By , Paige Winfield Cunningham
Published December 20, 2015
The nonprofit Obamacare health plans that have recently failed started off from a "weak" position, the Obama administration wrote Thursday in a letter to Sen. Ben Sasse.
In response to an inquiry from Sasse about why the Department of Health and Human Services loaned about $1.2 billion to the plans, which have since shuttered, the agency provided a four-page explanation of the purpose of the plans, the type of oversight it provided and a summary of how it discovered plans in Iowa, Nebraska and Louisiana were failing.
The Nebraska Republican had asked the department to answer a number of questions about why half of the consumer operated and oriented plans, otherwise known as co-ops, have failed under financial strains. The co-ops were intended to increase competition in the new insurance marketplaces set up under the Affordable Care Act.
In its response to Sasse, HHS said it "takes its role of protecting taxpayer funds seriously" but said that like any other start-up, the co-ops weren't assured of becoming "viable and sustainable."
Read more on WashingtonExaminer.com
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/republican-senator-renews-threat-to-block-obamacare-nominees