OFF THE WIRE
Reuters) - California said it is planning for a full launch of its
Obamacare online health insurance exchange on October 1, after testing
its functionality.
Last month, the state said it was considering a soft launch of the
exchange if tests showed it was not ready for wide public access. But
tests of the system last week were encouraging, said Dana Howard, deputy
director of communications for the Covered California exchange.
"All of our testing so far indicates that there is not going to be a
problem doing self-enrollment online on Oct 1," Howard said.
Howard said the exchange would continue to do testing, "but it appears that things are looking very good."
Under President Barack Obama's healthcare reform law, formally the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, millions of uninsured
Americans will be able to sign up for new government subsidized health
insurance plans starting on October 1 via online exchanges in each
state.
But the scale of the effort and political resistance in many states
have led to delays in implementation of the law and raised questions
about whether all 50 states will be ready by that date.
California, which embraced Obamacare early on, is considered one of
the most crucial states for the administration's enrollment effort.
Covered California aims to sign up 1 million to 1.4 million people
in 2014. Overall, exchanges across the country are expected to provide
coverage for 7 million people next year.