk says,

      24      "Well, do you have a ticket number?"

      25             And I says, "No, I didn't receive a ticket







                                                                  165
       1      number.  Am I supposed to?"

       2             And they said, "Yes."

       3             So the next time I had an issue, I tried to

       4      insist that I get a ticket number, so if I needed to

       5      follow up and call back, I had it.

       6             At that time, I was told that we don't --

       7      "We don't issue ticket numbers," in direct

       8      compliance to, you know, what I was told the last

       9      time.

      10             There was many times where we had programming

      11      errors, and the help desk just stated:  Look,

      12      everyone's having this here, they're having

      13      problems.  You're gonna have to try again tomorrow.

      14      Tell your client, you know, they're gonna have to

      15      reschedule an appointment with you.

      16             And these -- some of the clients in

      17      Delaware County, it's a huge county, they drove

      18      30, 35 minutes, just to get to me.  In inclement

      19      weather, you know, and they would have to turn

      20      around and drive 30 minutes home, and then back and

      21      forth again.

      22             The biggest help-desk issue we had was, on

      23      12/10, it was -- after we put all the information

      24      in, it was stated that it could not make a

      25      determination.







                                                                  166
       1             On the 13th, they finally made a

       2      determination that there would be no subsidy.

       3             On 12/16, when we went -- when the client

       4      wanted to pursue and get a policy anyways, when we

       5      went to confirm and check out, we received an error.

       6             The help desk said, "Keep trying again

       7      tomorrow.  We're gonna work on it."

       8             Three days later I sent a picture of the

       9      problem into the technical support, and, you know,

      10      that was on 12/19.

      11             That afternoon, I actually got an e-mail from

      12      a regional director of the Department of Health,

      13      stating that problem -- that issue was corrected,

      14      and that they assigned someone to follow up with me

      15      by phone.

      16             She gave me instructions -- they gave me

      17      instructions on how to enroll the client further.

      18             I tried that and it did not work.

      19             Eventually, the person called every day, that

      20      they assigned to help me, and we could not -- we

      21      could not get the coverage put through.

      22             On 12/21, with only two days left to get this

      23      client enrolled for January 1st, I resent the error

      24      message to technical support and that regional

      25      director, stating that we have still been unable to







                                                                  167
       1      enroll this client.

       2             And I immediately, from the regional

       3      director, received an out-of-office message that

       4      says, "I'm going to be out of the office until

       5      January 1, 2014.  I have a person who is here to

       6      help you.  Here's their e-mail address, please

       7      contact them."

       8             I forwarded the e-mail to that person, and

       9      I've never heard from either one of them.

      10             On the 27th I received a phone call from --

      11      the person that was helping me on the phone stated:

      12      The problem has finally been corrected, and we did

      13      install their plan, but it's not gonna be effective

      14      until February 1st.

      15             That was after -- on 12/23, the last day,

      16      I enrolled that client directly with a

      17      Blue Cross and Blue Shield plan, that they've paid

      18      for, and had to, you know, come into the office that

      19      day, to make sure they had coverage for January 1st.

      20             Applications that -- on individuals, to date,

      21      I put in 58 applications for the exchange, and I've

      22      enrolled 49.

      23             Out of the 49, I believe about 10 percent of

      24      them were enrolled into Medicaid that qualified for

      25      it.







                                                                  168
       1             For applications for the shop exchange,

       2      I have two, and enrolled -- enrolled one client in

       3      the shop exchange.

       4             One client that I had was an individual

       5      family that has one child in college, that's

       6      20 years old.  They have two children under the age

       7      of 19 that are still in high school.

       8             Their eligibility determined that they'd have

       9      a $414 a month subsidy on the Silver plan for the

      10      complete family.

      11             The premium was $1,370.  Their net premium,

      12      after the 414, is 955.

      13             And, also, even though they already qualified

      14      for a family plan, the exchange notified us that the

      15      children under 19 were eligible for

      16      Family Health Plus, and were forced to go into

      17      Family Force Plus, and they were charged an

      18      additional $60 on top of an already-family plan that

      19      they're paying.

      20             And we were told that there's no way to

      21      circumvent that.  Once that they qualified for

      22      Child Health Plus, they had to pay the additional

      23      funds.

      24             The clients eventually did enroll in that

      25      plan to get their subsidy, but are paying $60 extra







                                                                  169
       1      even though they're already paying for a family

       2      plan.

       3             My clients are mostly small groups,

       4      sole proprietors, partnerships, LLCs, and

       5      corporations.

       6             One client is an attorney with a newly opened

       7      firm less than two years old, and that's a

       8      corporation.

       9             This year, she promoted that second attorney

      10      to a partner, and now they're equal shareholders.

      11      Both are drawing a salary, and, they file a

      12      New York 45 quarterly; however, they're now

      13      classified as individuals because they're both the

      14      owners of the corporation, and now they're required

      15      to pay $39 a month more, each, for the same exact

      16      plan that's available for small businesses.

      17             This attorney decided and elected not to take

      18      the plan, based on that, and has taken the penalty.

      19             With having all small groups, every plan

      20      [unintelligible] everyone that I had was canceled,

      21      and those clients had to choose a new plan: either

      22      move through to the exchange, move to the direct

      23      market, or go -- or directly through the carrier.

      24             The President did announce that you were able

      25      to keep your existing plan for one more year, our







                                                                  170
       1      phone started ringing off the walls.

       2             Clients that we already had moved into new

       3      plans and already sent checks in, called up, wanting

       4      to move their plans back to their old plans.

       5             And we had to explain to them it wasn't

       6      available.

       7             Chamber members, as a whole, were very split

       8      on -- some were happy to have our help, and will

       9      continue to be members.

      10             Some members stated right out, that they

      11      don't need the chamber anymore, and this is the last

      12      time we're gonna pay our -- that was -- last year

      13      was the last time they're paying their dues and

      14      they're not gonna renew their membership.

      15             In summary:

      16             Some clients were very happy.  They chose a

      17      plan that was better than the one that they had, for

      18      the same or less money.

      19             Some clients were determined to be eligible

      20      for Medicaid, and were very unhappy and very upset,

      21      stating that, you know, "We don't want to be in

      22      welfare."  And they actually purchased a direct plan

      23      outside the exchange and are paying full price.

      24             Some sole proprietors are paying 50 percent

      25      more to 100 percent more in premium for less







                                                                  171
       1      coverage than they had in their old higher --

       2      high-deductible plans.

       3             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you.

       4             MAURICE ISAAC:  Thank you for this

       5      opportunity to share that with you.

       6             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you very much.

       7             Mr. Carey.

       8             BOB CAREY:  Hello, I'm Bob Carey.  I'm with

       9      the Mang NBT Insurance Agency as well, and, I'm an

      10      account executive.  And, I am the benefit

      11      administrator for the Otsego County Chamber.

      12             I do want to mention that our agency handles

      13      five different chambers as benefit administrators.

      14             Maurice is one of them.

      15             And I was asked to come here on behalf of the

      16      Otsego County Chamber, to talk about the

      17      difficulties and problems, as well as their feelings

      18      towards the -- what's been happening within this

      19      last year.

      20             The chambers, as a whole, have spent many,

      21      many years, in concert with the Legislature here in

      22      New York, to create the "sole proprietor" product

      23      line, and the "sole proprietor" product line came

      24      about because of the input of the chambers, with the

      25      State legislators and the Insurance commissioner,







                                                                  172
       1      and they created what's called the "Chamber Trust

       2      Product."  And that Chamber Trust Product did have

       3      small-group products, 2 to 50, and it typically had

       4      the "sole proprietor" product that was mentioned,

       5      that is 10 to 15 percent more.

       6             With the Affordable Care Act, and no reason

       7      that -- or, New York didn't do anything to create

       8      this, but the Affordable Care Act created the

       9      situation where the individual sole proprietor is

      10      being moved to the individual market.

      11             What we had discovered when that happened is,

      12      within our chambers, anywhere between 25 and

      13      90 percent of chamber revenue on that product line

      14      will be lost because of these chamber members moving

      15      to the individual market.

      16             So from a chamber's perspective, that was a

      17      revenue stream that helped chambers do their good

      18      work of promoting small businesses in the community,

      19      and the economic-development work that they do, and

      20      all the other things.

      21             So, from the chamber's perspective, this law

      22      has been a real shot in the arm as far as revenue.

      23             On the small-group side, the executive

      24      director of the exchange had mentioned she wasn't

      25      sure how many plans were canceled.







                                                                  173
       1             I just want to mention that, in our

       2      marketplace, 100 percent of all small-group plans

       3      were canceled for January 1st, because they did not

       4      comply with the essential health benefits.

       5             So, every one of our clients received a

       6      letter that their plan was being canceled.

       7             That means every single participant received

       8      a letter that their plan was gonna be canceled, and

       9      that they would be mapped to a plan that was

      10      compliant with the Affordable Care Act.

      11             When the State Legislature -- or, when the

      12      Insurance Department and the exchange created the

      13      Platinum, Silver, Bronze, and Gold plans, they

      14      created standard plans.

      15             And if you study those plans, most small

      16      businesses in this state had plans that had

      17      deductibles and coinsurance, but they also had

      18      co-pays for many items.  And those deductibles and

      19      coinsurance would only apply to certain

      20      circumstances, like hospitalization, or outpatient

      21      surgery, and all your other services were

      22      co-pay-based.

      23             When the new plans in our marketplace came

      24      out, the plans that they were going to be

      25      automatically mapped to, and that employer might







                                                                  174
       1      have had a $1,000 deductible on their plan; that

       2      $1,000 deductible only if you were hospitalized.

       3             That $1,000 deductible in the mapped plan is

       4      now in front of all the co-pays, and there are only

       5      a handful of plans by one carrier in our marketplace

       6      that has co-pays in front of the deductible.

       7             So, it created a tremendous amount of stress

       8      in the broker community to reach out to all their

       9      clients, to explain that they were being mapped to a

      10      plan, and, yes, the premium is less, but all your

      11      participants are gonna be subject to this deductible

      12      in front of their doctor co-pay.

      13             So, from our perspective, it created a

      14      tremendous amount of stress on our staff, on our

      15      brokers themselves, and, on our clients, because

      16      they didn't understand the products, they didn't

      17      understand how they worked, they didn't understand

      18      the mandates that they had to have, that they didn't

      19      necessarily need.

      20             So from our perspective, although, as

      21      mentioned before, the 12,000 people in the

      22      direct-pay market received a substantial discount on

      23      their premium, but many of the other people are

      24      gonna have higher costs, maybe a lower premium, but

      25      a lot more out-of-pocket in the plan itself in







                                                                  175
       1      cost-shares.

       2             Additionally, I think agencies and chambers,

       3      going forward, are going to be reassessing their

       4      model as to their staffing, because if we're gonna

       5      lose 25 to 90 percent of our revenue stream, we're

       6      going to have to work on our staffing as well.

       7             And, so, this has created an additional

       8      stress on the industry, to staff properly in a

       9      environment where there's more inquiries coming into

      10      the agency.

      11             I have some other notes, but I won't touch

      12      upon those because they've already been discussed.

      13             Thank you.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you, Mr. Carey.

      15             And, finally, Ms. Clarke.

      16             LACEY CLARKE:  Hi.  Thanks for inviting

      17      Freelancers Union to testify today.

      18             I'm Lacey Clarke, director of policy for

      19      Freelancers Union.

      20             Freelancers Union has been providing health

      21      insurance to New Yorkers since about 2001.

      22             For the first several years that we existed,

      23      we offered health benefits to independent workers

      24      through a portable benefits fund.  And then,

      25      eventually, we decided to start our own







                                                                  176
       1      health-insurance company, rather than simply

       2      connecting our members to others' plans.

       3             Freelancers Insurance Company (FIC) was

       4      created in 2009 as a demonstration project, with

       5      bipartisan support from the New York State

       6      Legislature.

       7             It's the first several-purpose

       8      health-insurance company to offer independent

       9      workers affordable, stable, and portable health

      10      insurance, and is wholly owned by Freelancers Union.

      11             FIC aims to provide insurance to the

      12      30 percent of the workforce -- freelancers,

      13      consultants, temps, contractors, and the

      14      self-employed -- who are excluded from traditional

      15      work-based supports.

      16             FIC covers about 25,000 New Yorkers through

      17      5 health plans designed and tailored specifically

      18      for freelancers.

      19             In 2012, we launched Freelancers Medical, an

      20      innovative patient-centered primary-care program

      21      that offers free primary care with zero-dollar

      22      co-pays for all visits, free yoga, acupuncture,

      23      medication, and other wellness classes.

      24             Enrollment has already surpassed

      25      expectations, with more than 3500 members signed up







                                                                  177
       1      after only 12 months, and we're excited to open our

       2      second location in downtown Manhattan next month.

       3             And despite this new offering, members have

       4      seen zero premium increases for two consecutive

       5      years.

       6             FIC was created in 2009 before the

       7      Affordable Care Act was enacted and greatly changed

       8      the health-care marketplace.

       9             In 2012, this Legislature recognized the

      10      potential upheaval that the ACA could cause in the

      11      individual health-care market, and wisely extended

      12      the sunset date for the demonstration project for

      13      one year, until the end of 2014, to ensure that

      14      FIC members would have a smooth transition during

      15      the first year of the health exchanges.

      16             At the end of 2012 and in early 2013, the

      17      federal government promulgated numerous rules and

      18      regulations in preparation for the ACA's

      19      implementation in 2014.

      20             As we followed the events, it became clear

      21      that several our very popular health plans would

      22      need to be altered at a great expense.

      23             Additionally, more than 70 percent of our

      24      members, most of whom are middle-income earners,

      25      would not qualify for subsidies on the exchange and







                                                                  178
       1      would see significant increases in their monthly

       2      premiums.

       3             However, thanks to the forward-thinking of

       4      Chairmen Hannon and Seward, this Legislature

       5      reaffirmed FIC's ability to continue to offer and to

       6      afford both comprehensive plans for these

       7      independent workers through the end of 2014.

       8             We are very pleased to report that FIC

       9      members have not experienced any disruption in

      10      coverage, and 97 percent of members renewed their

      11      existing coverage in December for another year.

      12             In addition to FIC, Freelancers Union also

      13      owns a health-care technology company that provides

      14      back-end services to insurance companies in several

      15      states, including New York; New Jersey, whose

      16      exchange is run by the federal government; and,

      17      Oregon, who runs their own exchange.

      18             Our experience working with both the federal

      19      and another state exchange has only highlighted the

      20      exemplary work that New York State has done in their

      21      exchange and in managing the implementation process.

      22             The New York -- an insurance company we

      23      provide consulting services for had very few delays

      24      in enrollment.  New Yorkers were able to easily

      25      enroll on their on exchange -- on exchange plans







                                                                  179
       1      from day one, and exchange staff has been

       2      well-informed and accessible throughout the process.

       3             While Freelancers Insurance Company does not

       4      currently offer health coverage on the

       5      New York State exchange, Freelancers Union is

       6      committed to ensuring that our members transition

       7      smoothly onto the exchange for 2015.

       8             Our focus in the upcoming months will be to

       9      educate our members about the exchange offerings and

      10      the system in choosing a plan that will best meet

      11      their health needs.

      12             We look forward to continuing to work with

      13      Donna Frescatore and DFS as we guide members through

      14      the enrollment process for 2015.

      15             Thanks.

      16             SENATOR SEWARD:  Well, you've had a very

      17      complete testimony.  All my questions have been

      18      answered, except, one for a -- a quick one for

      19      Ms. Clarke.

      20             You're absolutely right, you know, through

      21      legislation, you know, the Freelance Union was given

      22      another year -- the demonstration project was given

      23      another year.

      24             Have -- will anything change at the end of

      25      2014, versus the end of 2013?







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       1             LACEY CLARKE:  Well, it --

       2             SENATOR SEWARD:  Other than the fact, you

       3      know, in terms of the impact on your -- your members

       4      and subscribers?

       5             LACEY CLARKE:  Well, we -- our members are

       6      currently enrolled in our -- in FIC through the end

       7      of 2014.

       8             The demonstration project only lasts through

       9      the end of 2014, so, right now, we're -- that's --

      10      we're really involved in trying to figure out what

      11      will happen in 2015, and we're really committed to

      12      making sure that we get our members onto the

      13      exchange.

      14             But it will definitely be a different

      15      marketplace for our members in 2015.

      16             SENATOR HANNON:  Just a lot of work ahead.

      17             LACEY CLARKE:  Exactly.

      18             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, thank you very much.

      19             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you.

      20             SENATOR HANNON:  We appreciate it.

      21             SENATOR SEWARD:  The next panel is our

      22      insurers:

      23             Sean Doolan, Blue Cross/Blue Shield;

      24             Paul Macielak, Health Plan Association.

      25             SENATOR HANNON:  Good afternoon.







                                                                  181
       1             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Good afternoon.

       2             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Good afternoon, yes.

       3             SENATOR HANNON:  Who would like to go first?

       4             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Go ahead.

       5             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  All right.

       6             I guess, after having sat here this morning

       7      and listening to a lot of the comments, I mean,

       8      from, I think, our perspective on the plan

       9      perspective, everybody operated under tight

      10      timelines, and continue to operate under tight

      11      timelines.

      12             You know, plans have had a deal with major

      13      and substantial policy-form changes, rate

      14      applications, technical architecture to plug into

      15      the exchange.  And there have been bumps in the

      16      road, and we've heard about some of them.

      17             There's a whole other list of other bumps in

      18      the road that we've already had to deal with as

      19      we've proceeded.

      20             One such bump has been the federal policies

      21      that have changed at the last minute, that have

      22      bound the state exchange, which has bound plans, in

      23      terms of they're dealing with enrollments.

      24             Extended times for enrollments, extended time

      25      periods for payment of premiums, all of those







                                                                  182
       1      factors play into the ability of the plan to process

       2      the applications, to get out the cards, the premium

       3      invoices, et cetera.

       4             Today, as we sit here, we meet with the

       5      State, at the CEO level on policy once a month, we

       6      meet on legal issues once a week, operations once a

       7      week, and the technical-related issues twice a week.

       8             That's an ongoing relationship that's been

       9      going on.

      10             In terms of, from our perspective, HPA, we've

      11      always said, at the exchange, there were going to be

      12      winners and losers.

      13             And you heard a lot about that today, in

      14      terms of, you know, how it's rolled out in the

      15      marketplace.

      16             Clearly, the Healthy NY population and

      17      sole proprietors have taken hits, in terms of, what

      18      they had, to what they have today as it's rolled

      19      out.

      20             The direct-pay market has had benefits in

      21      terms of what their premiums were, to what they are

      22      now in the exchange.

      23             Affordability is and continues to be, you

      24      know, the theme that we seem to strive for, we know

      25      that's what the exchange staff is also looking for,







                                                                  183
       1      and we believe that's what the public is looking

       2      for, in terms of health insurance.

       3             Whether it's transparency; whether it's

       4      trying to address surprise balanced billing, or

       5      billing from providers Senator Golden referred to;

       6      whether it's dealing with some of the ACA taxes or

       7      HCRA taxes that we're all paying; I mean, I think

       8      affordability is a key factor.

       9             Now, that has to be juxtaposed, I think, with

      10      the tension that exists about access and choice, and

      11      we heard a lot today about out-of-network benefits.

      12             So I'm fond of saying there's no free lunch,

      13      and that I think is an example of something that you

      14      have to confront.

      15             Well, chambers, sole proprietors, Healthy NY

      16      people, are concerned about affordability and want

      17      the policies to be more affordable.

      18             You have, on the other hand, other people who

      19      want out-of-network access and choice, which are

      20      going to add costs to the policy.

      21             And that's something I think you need to

      22      reconcile.

      23             I think I'll turn it over to Sean to make

      24      some more points.

      25







                                                                  184
       1             SENATOR HANNON:  I would simply point out,

       2      the sole proprietors --

       3                  (Turns on microphone.)

       4             SENATOR HANNON:  I would point out, the sole

       5      proprietors are not saying that they got increased,

       6      but, somehow, the system was able to take care of

       7      them before; and now they're being declared

       8      individuals instead of being able to a group of two.

       9             How is it that it -- by making them

      10      individuals, the insurance companies are saving and

      11      the individuals are paying more?

      12             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  What do they mean, the

      13      companies are saving?

      14             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Did you say the

      15      companies are saving?

      16             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, you're the ones who

      17      just said it costs somebody if you make these

      18      changes.

      19             Well, you're -- if the individuals are paying

      20      more, then, obviously, the insurance companies are

      21      collecting more, so, they're benefiting.

      22             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Well, I don't

      23      necessarily see that as a benefit.

      24             SENATOR HANNON:  I would think --

      25             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  If we have to pay --







                                                                  185
       1             SENATOR HANNON:  I was just --

       2             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  -- additional taxes --

       3             SENATOR HANNON:  I was just stating the

       4      proposition that you had outlined.

       5             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Well, if we have to pay

       6      additional taxes, like the ACA taxes, that's not

       7      something that's benefiting the insurance companies,

       8      but that is being imposed on those sole proprietors.

       9             Some of the additional benefits that are

      10      mandated by the essential benefit package, that

      11      sole proprietors don't like, those aren't benefiting

      12      plans either.  They are just additional benefits

      13      that are made available to the population.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  Then you'd have no problem

      15      going back to allowing these husband and wives to be

      16      declared a group instead of being two individuals?

      17             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yea, unfortunately,

      18      that's driven by federal law.

      19             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  It's federal policy,

      20      yeah.

      21             SENATOR HANNON:  I understand that.

      22             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  No, as a matter of fact,

      23      the "sole prop" issue is probably the most

      24      perplexing, because they were hit with two things:

      25             Number one, they were moved from the group







                                                                  186
       1      market, or a peg off the group market, to the

       2      individual market.  That was driven exclusively by

       3      federal rules.

       4             The second issue is, their product selection,

       5      many sole props were in high-deductible plans.

       6             SENATOR HANNON:  Excuse me?

       7             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Many sole proprietors

       8      were in high-deductible plans.

       9             By moving them into the individual market;

      10      and, in turn, as a result of the changes to -- that

      11      were coming down from the federal government, those

      12      high-deductible products became more expensive.

      13             So, how to address it?

      14             You know, quite frankly, other than getting

      15      at the underlying cost-drivers to coverage overall,

      16      unless you had some movement from the federal

      17      government to allow them to shift back to the group

      18      market, you know, there's nothing, you know, at

      19      least on the surface, that can be done.

      20             SENATOR HANNON:  What about the fact that,

      21      last year, we allowed for the continuation of the

      22      professional employee organizations?

      23             How do those members of those differ so much

      24      from the two-member groups, in concept?

      25             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  To a great -- the concept







                                                                  187
       1      is the same, but the PPOs, and this is actually

       2      something I think that they're still waiting for

       3      federal guidance on, the change to the "association"

       4      law required, if you're a small group or an

       5      individual and you go into an association business,

       6      you're rated -- you're going to continue to be rated

       7      as a small group or as an individual.

       8             The benefit of PPOs is that they could rate

       9      them as a large group, even though there was no

      10      connection between the individual and the small

      11      group.

      12             Whether the federal law -- and that -- again,

      13      that change in state law to applicable associations

      14      was driven from the federal government.

      15             To the extent -- and I think this is, you

      16      know, clarification that's still needed from the

      17      federal government, to the extent that that same

      18      rule applies to PPOs, then, they're going to run

      19      into the exact same problem.

      20             SENATOR HANNON:  You wanted to start.

      21             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Thank you.

      22             I will just touch on a few global issues, in

      23      terms of how things have gone, and then, perhaps, we

      24      can jump into some of the individual questions.

      25             To echo Paul, you know, this -- you could not







                                                                  188
       1      underestimate --

       2             SENATOR HANNON:  What I think we failed to

       3      do, this is being webcast, and we failed to have you

       4      do one essential thing:  Identify yourselves for the

       5      people who are on the other end of the TV camera.

       6             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  He's Paul Macielak,

       7      CEO of the Health Plan Association, chairman of the

       8      board, and president.

       9             I am Sean Doolan with Hinman Straub,

      10      representing the Blue Cross plans of New York.

      11             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you.  I'm sorry.

      12             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  No, thank you.

      13             This has been a transformational period for

      14      the plans.

      15             The focus today has really been on the

      16      individual and small-group market vis-a-vis the

      17      exchange.

      18             In reality, virtually every policy, whether

      19      it be coverage policy or plan policy, whether it be

      20      actuarial, whether it be underwriting, or whether it

      21      be sales, have gone through dramatic changes and

      22      implemented in a short time period.

      23             You know, as Paul had mentioned, there have

      24      been challenges, certainly, not the least of which

      25      has been a change in the paradigm of oversight.







                                                                  189
       1             Insurance has traditionally been a

       2      state-regulated business, with the exception of

       3      ERISA or self-funded plans.

       4             Now, obviously, many of the rules are being

       5      driven by the federal government on a blanketed

       6      perspective, not taking into consideration where

       7      each individual state has been in the past or what

       8      their ground rules are today.

       9             Adapting and changing to that has been

      10      incredibly challenging, not to mention the

      11      operational issues around the exchange.

      12             Historically, the business of insurance is

      13      really between the broker, at least with small

      14      groups, the plan, and the group.

      15             Inserting the exchange into that with

      16      individuals is just simply enrollment from the

      17      individual to the plan.

      18             Inserting the exchange into that process,

      19      where the exchange is the front end of enrollment

      20      without the plan's ability to do enrollment

      21      themselves, has been, you know, not only from an

      22      IT perspective, but just operationalizing it, an

      23      incredibly challenging endeavor.

      24             And, you know, in terms of recommendations at

      25      the end, you know, perhaps there are some areas for







                                                                  190
       1      improvement there.

       2             The exchange staff, you know, certainly led

       3      by Donna, the level of collaboration to all

       4      stakeholders, you know, really is unprecedented, and

       5      has been remarkable.

       6             Paul went through, you know, the somewhat

       7      daily contacts we have with them.

       8             You know, certainly, we agree on issues as

       9      frequently as we disagree, but, the dialogue,

      10      whether it be with Donna, her staff, the DFS, and

      11      other stakeholders, you know, has been, you know,

      12      truly helpful in trying to facilitate this process.

      13             In terms of your initial question, Senator,

      14      "Has the implementation of the ACA accomplished its

      15      goal?" -- and I think Paul touched on, and the

      16      broker panel before touched on, the key issue of

      17      affordability -- I think you have to look at the

      18      shop and individual exchanges differently.

      19             Certainly, the individual exchange, simply by

      20      putting in more products and greater selection to

      21      what was historically a broken system, is an

      22      improvement.

      23             You know, that said, there were a number of

      24      assumptions that went into the price-setting

      25      process.







                                                                  191
       1             Typically, through the prior approval, there

       2      are a limited number of assumptions: utilization,

       3      trend, being the two prominent ones.

       4             This process was a little bit more

       5      speculative, so to speak, in that, there was an

       6      anticipated level of uninsured people, the young

       7      invincibles, becoming enrolled.

       8             Likewise, there was morbidity factors:  How

       9      many groups were dropping coverage, and those

      10      individuals go -- healthy individuals going into the

      11      exchange?

      12             I think it remains to be seen whether those

      13      projections will ultimately prove to be true.

      14             And as a matter of fact, you know, as we head

      15      into 2014 and 2015 rates, you know, we will be

      16      submitting -- because of the prior approval process,

      17      we will be submitting rates, you know, in the first

      18      quarter, April, perhaps May at the latest, with very

      19      limited experience to ascertain whether those

      20      assumptions were spot on, or whether the number of

      21      healthy individuals that came into the pools were

      22      either overestimated or underestimated.

      23             SENATOR HANNON:  Given the number of types of

      24      policies that have sharply decreased because of the

      25      whole nature of change --







                                                                  192
       1             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah.

       2             SENATOR HANNON:  -- should you have to submit

       3      your rates that early?

       4             Or, should you at least, on a one-time basis,

       5      be given greater time to get some experience, and

       6      then -- because, arguably, they're -- the time frame

       7      was set when there were forty, fifty thousand types

       8      of policies, many of them were almost me-toos,

       9      but, still, they don't have to look at all of them?

      10             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah, I mean, you've got

      11      two timelines.

      12             You've got the prior-approval timeline, you

      13      know, which we've talked about, which is laborious.

      14             I mean, there's a 60-day notice of proposed

      15      rates, there's a review period, and then there's an

      16      additional 60 days at the back end, prior to being

      17      implemented.

      18             You know, there's an additional time period

      19      for the department to request more time.

      20             You know, that alone is about 150- to 180-day

      21      process.

      22             Compounding things -- so that takes you, you

      23      know, at a minimum, to, you know, May or June.

      24             Compounding and accelerating that timeline is

      25      the recertification of the plans to participate in







                                                                  193
       1      the exchange, which the department and the exchange

       2      has actually given us some additional flexibility,

       3      but it's still resulting in the submission of rates,

       4      you know, in, you know, April or May.

       5             And I think that, again, the plans submit the

       6      rates, say, May 1, but they begin to develop the

       7      rates on April 1, and, it gives them, essentially,

       8      three months worth of experience to determine

       9      whether they have a healthy pool, a sick pool, and

      10      whether any of the assumptions from last year's

      11      prior-approval process were accurate or not.

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  I'm just saying, for both of

      13      those timelines, it seems to be that experience

      14      would be a great valuable asset to have for

      15      actuarial projections, for adequacy network

      16      projections, to see what type of flexibility needs

      17      to be given.  And it's -- those are self-imposed

      18      deadlines, both by the department and the exchange.

      19             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah.  Yeah, I agree,

      20      I agree.

      21             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  We --

      22             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  And one other -- I'm

      23      sorry, Paul.

      24             One other huge variable in this, is risk

      25      adjustment, which will be coming down again from the







                                                                  194
       1      federal government.

       2             There were simulations done by the

       3      department, that were somewhat controversial, and

       4      that some plans agreed with them, some plans

       5      disagreed with them.  Those, likewise, were built

       6      into the rate.

       7             That risk-adjustment model has still yet to

       8      be promulgated by -- fully promulgated by the

       9      federal government.

      10             So, again, another variable that could have a

      11      dramatic impact on premium.

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  But how could they do a risk

      13      adjustment until they know the actuarial makeup, the

      14      demographic makeup --

      15             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Exactly.

      16             SENATOR HANNON:  -- of the insured pool?

      17             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Exactly.

      18             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Only to model.  I mean,

      19      it's -- what it was based on was some assumptions.

      20             I mean, we've operated, to date, on a lot of

      21      assumptions, and that's been part of the rate

      22      setting.

      23             And while you've had a number of new plans

      24      enter into marketplace, you have had a few other

      25      plans sit on the sidelines, because I think there







                                                                  195
       1      was a fear about rates, fear about, you know, what

       2      the mix was of who was going to enroll, and what the

       3      pent-up demand was, and what some the utilization

       4      would be.

       5             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  So back to the two

       6      worlds, you have the individual market, which we

       7      talked about, which definitely has promising

       8      features.

       9             On the flip side, I think you've heard pretty

      10      loud and clear, there has not been a lot for small

      11      business in the ACA.

      12             You have additional benefits, number one,

      13      which, obviously, lead to the increased cost in

      14      coverage.

      15             You have a very narrow tax-credit band that

      16      clearly is not providing a sufficient number --

      17      incentive for businesses to participate in the

      18      exchange.

      19             Likewise, that tax credit, under federal law,

      20      lasts only two years.

      21             And so you have -- and you have additional

      22      taxes.

      23             The ACA tax, the research task, that was

      24      enacted last year.  You know, the issue about

      25      self-financing, which you talked about, or touched







                                                                  196
       1      on earlier, Senator, in terms of paying for the

       2      exchange in 2015.

       3             And going forward, to me, that is, you know,

       4      especially since there is no mandate for the

       5      small-group market, addressing the affordability of

       6      small-group coverage will be critical.

       7             The other issues, in terms of lessons

       8      learned, you know, going forward, uhm -- and I --

       9      actually, one more other issue on the shop that

      10      I think has been an impediment, that the State,

      11      actually, we disagreed with them on, and the State

      12      actually had flexibility in this regard:

      13             One of impediments to the shop is, instead of

      14      a group enrolling in the shop, or enrolling for all

      15      of their employers -- employees, rather, which was

      16      certainly the initial guidance from the federal

      17      government -- the initial guidance from the federal

      18      government is, the group could pick the metal level,

      19      but each individual employee would pick the company.

      20             So whether it be Empire, Aetna, Oxford, that

      21      complexity, which I think recognized pretty early on

      22      by the federal government, and they allowed the

      23      states to simply stick with the current process,

      24      which is, a group can enroll all of their members,

      25      not only selecting the metal tier, but the







                                                                  197
       1      individual plan.

       2             I think between the broker community and the

       3      plans, that became a pretty significant impediment

       4      to enrollment in the shop, which I think you do have

       5      the control to modify.

       6             SENATOR HANNON:  State law?  Federal law?

       7             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  State law.

       8             The federal law modified it by giving states

       9      flexibility to allow for group enrollment.

      10             The State decided to stick with individual

      11      employee selection.

      12             So they're with -- they're -- and I think,

      13      frankly, that would make the shop, you know,

      14      perhaps, going forward, a more attractive

      15      marketplace.

      16             SENATOR HANNON:  I think there needs to be a

      17      full assessment of how corporations and small

      18      corporations are going to be looking forward in

      19      2015.

      20             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Sure.

      21             SENATOR HANNON:  Because the federal

      22      government suspended part of the rules for the large

      23      corporations --

      24             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Right.

      25             SENATOR HANNON:  -- and then changed around







                                                                  198
       1      some of the rules for the small.

       2             So, if there's anything with the market,

       3      they've screwed it up.

       4             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Right.

       5             In terms of -- and this actually touches on,

       6      I think, in terms of looking forward, an area to

       7      improve, you know, the operations of the exchange,

       8      as I said, you know, the plans have had, you know,

       9      a fairly significant challenge.

      10             There have been mistakes.

      11             A lot of the front-end issues that Donna

      12      touched on, that the State experienced in October

      13      and November, both in terms of enrollment, but just

      14      consumer access to the website, you know, obviously,

      15      the plans to -- start to experience in December and

      16      January with actual enrollment.

      17             So the same high volume, not necessarily high

      18      volume in enrollment, but high volume in terms of

      19      questions, and in terms of customer service.

      20             You know, likewise, there is somewhat of a

      21      natural barrier between the actual enrollment

      22      process and the plan's role.

      23             The plan, under the current construct, has

      24      very little role in the actual enrollment of whether

      25      it be a group or an individual on the exchange.







                                                                  199
       1             That is handled exclusively by the exchange,

       2      with assistance from, primarily, the navigators, but

       3      also brokers.

       4             To the extent that there is -- the plans can

       5      play a greater role in actually facilitating

       6      enrollment, either having access to the exchange's

       7      web portal and enrolling people through the plan's

       8      web portal, or having the ability to directly enroll

       9      with the exchange.

      10             SENATOR HANNON:  Do you mean, letting the

      11      plans who have been doing enrollment for decades

      12      actually do the enrollment?

      13             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Correct.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, it seems to me, that

      15      if you're not getting a subsidy or a tax credit, or

      16      you're not going on Medicaid, there's no reason to

      17      have the exchange do the qualification and all that.

      18             Why not just go directly to a plan?

      19             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Right.

      20             It -- certainly, at a minimum, having greater

      21      visibility.

      22             I mean, one of the challenges we had in

      23      operationalizing things were, in order to get access

      24      to the exchange, you had to begin the application

      25      process.







                                                                  200
       1             So the plans, just validating logos,

       2      validating that the information is correct, they'd

       3      have to be a dummy applicant, so to speak; as

       4      opposed to having greater visibility, and to the --

       5      at least on their own information, to ensure

       6      accuracy.

       7             Again, hindsight being 20/20, I think that's

       8      something that could be looked at to be corrected,

       9      going forward.

      10             In terms of some of the individual issues

      11      that have been raised, you know, I know, earlier on,

      12      there was a question about multi-lingual

      13      participation, that I think both Senator Rivera and

      14      Senator Larkin raised.

      15             Actually, there's an obligation on the plans,

      16      to the extent that there is greater than 10 percent

      17      of a particular ethnicity, whether it be

      18      Spanish-speaking, whether it be Asian, whether it

      19      be, even in Rockland County, Yiddish or

      20      Orthodox Jewish, there is a requirement that the

      21      plans provide enrollment data for -- or, enrollment

      22      applications, as well as backup data, in that

      23      particular language.

      24             You know, likewise, a number of plans, you

      25      know, certainly Empire in the city being one of the







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       1      more prominent, has gone through an outreach to the

       2      Spanish populations in the Bronx, in Brooklyn, in

       3      Queens, to facilitate and educate them on the

       4      enrollment process.

       5             But, certainly, more can be done, and having

       6      the multi-lingual website is a big start.

       7             In terms of the networks --

       8             SENATOR HANNON:  My point on multi-lingual

       9      was, that they have information in other languages,

      10      but there's not enrollment, so that if you were to

      11      go through the enrollment process, you need to know

      12      English.

      13             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Right.

      14             No, absolutely.  Absolutely.

      15             In terms of networks, certainly a lot of

      16      lessons to be learned.

      17             There are a number of issues there.

      18             You know, in terms of network submissions,

      19      and that the networks that the plans used to apply

      20      for the exchange, many -- each plan varied.

      21             Many plans, a number of upstate plans, for

      22      example, simply use their commercial network.

      23             So a provider, not knowing whether they're on

      24      the exchange or not on the exchange, frankly, might

      25      not know, because the plan is simply using their







                                                                  202
       1      commercial network.  And, the contract that they

       2      have with the provider covers all products -- all

       3      commercial products.

       4             Some plans used a variation of their

       5      commercial network.  Some plans built an

       6      exchange-only network.

       7             Based on the contracts with providers, they

       8      were to be notified of their, either, option to

       9      accept new rates or new terms and conditions, or

      10      not.

      11             In terms of --

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, that sounds well

      13      enough, but you were here to hear Dr. McLaughlin

      14      describe, both as an individual and as a

      15      practitioner, the attempt to find out who is in

      16      which plan, when, and how to prove it.

      17             So I would think that there's a large

      18      mountain to go up right now for all the health

      19      insurers in this state, because of all of the

      20      changes to try --

      21             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah, and my only point

      22      is, I think it varied, depending on the approach

      23      that the plan had taken.

      24             You had also asked about network adequacy.

      25             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, let me go back to it.







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       1             This is, Dr. McLaughlin was the

       2      Upper East Side.  Hardly the rural part of America.

       3             In fact, if I recall, it's probably one of

       4      richest parts of America; and, still, she was pretty

       5      articulate about the amount of confusion that

       6      exists.

       7             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  It still goes back to

       8      what Sean was saying:  Depending on what model the

       9      plan pursued, it didn't matter what part of the

      10      state you were in.  It mattered what the plan model

      11      was that they pursued.

      12             That created, I think, some of confusion.

      13             SENATOR HANNON:  I know, and the problem was

      14      not the exchange.  The problem is, your memberships.

      15             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah, I think, again, you

      16      know, starting with the exchange, you know, and

      17      I think that they would acknowledge this is an area

      18      for improvement.

      19             The consumer's ability to determine the

      20      providers in each plan's network is not a single

      21      provider point-and-click methodology, as opposed to

      22      getting full visibility into the entire plan

      23      network.

      24             Likewise, from the plans' end, I think that

      25      they can and should do a better job of transparency







                                                                  204
       1      on their own web pages, in terms of which plans are

       2      in the network.

       3             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Right, but I think that

       4      was, both were a reflection of the time.

       5             The time-compressed period that plans had to

       6      submit their proposed networks, have DOH, DFS, do

       7      the review and certify, or come back with what

       8      deficiencies were to have corrected, that it was

       9      that compressed.

      10             I think that, in part, feeds to some of the

      11      confusion we're hearing about today.

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  I think there was a lot more

      13      need for the plans, and, in fact, probably the

      14      exchange, to allow people to put in their providers

      15      and find out if anybody meets them.

      16             Likewise for drugs, likewise for clinics,

      17      likewise for hospitals.

      18             It is -- the entire onus is on an incredible

      19      maze of the consumer, or potential consumer, to try

      20      to figure out who's where.

      21             But I would simply -- I would simply think,

      22      go back and listen to what Dr. McLaughlin said.

      23      That's -- it's a lot more complicated than it's ever

      24      been before.

      25             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah, and I think to







                                                                  205
       1      Paul's point, I mean, both, in the defense of the

       2      exchange operationalizing their platform and the

       3      plans developing those networks in a short

       4      time frame, and negotiating contracts in a short

       5      time frame, continues to be a work in progress.

       6             SENATOR HANNON:  This goes back to your other

       7      point:  I think there's more time needed to plan for

       8      next year.

       9             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Correct.

      10             In terms of the network adequacy review,

      11      I think you had mentioned, DFS versus DOH.

      12             In reality, today, the DOH process is far

      13      more robust and comprehensive.

      14             The DFS process, really, is limited to a

      15      fairly minimalist approach.

      16             And I think deferring it to DOH, and the

      17      DOH review process, while more cumbersome, and has

      18      actually been -- there's been a quite a bit of

      19      give-and-take between the plans.

      20             And DOH, from a consumer's perspective, in

      21      terms of determining network adequacy, was the

      22      appropriate approach.

      23             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, that may be true, but

      24      the point is, for the consumer in New York, you have

      25      a problem with adequacy of a network, you make your







                                                                  206
       1      complaint to the Department of Financial Services.

       2             What the Department of Health is doing, is

       3      simply regulating the HMOs that are Medicaid

       4      HMOs, and, that's a whole different process.

       5             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Actually, DOH determines

       6      network adequacy for commercial HMOs as well.

       7             So, they basically took that commercial HMO

       8      network-adequacy standards and imposed them on

       9      insurance products.

      10             So, again, it actually required the plans, on

      11      their insurance products that had closed networks,

      12      to raise the bar.

      13             In terms of other changes that were made,

      14      again, going from HMO, to insurance, and I think

      15      Donna had touched on this, there were a number of

      16      consumer protections that exist in the HMO market,

      17      that, as a result of the contracting with plans,

      18      have been extended to the insurance market; whether

      19      it be allowing a member to go out-of-network for

      20      emergency services.  Or, for that matter, an APO

      21      product, allowing a member to go out-of-network, to

      22      the extent that there is not an appropriate and

      23      available provider in-network to provide those

      24      services.

      25             So, incrementally, I think they tried to







                                                                  207
       1      raise the standards.

       2             Clearly, more needs to be done, especially in

       3      terms of, you know, participating providers and

       4      network adequacy.

       5             And, whether it's updating them on a more

       6      timely basis, whether it's greater transparency, you

       7      know, the key, I think, from a policymaker's

       8      perspective --

       9             SENATOR HANNON:  All of which is obviated by

      10      the fact, if they've made these skinny networks,

      11      that -- and don't allow for going outside of

      12      network, that it doesn't matter about the rules for

      13      out-of-network, and, that the "adequacy" has had a

      14      new definition.

      15             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah, and I was going to

      16      get to the out-of-network issue, so, just to segue

      17      there, you know, because, obviously, that's been a

      18      dominant theme here.

      19             Even prior to the implementation of the ACA,

      20      the marketplace has been moving away from

      21      out-of-network coverage, for two reasons:

      22             You know, number one, pure affordability.

      23             And, having out-of-network benefits

      24      regardless of which benchmark you were using,

      25      whether it's UCR, a percentage of Medicare, or a







                                                                  208
       1      plan's own fee schedule, was becoming

       2      cost-prohibitive.  And the pricing, and you see it

       3      in the large-group market as well, the pricing was

       4      really being skewed, because only those groups or

       5      individuals that were accessing, or needed to have

       6      out-of-network providers, were purchasing the

       7      coverage; thereby, driving up the price.

       8             The other issue, you know, which, frankly,

       9      I think Senator Martins talked on, and, actually,

      10      Dr. McLaughlin referenced, was the

      11      balanced-billing process; where, if you're

      12      in-network, you have a contract between the plan and

      13      the physician or the hospital, that is payment full.

      14             If you're out-of-network, the plan pays their

      15      out-of-network reimbursement rate.  Since there is

      16      no contract, the provider then turns around and

      17      balance-bills the member whatever that particular

      18      provider desires.

      19             Now, Dr. McLaughlin said that that,

      20      frankly, was, you know, an admirable process: let

      21      the provider negotiate with the consumer.

      22             Frankly, from a customer-service perspective

      23      and a public-policy perspective, I would think you'd

      24      want the member out of the middle, and not to get

      25      hit with that surprise bill.







                                                                  209
       1             You know, likewise, the example that

       2      Senator Golden walked through, unfortunately, that

       3      is a very common scenario, where you have the member

       4      go to a participating hospital, they think they're

       5      in-network.  The surgeon is a participating

       6      provider, but the anesthesiologist or some other

       7      specialist is non-par; the hidden provider.

       8             They think that they've played by the rules,

       9      and they get hit with the balance bill.

      10             Greater transparency in terms of the

      11      physician, because they'll -- should know, you know,

      12      who's providing the services.  The hospital should

      13      know which -- whether they're par or not, which

      14      plans they participate with.

      15             Greater access to consumers of which

      16      providers are par, and which are -- which plans they

      17      participate with and which they don't, is a major

      18      step in the right direction, in terms of reform,

      19      that would go a long way.

      20             You know, in terms of, you know, the mandate

      21      of having an out-of-network benefit, again, you

      22      know, with the digestion of these benefits today,

      23      and, likewise, even if you handled it through a

      24      rider type of scenario, the groups that would

      25      purchase that rider are only those groups that would







                                                                  210
       1      utilize the coverage; and that, in turn, would make

       2      it cost-prohibitive.

       3             So, from the plan's perspective, having a

       4      mandate, whether it be on the exchange or off the

       5      exchange, of an out-of-network benefit, which

       6      doesn't hold the consumer harmless, number one;

       7      which doesn't have that greater transparency and

       8      ultimately leads to increased costs; goes completely

       9      contrary to the goals that we're trying to

      10      accomplish in terms of affordability.

      11             SENATOR HANNON:  Doesn't answer the question.

      12             The -- I did put a bill in, for requiring an

      13      out-of-network rider, but without any limitation as

      14      costs.

      15             So if people really want that, is what they

      16      want to design their policy, let them pay for it.

      17             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Well, the other related

      18      issue to that is, that rider we have to get approved

      19      by the DFS division.  And I'm not sure that, you

      20      know, what would be requested, what we believe would

      21      be the market price, would get clearance through the

      22      DFS process, in terms of the prior approval.

      23             So that would be a concern, as we had seen,

      24      actually, in the other direct-pay market,

      25      particularly on the point-of-service product, what







                                                                  211
       1      some of the costs were, what some of the rate

       2      requests were, versus, what was approved.

       3             So, that, that would be a concern.

       4             SENATOR HANNON:  Good point.

       5             SENATOR SEWARD:  I had one question.

       6             And it's been an interesting discussion here.

       7      You've covered a lot of issues.

       8             But I had one question regarding the -- your

       9      view of the transfer of debt and information once,

      10      you know, someone has enrolled on the exchange and

      11      selected a plan, that the delay in getting the

      12      verification and the cards and ID numbers out, you

      13      know, we've run into many, many examples of where

      14      that has been a great delay.

      15             And, of course, the premium payment also.

      16             How -- how prompt has the State been in terms

      17      of providing the plans with information, in terms of

      18      who has enrolled in their plans; and, thus, you

      19      start the process for billing and setting up the

      20      account?

      21             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah, I mean, I would say

      22      in a condensed time period, you know, they have done

      23      a good job.

      24             Part of the issue was, you know, each plan

      25      needed to go through a testing process, an IT







                                                                  212
       1      testing process, to make sure that the enrollment

       2      fields and the actual enrollment, on what they call

       3      the "834 form," matches up with the plan's process.

       4             They went through that process and

       5      standardizing it all amongst all of the plans.

       6             That, obviously, was in a very short time

       7      period.

       8             The transfer of the files began, you know,

       9      roughly, in December.  It went through December.

      10             So, in a very tight time frame, sure, they

      11      met all their milestones, but then it made it very

      12      difficult for the plans to turn around and meet

      13      their milestones.

      14             And, you know, that being said, the plans

      15      have had challenges.

      16             You know, the way the process is unfolding,

      17      is that the plan gets the enrollment, they confirm

      18      enrollment, and then they send out a bill.

      19             They send out a bill, they get premium

      20      payment back.  The member, at that point, is

      21      technically enrolled, but doesn't have an ID card.

      22             You know, typically, this happens in, you

      23      know, November -- October, November, and December,

      24      so by the time January 1 rolls around, they've got

      25      the card in hand.







                                                                  213
       1             Here, we're trying to do everything almost

       2      simultaneously.

       3             To adjust to that and address that issue, the

       4      plans have done a couple of different things.

       5             Number one, given consumers the ability to

       6      download a temporary ID card off the web;

       7             And, number two, give providers -- and this

       8      actually came up on the provider panel, give

       9      providers access to their provider web portal with

      10      the plan, to determine whether an individual is

      11      enrolled or not.

      12             That's the concept.

      13             Obviously, there are a lot of challenges.

      14             You know, when you have thousands of people

      15      trying to download temporary ID cards, you run into

      16      bumps.

      17             I think the fact that all the invoices, to

      18      Donna's point, have gone out by the end of last

      19      week, the process should start to improve.

      20             We still have challenges ahead, though.

      21             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  And I would just echo

      22      what John said, but I think the data flow from the

      23      State to the plans, really, was as good as they

      24      could do, in terms of the bulk of it.

      25             As we went through the process, and we would







                                                                  214
       1      see in our weekly calls, we would see glitches, and

       2      you would see, you know, a field that wasn't

       3      identified, or a particular family status that would

       4      have knocked somebody out of coverage, so the 834

       5      wouldn't have been complete or would have been

       6      rejected.

       7             Those type of things came up, and we continue

       8      to work through those kind of bumps.

       9             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  Yeah, and, obviously, as

      10      the federal rules changed, you know, in December,

      11      you know, that threw an additional monkey wrench in

      12      resources.

      13             And the perfect example, is this ability to

      14      purchase catastrophic coverage --

      15             PAUL MACIELAK, ESQ.:  Right.

      16             SEAN DOOLAN, ESQ.:  -- you know, which came

      17      down from the federal government.

      18             The only catastrophic policy available is on

      19      exchange.

      20             And as I mentioned earlier, since the plans

      21      have no ability to enroll, they pointed to the

      22      exchange to facilitate enrollment.

      23             While the exchange needed to verify whether

      24      the individual was getting a federal waiver, and got

      25      it punted back to the plans, and then the plans,







                                                                  215
       1      ultimately, are now, at least in this limited

       2      circumstance, are allowed the ability to enroll

       3      based on this.

       4             But this all went down, you know, the last

       5      ten days of the year.  And, to operationalize it

       6      was, obviously, challenging.

       7             SENATOR HANNON:  Yeah.

       8             SENATOR SEWARD:  Thank you.

       9             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you very much.

      10             SENATOR SEWARD:  Our final panel, on public

      11      health advocates and insurers:

      12             Elisabeth Benjamin, who's the vice president

      13      of health initiatives at Community Service Society

      14      of New York;

      15             James Lytle, Coalition of the New York State

      16      Public Health Plans;

      17             And, Mark Scherzer, health plan -- excuse me,

      18      Health Care for All New York/New Yorkers for

      19      Accessible Health Coverage.

      20             We're going to ask Jim Lytle to go first.

      21             JAMES LYTLE, ESQ.:  All right.

      22             Well -- and I will be very brief.

      23             I think my client sort of bridges the

      24      two last panels.  They are the Coalition of

      25      New York State Public Health Plans, which are the







                                                                  216
       1      Medicaid mainstream plans in the state,

       2      not-for-profit provider-sponsored plans, responsible

       3      for enrolling 2.7 million people in the Medicaid

       4      program.

       5             Four of the plans in our coalition made the

       6      decision to become active participants on the

       7      exchange, which we felt was extremely important,

       8      particularly for those individuals who may be

       9      transitioning, from time to time, from Medicaid to

      10      commercial insurance.  And these four plans are now

      11      part of the exchange, including some of the plans

      12      that have been referenced earlier today:  Fidelis,

      13      Health First, and others.

      14             The -- how successful they've been on the

      15      exchange remains to be seen.

      16             Today's "Crain's Health Pulse" has more data

      17      than I've seen, but, Metro Plus, the city health and

      18      hospitals corporation plan reports about

      19      23,000 individuals have enrolled in their plan

      20      through the exchange.

      21             There are -- many of the issues that the

      22      insurers just discussed are shared by the plans that

      23      we represent.

      24             It was, I suppose, in some ways, an even

      25      greater challenge for some of the plans in our







                                                                  217
       1      coalition, because this was the first time they ever

       2      had to submit premium proposals, and go through this

       3      sort of more commercial side of selling insurance

       4      than they had previously done in providing Medicaid

       5      managed care, Family Health Plus, and children --

       6      Child Health Plus insurance.

       7             One of the things that the plans are

       8      particularly proud of is their experience in

       9      facilitating enrollment, in helping folks navigate

      10      their way into health insurance, which they've done

      11      for decades, or almost decades.

      12             And, on the Medicaid side, they're pleased

      13      that the State continues to believe in the

      14      facilitated enrollment program, and the plans have

      15      used their resources and their experience,

      16      particularly in reaching out to populations that

      17      are -- have been more vulnerable and less capable of

      18      accessing health care, to try to make sure that,

      19      whether it's language barriers or other barriers,

      20      that information was provided as much as possible.

      21             I would note, in comments of one of the

      22      individuals from a small business who was worried

      23      about their Fidelis coverage of one of their

      24      employees, I think there's a presumption that the --

      25      those plans that have historically provided Medicaid







                                                                  218
       1      coverage are -- present networks or present an array

       2      of services to the people who are enrolled in their

       3      plans, that are somehow less than what they may find

       4      in the commercial market.

       5             They're subject to the same tests, subject to

       6      the same assessments, by the Department of Health,

       7      as Sean was just testifying.

       8             And, I think that sort of a best-kept secret

       9      in New York is going to be how robust some of these

      10      Medicaid managed-care plans, or historic

      11      Medicaid-plans networks, actually are.

      12             We appreciate there are issues about

      13      out-of-network coverage.

      14             I know that the Senator has scheduled another

      15      hearing on that subject.

      16             I think, in general, we think it's a little

      17      too soon to tell exactly how significant those

      18      barriers may be, but, it is something, particularly

      19      the provider-sponsored plans are sensitive to and

      20      are interested in exploring further with you.

      21             We -- one of the points that you made on the

      22      hearing announcement was the importance of access to

      23      primary care, and whether we have a primary-care

      24      infrastructure robust enough to meet the needs of

      25      the exchange.







                                                                  219
       1             We pride ourselves, the plans do, on their

       2      ability to build strong primary care networks,

       3      relying on the historic primary-care infrastructure

       4      of the state, many of whom were founded by community

       5      health centers.

       6             And -- but, we continue to work with the

       7      State on issues like patient-centered medical homes

       8      and health homes, to build an even stronger

       9      primary-care infrastructure.

      10             And with that I'll let the -- my consumer

      11      colleagues take it from there.

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  You talked so slow.

      13             JAMES LYTLE, ESQ.:  I'm sorry?  I talk so

      14      slow?

      15             I was trying to see if I could actually be

      16      briefer than Mr. Doolan, so, I was doing my best.

      17             SENATOR HANNON:  Now, now for a real

      18      slow-talker.

      19             Ms. Benjamin.

      20             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Sure.

      21             First of all, I want to thank you both very

      22      much for letting me come and testify -- or, inviting

      23      me to testify today.

      24             Thank you, Senator Seward.

      25             Thank you, Senator Hannon.







                                                                  220
       1             I also really want to thank the staff of the

       2      exchange, and, actually, the larger health-delivery

       3      community.

       4             I think the plans, the providers, the docs,

       5      we've all -- the consumers, we've all really tried

       6      to pull together and make this process, this very,

       7      very significant transition, work as best as

       8      possible for the consumers, and the State of

       9      New York, along with elected officials.

      10             And, it's been a really exciting, and

      11      sometimes crazy-making period, but, it's been

      12      really, you know, a real honor to be part of this

      13      whole process.

      14             And I think it's a real testament to how hard

      15      we all are trying to work and communicate with each

      16      other, that it has gone as smoothly for New York.

      17             I think probably smoother in New York than

      18      anywhere else in the country.

      19             And, you know, there's a lot of great people

      20      all really trying to pull together.

      21             SENATOR HANNON:  As incredible as it seems,

      22      I read this morning, that there is one exchange,

      23      maybe there's more, in the nation that's not even

      24      open yet.

      25             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Yeah.  Vermont is not







                                                                  221
       1      doing well, as I understand it from my colleagues

       2      there.

       3             You know, Oregon is still having a tough

       4      time.

       5             It's really troublesome.

       6             But, New York is not -- I mean, really,

       7      New York has an exemplary exchange.  And, especially

       8      because we do this one-stop shopping that I think

       9      Donna was trying to talk about.

      10             You know, we really are trying to do small

      11      group, and public insurance, and the qualified

      12      health plans, all in one house.

      13             And from the consumers' perspective, that's

      14      incredibly helpful, because we do have consumers

      15      that are trying to sort through which bucket they

      16      should be following -- falling in, and our exchange

      17      actually does make it very easy to figure that out.

      18             But, I'll just try to be brief.

      19             You know, Community Services Society, one of

      20      these old philanthropies, has been around for many,

      21      many years.  170 years in New York.

      22             We both do -- we have the largest state

      23      navigator program.  We're in 61 out of 62 counties

      24      through our network of 38 community-based

      25      organizations and chambers of commerce and







                                                                  222
       1      business-serving groups.

       2             It's a robust network, we're really proud of

       3      it.

       4             We also -- so that's for our enrollment

       5      services, but we also work to help people,

       6      post eligibility, post enrollment, through the state

       7      Consumer Assistance Program, our community

       8      health-advocates program, try to navigate when

       9      glitches do arrive, after having been enrolled in

      10      coverage.

      11             So, I'd like to talk about both of those

      12      programs, super briefly, because I know you guys, I

      13      can't believe you're still sitting there,

      14      Senator Seward.

      15             My hat's off to you.

      16             But, anyway, so, I'll go fast.

      17             I noticed there were some questions in the

      18      hearing about:  "What are navigators?"  And, "How is

      19      it working?"

      20             Navigators, under the Affordable Care Act,

      21      are designed to sort of be distinct from brokers in

      22      the sense that, we're neutral.  We do not receive

      23      commissions from carriers.

      24             I would say that's our biggest distinction.

      25             We are supposed to be culturally competent.







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       1      We're supposed to have many multi-lingual capacity.

       2             I think the idea was, that we would really be

       3      sort of local trusted groups.

       4             And I think, in New York, we've really

       5      achieved that.  There are 48 lead navigator

       6      agencies.

       7             So, like me, I have 47 lead agencies that are

       8      companions.

       9             Under my network, I have another 38 chambers

      10      and community-based groups.

      11             So, we really do try to be in all communities

      12      in the state of New York.

      13             And, I'm pleased to report, and maybe Donna

      14      touched upon this, there are at least two navigator

      15      groups in every single county of New York State,

      16      with 572 full-time equivalent-trained navigators.

      17             We've all gone through three-day intensive

      18      trainings.  We're pretty -- you know, on a variety

      19      of topics.

      20             You know, privacy is security.  I think

      21      you've touched about that, is a very important part

      22      of our training.

      23             In order to -- I mean, I can talk about all

      24      the protections in the exchange itself, to make sure

      25      that our -- you know, anything we have access to is







                                                                  224
       1      kept very secure.

       2             And, I can get into that if you want to.

       3             The navigators are really helpful in rural

       4      communities where, you know, you only have dial-up.

       5      A navigator group can come in and really help people

       6      that are in rural areas.

       7             A lot of us are former facilitated enrollers.

       8      We're really, really comfortable at working people

       9      through eligibility systems.

      10             And, you know, I can go through our

      11      activities, but I'm going to try to be short because

      12      I'm cognizant of time.

      13             I think the importance of navigators is not

      14      to be underestimated in the wake of a recent

      15      "Health Affairs" article that came out two weeks --

      16      about a month ago, but it's in this month's

      17      "Health Affairs" article, that says, 60 percent of

      18      Americans do not understand basic insurance

      19      concepts.

      20             We're talking about deductibles,

      21      co-insurance, co-payments.

      22             And navigators really are there to help

      23      people understand:

      24             What's in the net -- what's a net --

      25      in-network?







                                                                  225
       1             What's out-of-network?

       2             You know, what's in a formulary?

       3             How do co-payments work?

       4             What are these tiers?

       5             Cost-sharings:  How a cost-sharing reduction

       6      can actually be sort of like a -- I like to think of

       7      it as an upgrade.  An airline upgrade.

       8             So, kind of walking through these concepts

       9      with people.

      10             And, you know, after we help enroll people,

      11      they're incredibly and intensely gratified.

      12             We had one woman say, you know:  Health

      13      care's what I wanted for coverage, and I have it.

      14             And, I have so many stories of people that

      15      have -- we have helped enroll in coverage, that are

      16      so very, very pleased to have it, and really feel

      17      like the New York State of Health has offered them

      18      an extraordinary option.

      19             I think, just turning -- pivoting for a

      20      second, the Community Service Society, along with

      21      our partners at the Medicare Rights Center,

      22      Empire Justice Center, and the Legal Aid Society,

      23      have administered, traditionally, the state

      24      Consumer Assistance Program for the last

      25      three years, under Section 1002 of the Affordable







                                                                  226
       1      Care Act.

       2             Thank you very much, in the past, you all

       3      have helped us secure dry appropriations, so that

       4      when federal consumer-assistance program funding has

       5      come through, we've been able to access that.

       6             And, I would just encourage you all to

       7      continue to find a sustainable source of funding for

       8      that program.

       9             We are experiencing boomerang clients;

      10      clients who, after enrollment, come back and have

      11      questions, and need help kind of getting through

      12      their new systems of care.

      13             It is a new system.

      14             People need help getting through it.

      15             They need help with prior approval, they

      16      need -- or, prior authorization.

      17             They need help with, you know, random bills.

      18             They need help, you know, as they sort of get

      19      used to coverage.

      20             And, I would really encourage you all to

      21      continue your support in the past for that program.

      22             It's an exciting program.

      23             At its height, we were able to serve

      24      65,000 consumers a year.

      25             I know, for the help line, we run the







                                                                  227
       1      help-line component of that Consumer Assistance

       2      Program, and our call volume has gone up, from

       3      around 125 calls a week, to over 600 calls a week,

       4      and we are struggling, with a cobbling together, you

       5      know, attorneys, paralegals, and a lot of volunteers

       6      that we train to handle that call volume.

       7             So, your continued support would be

       8      incredibly, you know, well received from our end.

       9             I can answer more questions if you want, but

      10      I was trying to be brief, because I know you guys

      11      have been here for a while.

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  Earlier today,

      13      Senator Larkin was talking about finding out the

      14      navigator in his -- one of his counties.

      15             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Uh-huh.

      16             SENATOR HANNON:  So I just, while you were

      17      talking, and I didn't have much time, because you

      18      talked fast --

      19             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  I'm sorry.

      20             SENATOR HANNON:  -- I went to the state

      21      health site, and looked -- I started to look for

      22      navigators, and to see if I could find out a

      23      navigator in my home county.

      24             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Nassau.

      25             SENATOR HANNON:  I couldn't find it.







                                                                  228
       1             I did find out there's an application process

       2      to become a navigator.

       3             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  You mean on the state

       4      website?  I'm surprised.

       5             SENATOR HANNON:  I'm on the state website.

       6             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Oh, well, I mean, I know

       7      that --

       8             SENATOR HANNON:  Then I went to the "Search,"

       9      and I went to search for "navigators," I came back

      10      to what I already had.

      11             Then I went to the "Search," "Nassau County

      12      Navigators" and it just stopped.

      13             So, the point is, I'm Joe Jones.  I'm in the

      14      county of Suffolk.  I'm interested.  I can't figure

      15      it out.  So, where do I go to find a navigator, and

      16      how do I access the list of navigators?

      17             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Sure.

      18             You go onto website, you're there now, it

      19      says "Get Help."  There's a "Get Help" button.

      20             And then you can -- you'll be able to get --

      21      you type in, there's a "search" function, by county.

      22             I've done it a lot, 'cause I, you know, have

      23      to help clients select myself, actually, as a

      24      navigator.

      25             I personally have done over 65 enrollments in







                                                                  229
       1      the last, 2, 2 1/2 months.  And, it's been really

       2      fun to kind of do the process with people.

       3             And exciting, actually.

       4             I mean, to be able to get people coverage has

       5      been sort of the --

       6             SENATOR SEWARD:  You mean, after the hearing,

       7      you'll be able to help --

       8             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Yeah, I'll do it.

       9             I mean, it's really -- you can appoint me,

      10      Kemp.  I can be your navigator.

      11                  [Laughter.]

      12             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  But it is doable.

      13             And then, also, as you're going there through

      14      the application, you can stop, on the left-hand

      15      side, it says "Get a Navigator," and you can go that

      16      way, too, if you're doing --

      17             I mean, I wish I had -- I can show you on my

      18      iPad, afterwards.

      19             Kemp?

      20             Senator Hannon?

      21             We've lost him.

      22             SENATOR HANNON:  So, three times I've put in

      23      the search for "navigator."  The first two --

      24             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Not the "Search"

      25      function.







                                                                  230
       1             It says -- when you're on the home page, it

       2      says "Get Help."

       3             Do you see that?

       4             SENATOR HANNON:  No, it's -- yeah, but

       5      there's a "Search" function.

       6             What would do you -- what would you do with a

       7      "Search" function, ignore it?

       8             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Well, I think --

       9             SENATOR HANNON:  So I push -- the third time

      10      I pushed "navigator," I got, it does show you,

      11      someplace, there's site locations for New York State

      12      Health, and it also got me to the DEC navigator.

      13             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Okay, no, no.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  And it got me to the

      15      New York City Department of Health and Mental

      16      Hygiene.

      17             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  But you're in the -- can

      18      you just go back to the home page?

      19             If you go to the home page, and it says,

      20      "Individuals and Families," you click on that, and

      21      then it says "Get Help."

      22             SENATOR HANNON:  I do websites a lot.

      23             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Okay.

      24             SENATOR HANNON:  I buy a lot of things.

      25             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Uh-huh.







                                                                  231
       1             SENATOR HANNON:  It's not a great website.

       2             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  You know, I would

       3      disagree.

       4             I mean, because, I think --

       5             SENATOR HANNON:  The point is, there's no

       6      list.

       7             Why can't there be a list of navigator, by

       8      county?

       9             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  I think there is a list

      10      of navigator, by county, but I will show it to you.

      11             It's hard to describe without knowing exactly

      12      where you are.

      13             But, if you go under "Individual" -- on the

      14      home page, you go to "Individuals and Families," it

      15      says "Get Help."  There's a little blue box in the

      16      middle of the page.  It's pretty prominent.

      17             SENATOR HANNON:  You know, I saw it before,

      18      but why would you have "Search," and then

      19      "Get Help"?

      20             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  I mean, I think -- well,

      21      you know, I don't design websites, so...

      22             I would suggest that you talk to the exchange

      23      about --

      24             SENATOR HANNON:  And under "Get Help," it

      25      says "Site Locations"; but why have "Search"?







                                                                  232
       1             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  I'm sorry?

       2             SENATOR HANNON:  It says -- yes, I can see

       3      now that it came up "Navigator Site Locations."

       4             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  So you got it?

       5             SENATOR HANNON:  And then you gotta go to

       6      another page to find out lists.

       7             It's still clunky.

       8             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Yeah.

       9             SENATOR HANNON:  It's still clunky.

      10             You know?

      11             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  I mean, I think

      12      everybody was working really fast to get it up, and

      13      it's -- you know, it's a lot to do on a little time.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  All right.

      15             SENATOR SEWARD:  Mark?

      16             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  Thank you,

      17      Senator Hannon and Senator Seward for the

      18      invitation.

      19             I'm not going spend your precious time

      20      echoing everything Elisabeth said, except to say,

      21      I echo everything Elisabeth said about how

      22      wonderfully the exchange staff had performed, and

      23      the other regulatory agencies, and the stakeholders,

      24      working together to make this work.

      25             I'm talking on behalf of Health Care for All







                                                                  233
       1      New York, which is a -- represents over

       2      160 organizations.

       3             We're dedicated to winning quality,

       4      affordable health coverage for all in New York, and

       5      we've been very anxious to see the ACA

       6      implementation work smoothly.

       7             We talked about affordability earlier.

       8             We're completely convinced that, certainly,

       9      was -- within the design of the ACA, that those who

      10      would be most helped with affordability are at the

      11      lowest end, above Medicaid, on the income scale.

      12      And we know they've been the ones who are -- been

      13      most likely to be uninsured, because of cost

      14      considerations.

      15             They're the ones who are certainly going to

      16      see a lot of benefit.

      17             We have talked a lot today about the, maybe,

      18      decreased premiums but increased cost-sharing, and,

      19      whether that really is an improvement in

      20      affordability.

      21             I think one thing we haven't focus on at all,

      22      and we ought to acknowledge, is that the ACA builds

      23      in an out-of-pocket maximum into all policies, that

      24      includes your co-payments, something that never

      25      really existed before.







                                                                  234
       1             So, someone who's a big user of health care,

       2      every time they went to the specialist it would be a

       3      $50 co-pay, $50 co-pay, $50 co-pay.  Even if you

       4      went every day, it never stopped.

       5             That -- now it stops.  Now there is an

       6      out-of-pocket maximum, which protects people at the

       7      back end who face serious health conditions.

       8             That's an element of affordability that is a

       9      tremendous improvement, from the standpoint of

      10      people who face big medical bills.

      11             I'm -- I heard, with great interest, the

      12      person from Kwik-Kut Manufacturing earlier, though,

      13      who talked about how she was very concerned, that if

      14      she had bought a tax-credit policy as a group, that

      15      her employees still could not afford their

      16      50 percent of even a small premium at the level of

      17      people who are earning sixteen, seventeen thousand

      18      dollars a year.

      19             She's similarly concerned about them going

      20      into the exchange, because, can they afford a

      21      $100-a-month premium that they'll be asked to pay,

      22      along -- you know, that they haven't been asked to

      23      pay in the past?

      24             And we recognize, fully, that that's a

      25      significant issue of affordability for people in







                                                                  235
       1      that income bracket.

       2             We think the State does have an excellent

       3      remedy for the affordability in that -- from that

       4      perspective; and that is to enact the basic health

       5      plan, which we urge you strongly to consider, which

       6      would enable coverage for people between 138 and

       7      200 percent of poverty level.

       8             It would, actually, likely save the State

       9      money because it would bring in federal funds for

      10      certain classes of immigrants that the State has

      11      been paying for, of a State-only money, to date.

      12             And, it would put people in the -- in that

      13      income bracket, that -- those Kwik-Kut employees, in

      14      a no-premium and very low co-payment situation.

      15             That's a way to address affordability that's

      16      well within your discretion to do, and we strongly

      17      urge your consideration for doing it.

      18             We think there -- we've heard a lot about

      19      transitional enrollment problems that need to be

      20      addressed, today.

      21             And, Senator Hannon, I think you pointed out

      22      earlier, a lot of those are not really problems of

      23      the exchange, or state officials.  They're problems

      24      at the plans.

      25             And we think that there are -- you know, we







                                                                  236
       1      could talk a lot about specific remedies for

       2      different things, like billing, and whatever, but we

       3      strongly suggest that plans be required to set up

       4      some point people who have to respond immediately to

       5      these consumer problems of, say, identifying whether

       6      you're in the plan or not, immediately.

       7             We also would like to see a remediation

       8      program enacted.

       9             So, for people who have received misadvice,

      10      very often, insurance-company employees, about what

      11      they have the right to enroll in and what they don't

      12      have the right to enroll in, if they can show that

      13      they're in the -- ended up in the wrong place

      14      because of that misadvice, there's some retroactive

      15      correction system in place for them to take

      16      advantage of.

      17             I've -- I'll rely on my written testimony for

      18      the rest of what I had to say, except for going into

      19      some detail on the two topics that have most

      20      consumed us this morning:  Sole proprietor -- the

      21      sole-proprietor coverage, and the issue,

      22      out-of-network coverage, which are closely

      23      interrelated.

      24             I think I come at this from a slightly

      25      different perspective regarding the sole







                                                                  237
       1      proprietors, because we've heard a lot to suggest

       2      that there's something unfair about treating

       3      sole proprietors as individuals rather than as

       4      businesses.

       5             And while there be issues about the

       6      two-person firm, that happen to be married to one

       7      another, not qualifying as a small group, it's

       8      really hard for me to see why it's unfair for an

       9      individual who happens to have a business, being

      10      treated very differently from an individual who, for

      11      example, may once have had a business, but has

      12      become disabled by illness and no longer can operate

      13      that business.

      14             Why is it unfair to put those together as

      15      individuals in a market, and not -- not -- and treat

      16      them differently from small groups, if you have

      17      those two categories of coverage?

      18             And, I'm going to come back to that, "if you

      19      have those two categories of coverage," because

      20      I think it's important --

      21             SENATOR HANNON:  There's -- because the

      22      answer is -- "Why?" -- is because we, earlier this

      23      year, ratified the PEOs, which allow individuals

      24      to join these organizations.

      25             And, conceptually, I don't know the







                                                                  238
       1      difference between individuals in those

       2      organizations, and the individuals who were part of

       3      the two-person group.

       4             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  Well, and I think --

       5      but you -- Senator Hannon, I think the question is:

       6      Why are any of these individuals different from any

       7      other individuals?

       8             I think you could view our traditional

       9      approach to the sole-proprietor coverage as having

      10      provided artificial price protection to

      11      sole proprietors who were pegged at 15 percent above

      12      the group rate, no matter what the sole proprietor

      13      experience was.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  And that gets you into the

      15      philosophy of, why does anybody get anything less

      16      than total equality?

      17             But --

      18             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  Well, and that's the --

      19      I think that's exciting [unintelligible] --

      20             SENATOR HANNON:  -- [unintelligible] that

      21      people with risky behaviors should not be getting

      22      away with the same time type of premium that people

      23      who lead exemplary, healthy lives.

      24             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  But -- well, we're not

      25      necessarily talking about whether people who have







                                                                  239
       1      cancer, or whatever, have led risky lives.

       2             Sometimes it's just the luck of the draw

       3      whether you get ill or not.

       4             SENATOR HANNON:  I'm not going to name them,

       5      but, those -- that's an illness.

       6             There are people who have risky behaviors who

       7      endanger themselves; and, therefore, greater medical

       8      costs.

       9             And, should everybody else be subsiding them?

      10             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  Okay, well, I --

      11      let's -- I think that's a big philosophical

      12      question.

      13             I'd like to look at a practical solution to

      14      the problem of sole proprietors, which is within our

      15      grasp.

      16             I would disagree with Dan Colacino who said

      17      earlier that you could roll back the practice in

      18      New York to define "sole proprietors" as businesses

      19      rather than individuals.

      20             I think the ACA dictates they must be viewed

      21      as individuals.

      22             But I think what we can do is --

      23             SENATOR HANNON:  There are ways that you can

      24      do it.

      25             I mean, we were -- we looked at the







                                                                  240
       1      freelancers, and thought that that was unfair to

       2      pull the rug out from under that group.

       3             So, yet, we allowed the others to have rug

       4      pulled out from under that group.

       5             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  I -- we have two --

       6             SENATOR HANNON:  So the point is, how do you

       7      go forward and try to find things for people?

       8             And then there's the other part of it is:

       9      Will the people who want to pay, now that they're

      10      single, find something they -- that's worthwhile of

      11      their purchase?

      12             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  And I think we need to

      13      talk about both of those issues, as opposed to price

      14      and the out-of-network access.  And they're both

      15      solvable, we believe.

      16             The "price issue," the fair way to resolve

      17      it, we believe, and which something we've advocated

      18      for for several years now, is merging the individual

      19      and small-group markets, which the ACA permits

      20      states to do.  That's absolutely within your purview

      21      to do.

      22             And, it's something that Massachusetts did as

      23      part of its reform.  For risk purposes, it has

      24      merged the two markets.

      25             That way, is it a question of:  Whether







                                                                  241
       1      you're a two-person firm or a one-person firm?  Is

       2      it, whether you're a firm or not a firm?

       3             It all becomes irrelevant.  Everyone is in

       4      the same risk pool.

       5             Merging the markets is, we think, the

       6      solution to fairness in pricing without ping-ponging

       7      the sole proprietors back and forth between the

       8      high-cost individual market and the low-cost group

       9      market.

      10             That seems to me to be somewhat intuitive,

      11      that we can average them out, by -- and not have any

      12      questions of what's fair and what's not, by just

      13      saying everyone's in the same pool.

      14             With respect to out-of-network coverage,

      15      first of all, I think we should recognize that there

      16      is nothing in the ACA that dictated that New York

      17      had to abolish its requirement that plans offer

      18      out-of-network coverage to individuals.

      19             One of the great advantages of having

      20      colleges with winter break, is that I've had a

      21      wonderful intern with me for the last week and a

      22      half, Alec Tevevo [ph.] from Haverford College, who

      23      I tasked with surveying the other states and what's

      24      available in the individual markets.

      25             And a copy of his report is annexed to my







                                                                  242
       1      testimony here.

       2             He found with relative ease, that individual

       3      coverage with out-of-network benefits is relatively

       4      available in 47 states and the District of Columbia.

       5             It's only New York, New Hampshire, and, we

       6      think Massachusetts, although we're not sure, that

       7      don't have that available to individuals.

       8             So, there is nothing in the ACA that says

       9      that you can't have out-of-network coverage in the

      10      individual market.

      11             And, Senator Hannon --

      12             SENATOR HANNON:  Okay, but, I agree, and

      13      I know there's not there.

      14             It's the tendency to -- two things:  Save

      15      costs, and, to try to go after people who were

      16      making some outrageous billing under out-of-network.

      17             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  Well, and you have to

      18      view, first of all, I mean, there's two separate

      19      questions here, because the question of

      20      out-of-network surprise bills is something you need

      21      to deal with with general legislation.

      22             That's something that people are, you know,

      23      not protected from, even though, for example, we

      24      have the exchange negotiating with plans, to say, if

      25      someone doesn't have an adequate expert in-network,







                                                                  243
       1      they get to go out-of-network for it.

       2             You're right, that could be an elusory

       3      protection, both, because you have to fight your

       4      plan; but also because, if you're in the EPO market

       5      outside the exchange, you don't have that protection

       6      still.

       7             There are a lot of -- there are millions of

       8      people in the state who don't have that protection,

       9      no matter what you do in the context of the

      10      exchange, or the implementation of the

      11      Affordable Care Act.

      12             That's just a question of state law that the

      13      Legislature needs to resolve.

      14             SENATOR HANNON:  Just a question.

      15             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  Just a question.

      16                  [Laughter.]

      17             MARK SCHERZER, ESQ.:  And we think, that

      18      Assemblymember Cahill actually has some interesting

      19      thoughts he's been given to, how to set a price

      20      benchmark, that we think may -- we -- may be able to

      21      sort of thread the needle between where the plans

      22      are and where the doctors are on what the cost ought

      23      to be when people are stuck with surprise

      24      out-of-network bills, and that has to be arbitrated.

      25             You're absolutely right, Senator Hannon,







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       1      though, that the price on a rider can be separately

       2      set, so that it's a voluntary thing.  It's not going

       3      to affect the base price within the market if you do

       4      require that that be offered.

       5             I think the other issue that guided the

       6      decision not to have out-of-network coverage in our

       7      new market, was the desire to get the PHSPs into

       8      the marketplace -- into the exchange marketplace,

       9      and, the concern of the health plans, that if the

      10      PHSPs were in, and they didn't know how to do

      11      out-of-network coverage, and they didn't have to do

      12      out-of-network coverage, then the health insurers

      13      would be sort of the magnets for the adverse risk

      14      that wanted to buy the out-of-network coverage.

      15             We think the resolution there is two-fold:

      16             One is, you give a transitional period to the

      17      PHSPs, to learn how to do the out-of-network

      18      coverage;

      19             And, second, that you do more robust risk

      20      adjustment in the meantime so that nobody gets stuck

      21      with disproportionate risk.

      22             For the sole proprietors who, in the

      23      immediate term, have lost out-of-network coverage

      24      that they had, and can't replace it, you have an

      25      easy fix in the short term.







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       1             The easy fix is, that, in order to protect

       2      the individuals in the direct-pay market, who had

       3      out-of-network coverage, and were about to lose it

       4      at the end of last session, you enacted a law that

       5      grandfathered them, allowed them to buy a rider on a

       6      Platinum plan, in the out-of-network --

       7      out-of-exchange marketplace.

       8             You could allow the sole proprietors who are

       9      now going into the individual market to buy that

      10      very same pre-existing product.

      11             There's no, like, startup effort here

      12      required.  It's there; just allow them to buy it,

      13      too.

      14             That would be a quick fix for those who are

      15      losing coverage right now.

      16             The longer-term bill, along the lines that

      17      you have proposed, we think is a very good way to

      18      go.

      19             There may need to be, again, issues

      20      addressing what -- 'cause you're, as I understand

      21      6207, it addresses just the Article 43s and the

      22      Article 32s.

      23             There may be other categories that need to be

      24      transitioned into that in order to make it work in a

      25      fair way.







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       1             So, I think that there needs to be

       2      consideration given there.

       3             But, we think the fix is, to a lot of these

       4      problems, are within your legislative control, and,

       5      we welcome the chance to discuss them with you

       6      further.

       7             SENATOR HANNON:  Well, thank you.

       8             And I found it.

       9                  [Laughter.]

      10             SENATOR HANNON:  But, it actually went off

      11      the -- it got locked in to -- just went off to

      12      another site.

      13             But the third time, it was right there.

      14             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Good, I'm glad you found

      15      it.

      16             I mean, because -- and we have, I think,

      17      four colleagues, four of our subcontractors, are in

      18      Nassau County, Senator Hannon.

      19             SENATOR HANNON:  No, I can see it.  It's on

      20      the list.

      21             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Yeah, so we have -- not

      22      to mention, you know, the other navigators.

      23             SENATOR HANNON:  Thank you.

      24             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Thank you both for

      25      hanging in there.







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       1             I'm completely impressed that you guys stayed

       2      there.

       3             Thank you very much.

       4             SENATOR SEWARD:  Well, thank you very much.

       5             We've had an interesting and insightful

       6      hearing, and we'll continue to, not only monitor,

       7      but be involved in these issues.

       8             Thank you.

       9             ELISABETH BENJAMIN:  Thank you.

      10                  (Whereupon, at approximately 2:30 p.m.,

      11        the joint public hearing held before the

      12        New York State Senate Standing Committee on Health

      13        and the Senate Standing Committee on Insurance

      14        concluded, and adjourned.)

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