Lawmakers Claim Consumers Kept in Dark With HHS ‘Abortion Surcharge’ Rules

Proposed rules from the U.S. Deptartment of Health and Human Services will make the abortion surcharge on health-insurance bills ‘all but invisible,’ according to Congress members.

Speaker John Boehner administers the the oath of office to members of the 113th Congress on Jan. 3, 2013.
Speaker John Boehner administers the the oath of office to members of the 113th Congress on Jan. 3, 2013. (photo: Official Photo by Heather Reed.)

WASHINGTON — More than 75 members of Congress have written the Obama administration stating that abortion coverage must be billed separately under the health-care law, as it was promised.

Members of Congress wrote in a December letter to Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Sylvia Burwell that the law requires the “abortion surcharge must be a separate payment” on consumers’ health-care bills.

However, the letter stated that the HHS was considering rules for insurance providers on the health-insurance exchanges that “brazenly ignore the separate-payment requirement in the law and instead specify that the abortion surcharge may be collected in a single payment and the surcharge does not even have to be listed on the consumer’s bill.”

When the Affordable Care Act (also known as “Obamacare”) was passed, the separate billing for abortion coverage was meant to assuage concerns of those objecting to paying for abortion coverage for reasons of conscience. At least one health plan not offering abortion coverage was to be featured on each state insurance exchange set up under the law.

Back in September, however, an independent government watchdog found that five state exchanges offered only plans including abortion coverage. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported that many insurance issuers were not separately billing enrollees for abortion coverage.

In the ACA, Section 1303 directs health-plan issuers on the insurance exchanges to “segregate” the estimated abortion coverage costs for all enrollees choosing such coverage.

However, the members of Congress charged in the letter that the HHS’ proposed rules allow insurers another way, aside from separately billing abortion coverage: simply itemize the estimated cost of abortion coverage and send it as part of one single bill.

The HHS proposed rule states, “Section 1303 of the Affordable Care Act permits, but does not require, a QHP [qualified health plan] issuer to separately identify the premium for non-excepted abortion services on the monthly premium bill in order to comply with the separate-payment requirement. A consumer may pay the premium for non-excepted abortion services and for all other services in a single transaction, with the issuer depositing the funds into the issuer's separate allocation accounts.”

The members of Congress argued that the proposed rules go against the health-care law.

“In contrast to the law, the proposed rule permits issuers to collect the premium in a single transaction,” they wrote Secretary Burwell. “Additionally, issuers are permitted, but not required, ‘to separately identify the premium for non-excepted abortion services for the monthly premium bill in order to comply with the separate-payment requirement.’”

“Therefore, under the proposed rule, the surcharge is not billed separately and will likely be all but invisible to the consumer,” they continued.

“[I]t is essential that the administration at least follow the minimal statutory requirements related to the accounting gimmick often referred to as the Nelson amendment.”

Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., co-chair of the Bipartisan Congressional Pro-Life Caucus, argued that the lack of enforcement by the HHS is part of more broken promises from the Obama administration.

“President Obama’s solemn promise not to fund abortion on demand continues to be broken with impunity,” the congressman said in a Dec. 18 statement.

“Consumers have a right to know.”

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