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A: The explanation is the same in both cases: Without waivers, several million people would be at risk of losing their coverage. If that happened, Obama and the Democrats would really have some explaining to do, since the law is meant to expand coverage, not add to the 50 million uninsured. Part of the reason for those potential problems is that the main benefits of the health care law don't take effect until 2014. That year, millions of people will get tax credits to help pay their premiums, health insurers will be barred from turning away those in poor health, state-based insurance markets will make it easier to shop for a policy and many employers will be required to contribute toward the cost of workers' care. Right now, there's none of that. So if employers currently offering a skimpy insurance plan drop it because of the new requirement that they cover up to $750,000 in annual expenses, or if insurers pull out of a state because they can't meet the 80-percent test in that particular market, then the people they cover would have very few options. "You would get reporters writing stories about how the Democrats passed this bill, and the Schultz family lost its health insurance and now poor Tommy has a brain tumor," said Robert Laszewski, a former-health-insurance-executive-turned-policy-consultant. Any law dealing with an area as complicated as health care is going to have unintended consequences, said Laszewski. "You have to manage through it in a common-sense way," he added. Obama's health care law allows waivers to prevent loss of coverage, cost spikes or disruptions to a state's health insurance market. "I wouldn't see that as special deals as much as bowing to reality," said Paul Ginsburg, president of the Center for Studying Health System Change, a nonpartisan research organization. ___ Online: Center for Consumer Information & Insurance Oversight: http://cciio.cms.gov/
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