Washington – Members of Congress' chief investigative committee aggressively questioned MNsure's interim CEO on Thursday, demanding to know if Minnesota's health insurance marketplace has rebounded from problems that left it on the brink of collapse last fall.
Citing the findings of a consultant's report from January that found MNsure's management in constant "crisis mode," Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., pressed interim MNsure CEO Scott Leitz for details on the shake-up inside the agency in the wake of a troubled launch.
In its infancy, MNsure's call center wait times stretched up to an hour and its website blocked residents from buying insurance.
"Have you fired anyone in state government for the bungled launch and the massive loss of taxpayer dollars?" a skeptical Gosar asked. "Or have they just been reassigned like they do here in the federal government?"
While acknowledging the health care exchange's unpromising start, Leitz told the House Oversight Committee that changes have been made and Minnesota's exchange is now "stable, secure and successful."
Leitz was among several representatives of what the committee called "problem-filled state exchanges" who were summoned to testify before the congressional panel.
On Capitol Hill Leitz also faced pointed queries about the $26,000 in bonuses awarded to MNsure managers in the lead-up to the website launch. Under questioning, Leitz said nothing has been done to recoup the payouts.
MNsure officials said this week that they exceeded their goal for the initial open-enrollment period, with nearly 170,000 Minnesotans signed up for insurance coverage. The total topped the 135,000 the agency set as a target last October, before technical glitches waylaid the exchange website and call center.