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Government United States News

800,000 Using HealthCare.gov Were Sent Incorrect Tax Data 211

mpicpp sends this report from the NY Times: About 800,000 taxpayers who enrolled in insurance policies through HealthCare.gov received erroneous tax information from the government, and were urged on Friday to hold off on filing tax returns until the error could be corrected. The Obama administration, under heavy pressure from congressional Democrats, also announced that it would give several million people more time to buy health insurance so they could comply with federal law and avoid tax penalties. The incorrect insurance information is used in computing taxes. Consumers can expect to receive corrected data in the first week of March. With the new data, officials warned, some taxpayers will owe more and some will owe less. Officials said they did not know why the error had occurred.
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800,000 Using HealthCare.gov Were Sent Incorrect Tax Data

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  • News (Score:5, Funny)

    by Orgasmatron ( 8103 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @02:54PM (#49095887)

    I'm tired of all this bad news about Obamacare. Could we maybe just all agree not to talk about it any more until there is some good news to report?

    • by Dan667 ( 564390 )
      all these people using Obamacare are not being screwed by private healthcare. How's that?
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by halivar ( 535827 )

        Technically, they are. Marketplace insurance is just a private plan with an extra layer of government collusion. Crony-capitalism at its finest.

        • Re:News (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:26PM (#49096111)

          Technically, they are. Marketplace insurance is just a private plan with an extra layer of government collusion. Crony-capitalism at its finest.

          But here's the thing.

          Other countries are somehow managing to give their citizen's healthcare. And Beelzabub hasn't risen to claim their souls.

          We were in a death spiral, positive feedback loop regarding health insurance. As people fell off the bottom rung of the ladder, their healthcare was being provided by the Government anyhow. Small employers health insurance costs were occasionally doubling every year. And if you had a pre-existing condition, you were fucked - and not in th ehappy fun way either. But that's what happens when a lot of people use Emergency Rooms as basic healthcare - it gets billed back to insurers through billiong magic, and we pay for it, but eventually the system collapses as all positive feeback loops do.

          The scary part for those who can't handle the idea of universal healthcare is that this cockamamie system we've implemented is just good enough to work, but tweaking it leads to the inescapable.

          • We're not other countries. Our government is the most corrupt institution on the planet.

            Why would you think a government, that couldn't roll out a website, after spending over $2 billion, could effectively manage something far more complex?

        • The big picture (Score:3, Insightful)

          by sjbe ( 173966 )

          Marketplace insurance is just a private plan with an extra layer of government collusion.

          It's a private plan with regulations to keep the price reasonable because it wouldn't be otherwise. Now your ability to get health insurance is not tied to your continued employment. No one should lose health insurance just because they lost a job. Criticize the details all you want but that part of the ACA is unequivocally a Good Thing.

          Crony-capitalism at its finest.

          Since these insurance companies wouldn't insure millions of people at a reasonable price until the government forced the issue it eludes me how this is "crony capitalism"

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by SuperKendall ( 25149 )

            It's a private plan with regulations to keep the price reasonable because it wouldn't be otherwise.

            Right, that's why a lot of middle class families are now paying more for worse insurance than they were before Obamacare...

            Nice revisionist history there.

            • prices go up and obamacare is NOT there to stop or help with that.

              how can it? with this near-religion we have about bowing down to 'free markets', the gov won't ever force the HC companies to have reasonable prices and limit the price increases. they SHOULD step in, but the republicans would throw yet another fit and since they're mostly in control now, we won't get anything else out of this system until a new guard comes in.

              of course, you are IGNORING the fact that every single year, prices of HC go up

            • by laird ( 2705 )

              Healthcare costs have always gone up every year. The reality is that healthcare costs have gone up under ACA at half the rate of the pre-ACA increases (3-4% under ACA, vs. the 6-10% annual increases every year for decades!). That's better.

              As for worse insurance, that's unlikely. For example, the insurance companies aren't allowed to waste more than 15% of what they are paid, when previously there was no limit. And they were allowed to take insurance away from people that had been paying for it, if they beca

          • Since these insurance companies wouldn't insure millions of people at a reasonable price until the government forced the issue

            Also, the government introduced the insurance mandate, thereby sharply reducing the adverse selection problem associated with the individual insurance market.

          • Re:The big picture (Score:4, Insightful)

            by Major Blud ( 789630 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @05:20PM (#49097041) Homepage

            "Now your ability to get health insurance is not tied to your continued employment"

            Help me out here, because I really don't understand how it works....but how are you supposed to pay for private health insurance if you lose employment?

            • by radarjd ( 931774 )

              Help me out here, because I really don't understand how it works....but how are you supposed to pay for private health insurance if you lose employment?

              I think that the argument was that you could leave your job and become self-employed or join a small business without a company plan. I did that. I left my job to start my own business, and I insure myself and my family through the marketplace.

              It has not been a particularly pleasant experience. While yes, I am able to get insurance, the marketplace has an extremely limited number of options. For 2014, I had 3 choices in my state. For 2015, it's better and bigger, but choice basically amounts to "choose your

          • It's a private plan with regulations to keep the price reasonable because it wouldn't be otherwise.

            Right, because my insurance was going up by 10-15% each year, severely outpacing inflation. But thankfully, Obama put a stop to that with the Obamacare plan, which only made it go up 400% the first year and 25% the next year. Those are the only two years of data points so far. I admit there is every possibility that next year, my insurance could drop by a factor of 6 putting it in line with what my insurance formerly was trending.

          • Since these insurance companies wouldn't insure millions of people at a reasonable price until the government forced the issue it eludes me how this is "crony capitalism". It's not as if the insurance companies were lobbying in favor of insuring poor people.

            Actually, the insurance companies wrote much of the bill and are estatic about insuring anyone, especially when the government is paying them. Effective compeitition (a pubic option) or allowing medicaid to negotiate drug prices with the drug companies might have helped with cost control, but those were both nix'd extremely early in the process.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by rubycodez ( 864176 )

        You are so funny, my friends working for small and mid sized companies had their premiums more than double thanks to obamacare.

        • Re:News (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Albanach ( 527650 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:30PM (#49096141) Homepage

          their premiums more than double thanks to obamacare

          Do you ave any evidence to cite that justifies this as the reason for the increase? Or is it possible their employer saw an opportunity to screw the workforce and blame the President?

          Obamacare did little to change most employer plans, so unless your friends had extremely limited insurance coverage, a > 100% increase seems implausible.

        • fallacy of omission, right there.

          probably a few of them would not be ABLE to get ANY healthcare if they had 'pre-existing' conditions. at least they did get rid of that big problem!

          I have a PEC that made it (past tense!) very hard to get private insurance, so this is an issue near and dear to my heart. I know I won't have a low price on my insurance, but I will at least be able to GET SOME AT ALL.

          for those that don't have PEC's, you will never know the pain of being rejected, for no fault of your own, si

          • probably a few of them would not be ABLE to get ANY healthcare if they had 'pre-existing' conditions.

            How come the supporters of PelosiCare don't know the difference between health insurance and health care?

            I'm asking you because you appear to be an expert at not knowing the difference.

    • Re:News (Score:5, Insightful)

      by halivar ( 535827 ) <`moc.liamg' `ta' `reglefb'> on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:00PM (#49095927)

      Oh, no. There were tons of us saying our government could not be trusted with shit this important, and we were right. "But Europe!" they said. Well, we don't have a European government. We have an American government, with all the heft and agility of the Titanic. Crony-capitalism under a veneer of pretend-socialism and you have a recipe for guaranteed disaster. Now, is it the end of the world? Not really, just for the poor marks that bought Marketplace insurance plans.

    • Re:News (Score:4, Insightful)

      by digsbo ( 1292334 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:20PM (#49096077)
      You should be modded insightful. The main source of bias in the press is not what's reported, but what's not reported.
    • by nobuddy ( 952985 )

      11.7M people who were uninsured now have healthcare coverage.

      Goodbye doughnut hole. Medicare drug plans (Part D of Medicare) stop providing insurance to people after their claims for covered drugs hit a certain level ($2,970 in 2013), and coverage doesn't resume until spending hits another level ($4,750 in 2013). Health care reform is closing this doughnut hole in annual stages, and it will be totally closed by 2020. Savings to Medicare beneficiaries will be in the tens of billions of dollars.

      Free Medicare

      • and the only one on that list that is worth anything is the pre-existing conditions. Why could they have not passed a 1 page law that says :"insurance companies cannot discriminate based on medical history"

        thats it, would have cost next to nothing to the people, and would accomplish the only good thing that obamacare has going for it. The rest of your list is fluff
        • Because then the insurers couldn't make money and the system would have collapsed. Anything that you did to the system would have had to be balanced by other players in the system, lest it collapse. This means a complicated law.

          Want a simple law? Here's one: Everyone gets Medicare and the government surcharges your taxes x% to pay for it. That's a simple law - no muss, no fuss, and done. No, all of the complication comes from the fact that we have this fu'ed system with a bunch of asshats sitting in the mid

        • thats it, would have cost next to nothing to the people, and would accomplish the only good thing that obamacare has going for it.

          ..and is something many States already had a law for. It is unbelievable how many people point to the pre-existing conditions rule completely unaware that they were already living under such a law. It just goes to show that uninformed idiots are deciding things, and then defending those things, while commiting logical fallacies all the way through.

          • by rsborg ( 111459 )

            thats it, would have cost next to nothing to the people, and would accomplish the only good thing that obamacare has going for it.

            ..and is something many States already had a law for. It is unbelievable how many people point to the pre-existing conditions rule completely unaware that they were already living under such a law. It just goes to show that uninformed idiots are deciding things, and then defending those things, while commiting logical fallacies all the way through.

            [cite needed]

    • no/..... never???
    • by thieh ( 3654731 )
      It's not like all the president has no bad news. Every last one of them got some dirt on their representative work.
    • I'm tired of all this bad news about Obamacare. Could we maybe just all agree not to talk about it any more until there is some good news to report?

      I, for one, do not want to take a lifetime vow of silence.

  • I fear this will not end well for those who happened to already file. I have previously dealt directly with the IRS for three filings, two of which were multi-month-long processes. In the worst case, I spent the better part of 13 months corresponding via phone and U.S. Mail regarding an amended return -- they owed me money.

    I'm not sure what percentage of filers end up owing taxes versus owed refunds. I imagine the number is fewer, so perhaps less than 400,000 people were even motivated to file early. Bu

  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:01PM (#49095939)

    They seem to be having some difficulties.

    • methinks .gov needs to get some new staff, the two-party bitches of mega-corps seem to be having some difficulties

  • IRS + medical (Score:2, Interesting)

    by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 )
    Why the FUCK does the IRS need to know anything about the state of my medical insurance?
    (we can go into why other entities (twitter/google/etc) need to know, but that was a previous slashdot article)
    • watch it, sounds like Joe Stack / Timothy McVeigh talk there

    • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

      Because you get tax credits based on your income level and healthcare situation. That's how the whole "government subsidizing the poor's healthcare" happens.

    • It doesn't, but if you're going to get federal tax credits that subsidize your insurance, and those credits are income-based, then it does.

      You could sign up at healthcare.gov without involving the IRS at all, but you'd have to forego the opportunity to get any subsidy.

      • You are also forgetting about the fine/fee/tax (pick your wording as it seems to be some sort of quantum superposition of them) that is assessed if you do not carry health insurance or the right kind of health insurance.
        • Yup, there's that too. Still, however, if you get your health insurance without any subsidy, the IRS only need to know that you have it.

          • And again, why does the IRS have anything to do with it? I have health insurance. Why do they need to know this?

            I know the reason, but good grief.....how far do we allow multiple departments to intrude into other areas?
          • Yup, there's that too. Still, however, if you get your health insurance without any subsidy, the IRS only need to know that you have it.

            Why didnt you address the part in his post which refutes what you are now saying? Seems like you large amount of intellectual dishonesty on your part. (why so dishonest? is it that you are uninformed and don't realize just how dishonest you are being?) You have to have the right kind of health insurance. Many people had plans much more responsible than so called qualified plans, that dont qualify.

            When I was growing up the plans were called Major Medical, and later on they were re-tokened High Deductible.

  • Oh darn... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:24PM (#49096099) Journal

    Obama administration, under heavy pressure from congressional Democrats, also announced that it would give several million people more time to buy health insurance so they could comply with federal law and avoid tax penalties.

    I really hope the King v. Burwell case goes against the government. The executive branch needs to learn they implement the law congress passes not the one they wish congress passes. If Obama and lefties suddenly are not allowed to continue to make up the rules as they go along maybe the other half of America will realize this law for the ill considered, abusive over reach of authority and corporate give away that it is.

    • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:35PM (#49096173)

      The executive branch needs to learn they implement the law congress passes not the one they wish congress passes.

      If Congress isn't specific in their statutes then it is to the discretion of the administration how they handle the regulations. Very few laws are passed with enough specificity that the executive branch doesn't have considerable discretion in the interpretation of the statutes.

      If Obama and lefties suddenly are not allowed to continue to make up the rules as they go along maybe the other half of America will realize this law for the ill considered, abusive over reach of authority and corporate give away that it is.

      You're accusing the left of corporate giveaways? Methinks you have the left and right mixed up. Abusive overreach of authority? I direct your attention to the actions of the previous administration, particularly post 9/11.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Friday February 20, 2015 @03:52PM (#49096337) Journal

        You're accusing the left of corporate giveaways? Methinks you have the left and right mixed up.

        No I don't have my left and right confused. I dare say most the GOP is confused about being on the right. Almost all regulation is a form of corporate give away. If it has no other effects, one certain effect is it creates a new barrier to entry in some way. Its a give away to the existing players because it keeps other out.

        Think about this. Do you think it would be easier to setup a new health insurance company in 2015 than it was in 2009? I am not suggesting it was easy in 2009 but its certainly harder now. Who is that good for? -- existing insurers.

    • "The executive branch needs to learn they implement the law congress passes not the one they wish congress passes"

      Except they ARE implementing the law congress passed. Nobody without a prior axe to grind, looking at the law as written, in the context of how and when it was passed, could reach the conclusion that the passage was designed to do what the plaintiffs claim it was. In cases of ambiguity in a specific phrase, the courts are obliged to look at the legislation as a whole and at the context in whic

      • By context, would you perhaps be talking about all of the quotes and video clips of the bill's authors, consultants and supporters in congress saying the exact opposite?

        • I'm aware of the one Gruber comment. Counterbalancing that is the weight of comments by all the key drafters and authors that this is not what they intended. It's poorly written, no doubt, but it's an incredible stretch to argue that the authors and backers of the law clearly intended to hide away a time bomb within it. Absent clear evidence that they did, the IRS's interpretation of the law looks entirely reasonable and in line with Congressional intent.

    • Bump parent up mod up +1 Like it upboat whatever - If you are going to enforce a law, enforce the entire law, not just the parts that make you feel magnanimous and beneficent. Liberal socialists seem to think that THIS TIME THEY WILL GET IT RIGHT AND MAKE IT WORK.

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