Right. Let's see how long it takes for the next contractor to build a replacement. Then let's watch the replacement go through the exact same problems.
Your understanding it correct. The government's CMS took on the role of integrator, including integration testing, and they on up to the White House were calling the shots.
This included a very late first set of requirements (delayed in part by a 3+ month freeze before the 2012 elections), per the NYT 7 major changes in the last 10 months, the major change in August to registration first, no window shopping (for which there is absolutely no technical or legal need), and changes continued through the week before launch.
CMS did not see fit to start integration testing until 2 weeks before launch, the tests, or at least the 200 simulated simultaneous login attempt failed hard, yet they launched the site anyway.
CMS has now lost their role to QSSI (who they in a panic proposed to fire 3 days into launch) and the fix-it czar is saying the right thing, like his highest priority is to stop sending garbage to the insurers, a colossal problem no one else in the effort has publicly been willing to even acknowledge.
Now the contractors have a chance.
As for these yahoos, all but the Filemon Vela are clearly in competitive districts, and his is brand new. Sounds like they're feeling the heat; I fear they'd better get used to it.
2. Is way too late for the millions losing their insurance as of Jan 1.
In theory anyone who had a policy before Obamacare was passed should have been grandfatherd, but HHS wrote regulations so strict, such that if anything changed like deductables, copays, or benefits, their policies are toast (per NBC: http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/28/21213547-...).
These people are truly screwed; only something that allows others to calculate or get subsidies calculations would accommodate them, and since those become are direct payments from the Federal government you can understand why it wants a great deal of control over them.
5 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 26.7 ms ] threadThis included a very late first set of requirements (delayed in part by a 3+ month freeze before the 2012 elections), per the NYT 7 major changes in the last 10 months, the major change in August to registration first, no window shopping (for which there is absolutely no technical or legal need), and changes continued through the week before launch.
CMS did not see fit to start integration testing until 2 weeks before launch, the tests, or at least the 200 simulated simultaneous login attempt failed hard, yet they launched the site anyway.
CMS has now lost their role to QSSI (who they in a panic proposed to fire 3 days into launch) and the fix-it czar is saying the right thing, like his highest priority is to stop sending garbage to the insurers, a colossal problem no one else in the effort has publicly been willing to even acknowledge.
Now the contractors have a chance.
As for these yahoos, all but the Filemon Vela are clearly in competitive districts, and his is brand new. Sounds like they're feeling the heat; I fear they'd better get used to it.
1. Shut down everything including taking all the existing sites offline.
2. Set a new launch date of July 14, 2014.
3. Fire all of the contractors.
4. Hire Harper Reed as CTO of Healthcare.gov, give him the ball and 100% of the budget, and let him run with it.
http://www.feld.com/wp/archives/2013/10/how-to-fix-obamacare...
In theory anyone who had a policy before Obamacare was passed should have been grandfatherd, but HHS wrote regulations so strict, such that if anything changed like deductables, copays, or benefits, their policies are toast (per NBC: http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/28/21213547-...).
These people are truly screwed; only something that allows others to calculate or get subsidies calculations would accommodate them, and since those become are direct payments from the Federal government you can understand why it wants a great deal of control over them.