Nov 25, 2015 |
By Allison Bell
Consumers
Mutual says it will pay provider claims for covered goods and services.
One of the
struggling nonprofit, member-owned Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP)
carriers is warning its agents that they will have to go through a special
procedure to seek commission payments.
Michigan
insurance regulators put the CO-OP, Consumers Mutual Insurance of Michigan,
into rehabilitation earlier this month. The CO-OP is on track to shut down at
the end of the year.
Consumers
Mutual says in a notice on its website that it cannot take applications for new
business or renewal business after Nov. 13, 2015.
If agents earn
commissions after that date, in spite of not being able to place applications
for new coverage or renewal coverage, Consumers Mutual will make those
commission payments through the usual commission payment process, the company
says.
But "Consumers
Mutual Insurance is currently prohibited under the rehabilitation order from
paying commissions earned prior to Nov. 13, 2015," the company says.
Consumers
Mutual plans to give agents a procedure they can use to submit claims for
payment of pre-Nov. 13 commissions at a later date, the company says.
The carrier's
organizers started it with a $72 million CO-OP startup loan from the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Drafters of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) included the CO-OP program provision
in an effort to increase the level of competition in the private health
insurance market.
The carrier says
it will continue to pay health care providers for the covered goods and
services they provide for plan enrollees. Earlier this year, the carrier had
about 28,000 enrollees.
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