Obamacare enrollment for 2018 tops 8.7 million, exceeds expectations

The Obama-era health care law President Trump has called a "disaster" is actually exceeding expectations. More than 8.7 million people have signed up for subsi...

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  • More than 8.7 million people have signed up for coverage next year under the Obama-era health care law. The program labeled a “disaster” by President Donald Trump has exceeded expectations. HealthCare.gov enrollment reached nearly 95 percent of last year’s level, outperforming  analysts projections that somewhere around 1 to 2 million fewer people would sign up for subsidized private coverage through the Affordable Care Act. (Federal News Radio)
  • A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report described the attempt by multiple agencies to improve the government-wide background investigation process as “messy and fractured.”  While the report recognized the National Background Investigations Bureau (NBIB) for working all year to find new ways to make the current background investigation process more efficient, Congress has thrown a wrench into the works  by authorizing the Pentagon to take back control of security checks for its own people.  GAO said NBIB faces dozens of other challenges as it works to reduce the current investigative backlog of nearly 700,000 cases. (Federal News Radio)
  • Robert Storch was named the National Security Agency’s (NSA) new inspector general and the first presidentially-appointed IG.  Until recently, Storch was the deputy inspector general at the Justice Department. The NSA post was vacant for nearly a year after the agency removed George Ellard for allegedly retaliating against a whistleblower.  (NSA)
  • New Defense Department (DoD) contractors have been warned they must comply with new DoD cybersecurity rules. Starting in 2018, vendors must certify that any of their systems that hold or process DoD data fall in line with security controls published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology in 14 specific areas. They’ll also be required to report any cyber breaches to DoD immediately, and preserve forensic data from those breaches so Defense officials can inspect it. Vendors who don’t comply with the new rules risk losing their DoD contracts. (DoD)
  • Veterans Affairs Department Secretary David Shulkin said the future of veterans’ health care could require looking beyond VA resources.  Shulkin specifically said partnering with the Defense Department, for example, is a good idea. He said the two departments working together could widen what’s available, while offering providers a larger patient pool. He called the idea of working with DoD “common sense.”   (Federal News Radio)

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    The HealthCare.gov website is photographed in Washington on Dec. 15, 2017. A burst of sign-ups is punctuating the end of a tumultuous year for former President Barack Obama’s health care law. Strong consumer interest around Friday’s enrollment deadline for 2018 was seen as validation for the program’s subsidized individual health insurance. But the Affordable Care Act’s troubles aren’t over. Even if full repeal now seems off the table, actions by the Republican-led Congress and the Trump administration could undermine the ACA’s insurance markets. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick

    Obamacare enrollment for 2018 tops 8.7 million, exceeds expectations

    Read more
    The HealthCare.gov website is photographed in Washington on Dec. 15, 2017. A burst of sign-ups is punctuating the end of a tumultuous year for former President Barack Obama’s health care law. Strong consumer interest around Friday’s enrollment deadline for 2018 was seen as validation for the program’s subsidized individual health insurance. But the Affordable Care Act’s troubles aren’t over. Even if full repeal now seems off the table, actions by the Republican-led Congress and the Trump administration could undermine the ACA’s insurance markets. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick

    Obamacare enrollment for 2018 tops 8.7 million, exceeds expectations

    Read more
    The HealthCare.gov website is photographed in Washington on Dec. 15, 2017. A burst of sign-ups is punctuating the end of a tumultuous year for former President Barack Obama’s health care law. Strong consumer interest around Friday’s enrollment deadline for 2018 was seen as validation for the program’s subsidized individual health insurance. But the Affordable Care Act’s troubles aren’t over. Even if full repeal now seems off the table, actions by the Republican-led Congress and the Trump administration could undermine the ACA’s insurance markets. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick

    Obamacare enrollment for 2018 tops 8.7 million, exceeds expectations

    Read more