Massachusetts Scraps Its Broken Obamacare Exchange, Requests $121 Million to Build Another One

Before Obamacare became law, Massachusetts was the only state in
the nation with a functional, widely used health insurance
exchange. But because the state’s system didn’t have all the fancy
new features required under the new health law, including real-time
verification of eligibility for subsidies, it began work on a new
exchange to replace the old one.

The Bay State received $179 million in federal funding to help
build its new exchange, and last October, it replaced the old
system with a new one designed to have all the nifty tricks that
Obamacare requires, plus some more that state officials
wanted. 

But there was a problem. Unlike the old system, which could be
slow but was generally functional, the new one didn’t work. State
officials began a repair effort, but ended up firing their tech
contractor in March. Last week, the state announced that it was
scrapping all work to date and starting over. Officials said they
would attempt to install a completely new exchange that was based
on existing technology, while also making backup plans to use the
federal exchange if the new installation effort failed.

Naturally, the state now says it wants another $121 million from
the federal government to get its exchange going. That’s in
addition to the nine-figure chunk of federal money they already
wasted.  
According to the Boston Herald,
when you add up all
the costs involved in attempting to build out an exchange for the
state, that brings the total price tag to more than $500
million.

To recap: The state had an exchange that worked—well enough, in
fact, that it was often cited as the model for the federal law.
Officials scrapped that exchange for an expensive new one, which
not only didn’t work, but was eventually deemed beyond repair. And
now the state wants $121 million in federal funding to try yet
again.

It’s the best they can do! They had no other choice! 

“The reality is, this is it,” Sarah Iselin, who is managing the
state’s exchange effort, said,
according
to the Herald. “When we look at what we can
reasonably do for the fall, this is it. I wish we had more choices,
but we don’t. We’re making the best of a really lousy
situation.”

I suspect that Sarah Iselin might benefit from
Googling the phrase “sunk costs.

The state could probably just give up on its big dreams and join
the federal exchange system for far, far less. Officials in Oregon,
which also scrapped an expensive state-run exchange, say it will
cost
about $5 million
to become part of the federal system.

Of course, that would require admitting failure, and giving up
on the desire to have the fanciest, shiniest, most impressive
insurance exchange in the nation. As the Herald notes:

Publicly, state officials — including Gov. Deval Patrick — have
blamed the debacle largely on [tech contractor] CGI.

But documents obtained by the Herald and interviews with project
staffers in February revealed infighting among top Patrick
administration officials and an obsession with building “the
absolute Rolls-Royce of any health exchange” that helped doom a
website plagued with delays since March 2012.

Well, they certainly spent Rolls Royce money. But they didn’t
even end up with a Yugo.

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