Little wonder it has been a complete failure and that Objmacare will drive our country into decline is of no importance to the progressive democrats, their plan for control is working, the country is failing and the people are finding they are out of options.
The average democrat voter will not vote for a Republican that say they will fix the problem. To the democrat voter, they would rather suffer the consequences of a failing country rather then allow Republicans to gain control and succeed with their agenda of personal freedom and the liberty to choose.
It's just so much easier to have others dictate outcomes then having to make the hard decision regarding one success or failure. Dependence is the new norm for democrats.
Top Officials With Failed Obamacare Co-Ops Made an Average of $245,000
Melissa Quinn / @MelissaQuinn97
Before 11 of the 23 nonprofit insurers created under Obamacare announced they would be closing their doors, the top executives running their operations raked in large sums of money.
According to 2013 tax filings accessed through Guidestar.org, the top executives at the 11 co-ops that have announced they will be winding down operations made an average of $245,203 annually. Tax filings for 2014 are not yet publicly available.
The Affordable Care Act placed a $500,000 salary cap on co-op employees, and executives running the nonprofit insurers earned a high of $490,125—paid to Jerry Burgess, chief executive of Consumers’ Choice Health Insurance Cooperative in South Carolina—and a low of $46,524—paid to Joanne Hill of Colorado HealthOP in Colorado.
In 2014, the median income for households was $53,657.
Congress created the co-ops to inject competition into areas where few insurance providers offered plans. The federal government awarded $2.4 billion in startup and solvency loans to 23 co-ops that were approved by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Since Obamacare went into effect in 2013, 11 co-ops have announced they’re winding down operations and no longer offering insurance on the state-run and federal exchange in 2016. Those 11 co-ops are located in Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Nevada, New York, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Utah.
The failed co-ops received more than $1.1 billion in total and enrolled more than 690,000 Americans in plans, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and state regulatory filings.
The Daily Signal reached out to all 11 co-ops for comment. Nine of the nonprofit insurers did not return requests for comment. Kentucky Health Cooperative directed questions to the state Department of Insurance, and the Louisiana Health Cooperative did not have a comment. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services also did not return a request for comment.
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