The law firm Callister & Associates filed the lawsuit, which
alleges gross
negligence and failure to do due diligence, on behalf of two local
Nevadans who said that, despite signing up for coverage as far back as four
months ago and paying premiums, have since been denied coverage.
Two Nevadans have filed suit after going without coverage despite paying premiums. Image: Shutterstock |
“I could not eat or sleep for 10 days,” Basich told local
Las Vegas news station 13 Action News. “I was not able to get into my bed until
two weeks ago.”
The other plaintiff, Lea Swartley, is an expectant mother
who was due to give birth Tuesday night. Swartley, like Basich, signed up for
coverage and paid premiums, yet has gone without coverage.
Though only Basic and Swartley are taking legal action
against the state, local attorney Matthew Callister told the Las Vegas
Review-Journal that about 40 people called him with the same issue. And the lawsuit
could grow even bigger, with a “pends” list of 10,500 people without coverage,
according to a list on the Nevada Health Link website.
The bid, according to Callister, “has nothing to do with the
ACA [Affordable Care Act]. This is one hundred percent about Xerox.” Xerox, one
of four companies who bid to build Nevada’s state exchange, won the bid after
receiving the highest-score on a state criteria list ranging from financial
stability to comparable contract experience, according to CBS Las Vegas.
“They’ve failed,” said Callister. “They absolutely failed.”
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