Enrollment for 2021 benefits is currently open on healthcare.gov, even as the landmark 2010 law faces challenges in the Supreme Court.
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"I've got two young children and I'm not getting any younger," Cameron Duncan, a Raleigh small business owner, said. "Having health coverage makes the most sense."
Duncan is the owner and manager at Staff'd NC, an events staffing company that has seen business plummet since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
"While I'm not working as much as I used to be, and I would love more work, not having health coverage is pretty risky for any family. You really understand that Obamacare savings once you go through something like this and your work is 95% down."
Duncan and his family have purchased health insurance on the open marketplace set up through the ACA since 2016. They're among the more than 11 million Americans and 500,000 North Carolinians who buy policies and benefit from subsidies that make the premiums more affordable.
"We would certainly have burned through our savings much quicker with an additional $700 a month," Duncan said. "It would've been horrible."
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For 2021, North Carolinians will have access to even more insurer plans and cost savings, and that might be a healthy antidote to the estimated 257,000 people who have lost their coverage after losing their jobs this year.
RELATED: Medicaid enrollment, costs growing as unemployment surges in North Carolina
"One of the things we know about people is when they are short of money and have to make a decision about rent, food or medicine--they won't buy medicine or visit the doctor because that's considered a luxury," Catherine Sevier, President of the AARP North Carolina, said. "Having insurance is critical to keeping all of us financially solvent and keeping the workforce intact."
Politically, Obamacare continues to endure despite several attempts to undo it, though this week the Supreme Court again heard arguments from opponents still seeking its demise.
"It's really hard to find a precedent of a Supreme Court decision that would have such a sweeping effect on the country," said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.
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At issue is whether the ACA's individual mandate, which requires Americans to have health insurance, is unconstitutional after the GOP Congress in 2017 zeroed out the financial penalty for going without.
The Supreme Court had previously upheld the mandate on the grounds that it was a tax. But after the penalty went away, two lower federal courts subsequently struck down the mandate as impermissible and called into question whether the rest of the law could stand as a result.
An estimated 21 million Americans would lose health insurance nationwide if the law is struck down, according to an analysis by the Urban Institute. Protections for 54 million people with pre-existing conditions could also suddenly go away.
"That 50-65-year-old is one that has been protected in this whole ACA change, and it's the most at risk because someone with preexisting conditions is most likely going to need more care," Sevier said. "Our older employees are usually slower to be hired back, so those people that are close to the end of their career will have more difficulty getting jobs."