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The New Mexico Independent going forward

By | 11.16.11

I am writing today to announce the closure of the New Mexico Independent. After three and a half years of operation in New Mexico, the board of the American Independent News Network, has decided to shift publication of its news…

EIB hears more anti-cap-and-trade testimony

Mesa Verde 80
By | 11.10.11

While environmental activists played their part yesterday during demonstrations at the capitol building, going so far as to dress up as solar panels and to sing the tune of “You Are My Sunshine,” their counterparts, the anti-cap-and-trade contingency who has…

New Mexico’s largest university low in popularity

jobs-80
By | 11.10.11

Roughly one quarter of University of New Mexico students are unimpressed with the state’s flagship public school, according to a survey that questioned college students about their higher education experiences.

Posts Tagged health insurance

PRC directs Insurance Division to suspend, reconsider Blue Cross Blue Shield rate hike

By | 05.13.10 | 2:33 pm

New Mexico Public Regulation Commission (PRC) commissioners Thursday morning unanimously directed Interim Insurance Superintendent Thomas Rushton to rescind the Insurance Division’s controversial approval of a  21.3 percent hike in the health insurance rates for individual policyholders of Blue Cross Blue Shield N.M.

Rushton announced that he had recused himself from further involvement in the case.

That, at least, came as welcome news to the Attorney General’s office, according to Spokesman Phillip Sisneros.

“We do support Mr. Rushton’s recusal from a hearing on the matter,” Sisneros said. “(But) our position is still in support of the settlement. Remember, our agency is not the policy making authority on this issue and in fact, we were asked to step in to help find a resolution. We are happy to continue in that advisory role in the future.”

Rushton appeared reluctant to rescind the Insurance Division’s April approval of the rate hike, telling commissioners that rate change review procedures had been followed.

“There was a hearing conducted,” Rushton said. “There was prefiled testimony. There was discovery. There was a settlement reached, and Morris Chavez accepted that stipulated settlement.”

PRC Chairman David King interrupted Rushton to say that there were outside interests that had not been heard in the rate hike settlement process.

“We’ve had death threats to the Commission, to staff, and the former superintendent (Chavez),” King said. “They certainly followed the law, but it wasn’t done as well as in California,” where a Blue Cross rate hike was recently overturned.

Rushton assigned Deputy Insurance Superintendent Darlene Gomez to be the hearing officer for the reconsideration of the settlement approval. Gomez will receive whatever staffing assistance she needs from the Commission, King pledged.

But the Insurance Division will work under close Commission scrutiny, King said. King said the Commission will also ask for a third-party independent audit of Blue Cross Blue Shield NM’s financial records.

Commissioners King, Jason Marks, and Jerome Block, Jr. have all said they want the PRC to investigate why Blue Cross Blue Shield has a virtual monopoly in much of rural New Mexico.

Marks and Block appeared to try to manage policyholders’ expectations, Thursday.

“I don’t want false hope here,” Marks said. “It’s only right to do what we can. But we don’t want false hope. There’s still a stipulated settlement.”

Block said Blue Cross Blue Shield was starting “from scratch,” as far as he was concerned.

But he cautioned that the company would not take the Commission’s decision lightly, and warned policyholders that the extra scrutiny could backfire on consumers.

“They’re going to come out swinging,” Block said. “There could be (financial) data that justifies a higher increase. I hope the public is ready to face that outcome if it’s substantially different.”

Switching interim superintendents?
Marks also floated the possibility of replacing Rushton as interim superintendent with former insurance superintendent Don Letherer, noting that Rushton is very busy.

“Don could keep the wheels on,” Marks said. “We’d have twice the assurance the job’s getting done.”

Commissioners agreed to add a meeting with Letherer to next week’s Commission agenda.

State Insurance Division may cancel Blue Cross Blue Shield NM rate hike

By | 05.13.10 | 8:56 am

Interim state Insurance Superintendent Tom Rushton may rescind his predecessor’s April 26 approval of a Blue Cross Blue Shield New Mexico health insurance rate hike — the result of a weekend settlement Rushton helped negotiate to the outrage of policyholders and Public Regulation Commission (PRC) commissioners. Commissioners want Rushton to stand aside while the rate increase is re-examined, and Commission chairman David King is calling for a third-party audit of the insurer’s books.

Blue Cross Blue Shield rate hikes approved every year since 2004

By | 05.04.10 | 12:30 pm

Insurance Superintendent Morris Chavez

State Insurance Superintendent Morris Chavez resigned Tuesday morning, following intense criticism for his approval last month of a 21.3 percent rate increase for Blue Cross Blue Shield New Mexico individual policyholders without any public hearings.

But last month’s contentious rate hike was nothing new.

The state Public Regulation Commission (PRC)’s Insurance Division has approved rate increases for Blue Cross Blue Shield individual health insurance policies every year since 2004, according to state Insurance Division documents obtained by The Independent.

The Independent sought comment from Chavez Tuesday morning, only to learn staff was scrambling to announce his resignation.

In several cases, the rate hikes were comparable to this year’s increase, exceeding 20 percent.

Cumulatively, the increases approved each year since 2004 have pushed up premiums for Blue Cross Blue Shield NM policyholders by as much as 154 percent, Insurance Division records show.

In 2009 alone, rate increases for the company’s Blue Choice and Blue Choice Plus policies increased 19.6 percent and 24 percent, respectively. The company’s NM Major Medical policies saw a 2009 rate increase of 24.7 percent and Number One policy rates increased 22 percent in 2009.

The financial impact of rate increases on policyholders can be profound, policyholders told The Independent.

Moya Melody and her husband Kim Radsliff, Santa Fe residents, now spend 30 percent of their income on their Blue Cross Blue Shield NM policy, Melody said.

Last month’s rate increase brought their montly premiums up to $1,305 a month, Melody said. When they first bought their Blue Cross Blue Shield NM policy in 2004, they paid $562, or 16 percent of their household income, Melody said.

Two PRC commissioners want more transparency

Health insurance rate increases have not been contested before in New Mexico, PRC Commissioner Jason Marks told The Independent.

“The only insurance rate increase appealed … in the past decade was an appeal two years ago over title insurance,” Marks said.

PRC Commissioners knew about the 20 percent Blue Cross rate increase in 2009, but had not been aware that the Insurance Division had routinely approved rate increases since 2004, Marks said.

“We knew about the 20 percent (Blue Cross) rate increase last year, but this 150 percent increase (since 2004) is news to me,” Marks said.

In the future, health insurance rate increases exceeding 10 percent should trigger public hearings and full Commission review, Marks said.

Commissioner Jerome Block Jr. agreed.

“It’s unfortunate the Insurance Division has treated rate increases as a routine or typical process,” Block told The Independent. “These aren’t typical times. New Mexicans are struggling. I’d like to see the 10 percent threshold serve as a red flag for public hearings and Commission review.”

The Commission also needs to investigate why Blue Cross Blue Shield NM is the only individual health insurance provider in much of rural New Mexico, Marks said.

Blue Cross Blue Shield NM spokeswoman Becky Kenny did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the rate increases. Nor did Kenny respond to requests for information regarding executive salaries.

Kenny refused to disclose the Blue Cross Blue Shield NM’s tax filings, and would not say whether or not the not-for-profit would provide tax filings to policyholders. Blue Cross Blue Shield NM is a division of Health Care Service Corporation (HCSC), a mutual insurance company that is owned by its customers. Profits must be reinvested in the business or given to customers.

HCSC’s chief executive officer was paid $10.6 million in salary and bonuses in 2008, according to documents filed with the Insurance Division by Consumers Union attorney Sondra Roberto.

The public vs. health insurance companies

By | 04.28.10 | 11:35 am

Over the weekend, the state Attorney General’s Office and Insurance Division struck a deal with Blue Cross Blue Shield that will allow the company to raise its rates by an average of 21 percent. Some are saying the public was shut out of the process. This week our panelists discuss whether the process of setting insurance rates should be more transparent to the public.

Gov. Richardson signs bill eliminating gender discrimination in health insurance

By | 03.09.10 | 7:06 pm

“Currently insurers in New Mexico can charge women up to 20 percent more than men for individual and small group health insurance plans. This is unacceptable…,” Richardson said Tuesday in a press release announcing that he had signed Senate Bill 148.

The…

NM individual health insurance rate hikes on hold

By | 03.09.10 | 8:15 am

The rate hikes planned for individual policy holders of Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico health insurance  are on hold pending a public hearing. The hearing was ordered by New Mexico’s Public Regulation Commission after it received “numerous…

NM individual insurance plan costs skyrocketing

By | 03.03.10 | 10:56 am

About 18,000 New Mexicans who purchase individual Blue Cross/Blue Shield health insurance plans are about to see a 29.5  percent increase in their payments.  Another 2,700 individuals will see a 10 percent increase, and “a handful” in a couple of…

NM cuts off enrollment of small employers in health care program

By | 12.16.09 | 10:20 am

The state officially has closed off enrollment to small employers who aren’t already part of a program that helps tens of thousands of New Mexicans afford health insurance by paying part of the cost of monthly premiums.

Last month the…

Poverty is all around us

By | 10.01.09 | 9:26 am

Now is the time to look and see the poverty that surrounds us all. Now, as the tenor of the national debate gets vicious and people shout louder about “socialized medicine” without acknowledging that the current system of underinsurance costs us all billions and takes an untold toll on million of Americans who didn’t choose to be sick.

Hispanics less likely to have health insurance

By | 09.25.09 | 12:29 pm

Six-in-ten Hispanic adults in the U.S. who are neither citizens nor legal permanent residents are without health insurance, the Pew Hispanic Center reports. But an estimated 28 percent of Hispanic adults who are citizens or legal permanent residents don’t…

Udall, other Senate freshmen, speak against health care inaction

By | 09.23.09 | 1:54 pm

U.S. Senator Tom Udall and eight other freshmen today urged Congress to pass health care reform bill. “Maintaining the status quo is the coward’s way out,” Udall said.

Ex-congressional candidate Carol Miller opines on health care reform in Roll Call

By | 06.09.09 | 3:49 pm

Ojo Sarco resident and rural health policy guru Carol Miller — who served on the Clinton Health Care Task Force in the ’90s  – wrote an op-ed in the influential Washington D.C. paper Roll Call about health care reform.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman weighs in on SCHIP debate

By | 01.27.09 | 5:21 pm

Once again, the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) is in the middle of some political wrangling. In 2007, an expansion of the bill passed the Senate and House but was vetoed by President George W. Bush. The House couldn’t…

TODAY’S TOP STORIES: New Mexicans say yes to drilling, nuclear energy

By | 10.13.08 | 9:30 am

New Mexicans want more oil drilling and nuclear energy. So says the Albuquerque Journal, which released poll results related to energy in an article yesterday. There are sharp partisan differences in the numbers, with Republicans overwhelmingly favoring increased drilling…