Showing posts with label failed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label failed. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2014

Maryland delays effort to recoup $55M for failed ObamaCare site - VIDEO: ObamaCare reportedly fading as midterm issue - Full Coverage: Midterm elections

web_site.jpg FILE: Oct. 2, 2013: A man looks over the Affordable Care Act signup page on the HealthCare.gov website in New York. (REUTERS)

Maryland officials reportedly have agreed to delay court action seeking $55 million from the primary contractor for the state’s problematic ObamaCare website.

Officials from Maryland’s health care exchange in April fired the contractor, Noridian Healthcare Solutions, and vowed to seek court actions to recoup the money.

Both sides have struck a temporary deal so state officials can focus on the second year of ObamaCare enrollment that starts Nov. 15, according to The Baltimore Sun.  

A spokeswoman for Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley told The Sun that officials are still “evaluating claims that we may pursue in litigation.”

The first ObamaCare enrollment, on Oct. 1, 2013, got off to a disastrous start, marked by an overwhelming public response that crashed the federal site, HealthCare.gov, and several state-run sites.

President Obama, angry and “frustrated” by the start of arguably his biggest legislative accomplishment, made sure the software problems were essentially fixed after the first several weeks by hiring industry experts to work around the clock to write better computer code and fix software bugs.

But at least two state-run sites — Maryland and Oregon’s — had to scrap their failed, multi-million dollar, online projects.

Oregon has moved online customers to the federal site after software bugs and other technical problems kept the state from fully enrolling a single customer online.

The problems and transition is estimated to cost state and federal taxpayers at least an additional $85 million — including $50 million to manually enroll thousands of customers and $35 million to Deloitte Consulting to salvage the faulty technology.

Maryland officials have decided to replace their technology, instead of fixing the system or like Oregon joining the federal exchange system.

They have hired Deloitte Consulting, which has successfully run the Connecticut exchange. The effort is expected to cost $43 million.

The decision also comes just weeks before Election Day for Democratic nominee for governor Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, who was O’Malley’s point man for ObamaCare.

Maryland and contractor Noridian have blamed each other and subcontractors, including IBM, for the problems.

The decision to delay action also came amid an ongoing inspector general’s probe, which was requested in February by Maryland GOP Rep. Andy Harris.

“Millions of dollars were wasted because of a lack of oversight by Lieutenant Governor Brown, and now the state must try to recoup some of the money he allowed to be sent to companies who couldn’t deliver,” Harris told The Sun. “The federal investigation should provide critical information about how taxpayer dollars were wasted and whether fraud occurred.”

Justin Schall, Brown’s campaign manager, said: “It’s disappointing that congressman Harris would mislead the people of Maryland and play political games with a federal investigation.”

Thirty-six states are part of the federal exchange, and there are 14 state-run sites.

The president crafted the legislation to help an estimated 30 million uninsured Americans get coverage.

The administration reached its goal of enrolling 6 million people by its self-imposed March 31 deadline. And right now, 7.3 million people have enrolled in marketplace plans, paid their premiums and have access to insurance, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.


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Maryland delays effort to recoup $55M for failed ObamaCare site - VIDEO: ObamaCare reportedly fading as midterm issue - Full Coverage: Midterm elections

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Hearing for VCB"s failed test to begin soon

Sport

BY PAUL A REID Observer writer Thursday, August 01, 2013

MONTEGO BAY, St James — The hearing into the doping charges against sprint star Veronica Campbell Brown is expected to get under way very soon, the Jamaica Observer has been reliably informed.Campbell Brown, who tested positive for a stimulant at the May 4 Jamaica International Invitational (JII), has requested a hearing from the Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association (JAAA) which has three months in which to put together a panel. The deadline for the request from the Campbell Brown camp was July 26 and it is understood that it was made on time.It is also understood that the hearing could take place soon, as the athlete, who has won 10 medals in the Olympic Games and World Championships, fights to clear her name of doping charges.As a result of the ‘B’ sample being confirmed, Campbell Brown, the defending champion in the women’s 200m, will miss the 14th IAAF World Championships that is set to start next week in Moscow, Russia, as she has been provisionally suspended until the hearing is completed.She is one of three top sprinters, including former men’s 100m world record holder Asafa Powell and Olympic Games silver medallist Sherone Simpson who tested positive for another stimulant at the June JAAA National Senior Championships, who will miss the global spectacle.The absence of Campbell Brown and Simpson will be a big loss to the women’s 4x100m relay team as both played big roles in the team’s silver medal performance at the London Olympic Games last year when they ran a National Record 41.41 seconds.Meanwhile, the Observer understands that the substance that Campbell Brown tested positive for is a stimulant, and not a diuretic as previously speculated.Positive tests for stimulants attract a maximum three months suspension or public warnings and the news confirms reports carried by the Observer in June, and later confirmed by the IAAF that the matter was a ‘minor’ offence.News of Campbell Brown’s positive test in mid-June rocked the track and field world, but except for a brief statement just over a week later, the track superstar’s handlers have refused to make any public statements, and her manager Claude Bryan has declined several interview requests from the Observer as late as earlier this week.

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Hearing for VCB"s failed test to begin soon