BCBSIL bosses bag big bucks after unjustified rate increases, staff layoffs….Enough is Enough!

Jul 3, 2020 | Blue Cross Blue Shield, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, Illinois Health Insurance, Insurance News | 0 comments

Severance pay drove the outgoing CEO’s compensation above $31 million, while the Blue Cross parent also showered cash on her interim successor, the board chairman and other execs.

BCBSIL bosses bag big bucks after unjustified rate increases, staff layoffs....Enough is Enough!
Paula Steiner, who stepped down as CEO in July, received total compensation last year of $31 million, including $12 million in severance pay after resigning. (Not pictured, everyone with real jobs wondering why anyone would get $12 million for quitting your job)

Executive pay keeps climbing at Blue Cross of Illinois’ parent company, even as the health insurance giant lays off workers and looks for a new strategy.

The 10 highest-paid employees at Health Care Service Corp. got a combined $70 million last year, up 58 percent from 2018. The biggest winner was Paula Steiner, who stepped down as CEO in July. Her total compensation surged 120 percent to $31 million—about $12 million of which was severance pay.

Board member David Lesar, who took over as interim CEO, pocketed $6.2 million; Maurice Smith, who was named president, got $3.6 million; and board Chairman Milton Carroll got a 429 percent boost to $4.9 million.

The massive raises come amid increasing cost pressures and rising uncertainty for the entire health care industry, and HCSC in particular. The nation’s sixth-largest health insurer cut “a few dozen” staffers late last year—followed by an additional 400 in January—and needs to step up growth to compete with rivals.

The pandemic’s financial impact on insurers isn’t clear yet. With unemployment skyrocketing in the wake of anti-contagion measures that have essentially locked down the economy, HCSC could see enrollment in its employer-based insurance plans drop. HCSC and some other large insurers have agreed to cover certain patients’ out-of-pocket costs for COVID-19 treatments, a move that could cost them money, unless they make it up in premium hikes.

“With COVID-19, any losses incurred by these insurance companies because they’re waiving copays will directly come out of insurance premiums the next year, or negotiated prices with providers who are going to have to accept lower reimbursement rates,” says Attila Hertelendy, a health care expert and business professor at Florida International University.

HCSC, which owns Blue Cross plans in Illinois, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas, is navigating the pandemic without a permanent CEO. The turnover has been expensive. For example, the company’s longtime board chairman profits when there’s a transition at the top. Carroll, an energy industry executive, pocketed $4.9 million last year as part of a deal—the terms of which were not disclosed—”to ensure a smooth transition” and provide “proper support” to Lesar and Smith, spokesman Greg Thompson says in an email. Carroll’s compensation “reflects the additional time, effort, focus and input during this time of transition.”

Thompson did not say how many hours per week Carroll, who is also a director at oil services company Halliburton, devotes to HCSC business. He’s not the only high-level connection linking HCSC and the Houston-based energy industry giant. Lesar previously served as executive chair of Halliburton, and Patricia Hemingway Hall, who retired five years ago as CEO of HCSC, joined Halliburton’s board last year.

BCBSIL bosses bag big bucks after unjustified rate increases, staff layoffs....Enough is Enough!

While an outgoing chief executive moving into a chairman role or a board member stepping in as interim CEO, like Lesar, often get pay bumps during transitional periods, sources say Carroll’s arrangement is unusual for an outside director.

Since HCSC is not a public company, “there’s very little oversight and very little transparency,” Hertelendy says. “Nobody is holding them accountable so, realistically, they can do whatever they want.”

Carroll collected $930,347 in 2018, after getting nearly $5 million in each of the two previous years as part of a deal to oversee the leadership transition when Steiner succeeded Hall. Steiner, who spent more than three decades at Blue Cross & Blue Shield companies, left after disagreeing with directors over long-term growth plans.

Carroll’s compensation is far more than non-executive board chairmen got at comparable publicly traded health insurers. Humana and Cigna, for example, paid their chairmen $544,044 and $575,352, respectively.

Board compensation at HCSC “is designed to attract and retain the most qualified business leaders with broad and diverse experience to provide strategic counsel and guidance in the dynamic and rapidly evolving health care industry,” Thompson says. He notes that executive compensation is determined by the board, with guidance from outside advisers.

Some of the most common performance metrics that health insurance companies use to determine executive compensation are enrollment, market share and customer satisfaction, says Judy Canavan, leader of BDO’s compensation surveys practice. Revenue is also considered, but companies should be mindful that growth could result from higher prices, she says.

Thompson says metrics at HCSC include “expanding access to coverage and efforts to help control the rise in medical costs for our members,” in addition to market competitiveness and relevant peer data.

BIGGER PAYMENTS

HCSC paid more for CEO services last year than two larger health insurers. Altogether, Lesar and Steiner were paid about $25 million, not counting Steiner’s severance pay. Anthem chief Gail Boudreaux, a former HCSC executive, got $15.5 million, while Humana’s Bruce Broussard received $16.7 million. Anthem reported $104.2 billion in revenue last year and Humana booked $64.9 billion, compared with $38.6 billion for HCSC.

Companies likely established 2020 performance measures around the time COVID-19 hit, so they’ll want to revisit their expectations, Canavan says, adding that “bonuses probably got paid out right before we were aware of how big of a deal this would be. Optically, it’s going to be awkward, but it was for 2019 performance.”

In fact, HCSC’s 2019 payouts come at a time of great uncertainty for health insurance companies. As hospitals and outpatient centers cancel elective surgeries due to COVID-19, insurers initially will have fewer medical claims to pay. But insurers will soon get bills for COVID-19 treatments. And claims for deferred elective surgeries could pour in later this year or early in 2021, depending on when such procedures resume. Later, enrollment numbers could drop as employers shed insured workers.

Like its rivals, HCSC has agreed to waive some patients’ out-of-pocket costs for COVID-19 treatments, as well as prior authorizations and COVID-19 tests, in addition to expanding virtual health care coverage. It has also launched a special enrollment period for people who previously declined group coverage through their employer.

Still, as COVID-19 squeezes insurers’ profits, premium increases in individual and employer markets nationwide could be 40 percent or higher in the absence of federal action, according to a March 24 report from California’s Affordable Care Act marketplace.

Meanwhile, HCSC recently cut hundreds of staffers—many of whom had senior manager and director titles. In an internal memo announcing the January layoffs, Smith said the company is focused on making changes that “ensure we have the structure and resources to best serve our members now and into the future.” What a joke. Do they really think the public will understand when their rates go up 20% after handing out $73 million in executive pay with incompetent leaders that ended up resigning?

The “Blues” brand we used to love and trust has turned into another company where greed comes first, second, and third.

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