This screenshot shows a message on the Vermont Health Connect website.
This screenshot shows a message on the Vermont Health Connect website.

After taking Vermont Health Connect offline for roughly 15 hours, Shumlin administration officials announced Thursday that they have fixed one of the website’s persistent malfunctioning mechanisms.

Employees of companies that have elected to offer health insurance through the online market should no longer encounter errors when they attempt to select their plans, Department of Vermont Health Access (DVHA) officials said.

For just about everything you wanted to know about the state’s health care exchange, but were afraid to ask, go to VTDigger’s user’s guide to Vermont Health Connect.

The guide includes an interactive chart that helps you find your estimated subsidy level instantly.

The Vermont Chamber of Commerce, which has the stateโ€™s largest navigator grant, reported that, up until last week, every employee application they had worked on had become stuck at this point.

โ€œNavigator accounts were filled with dozens and dozens of โ€˜pendingโ€™ applications with no solution for how to finalize them,โ€ the Chamber noted in a report to lawmakers Thursday.

Rep. Mark Larson. VTD/Josh Larkin
Mark Larson. VTD/Josh Larkin

According to DVHA Commissioner Mark Larson, employees are among the now roughly 6,000 people who have selected a plan, but up until now, most of them were only able to do so by calling DVHA and having the department do it for them.

The department emailed navigators early Wednesday evening, alerting them that the site would be down from 8 p.m. Wednesday night until Thursday morning at 11:15 a.m., according to Emily Yahr, Vermont Health Connectโ€™s public information officer.

The site is usually down for maintenance between midnight and 5 a.m. each night, Yahr said, but this particular repair required additional time. Vermont Health Connect also experienced a temporary outage around noon Thursday.

Officials said they have received positive feedback on the changes made Thursday, and they are keeping close watch for any problems that could arise.

Vermonters still cannot pay for their plans โ€” the payment piece of the site is undergoing testing. This component was supposed to be launched Oct. 1, along with the rest of the website; it was later delayed until Nov. 1, and has since been delayed indefinitely.

A news release announcing the improvement also notes that small businesses only have four days to decide whether they want to extend their insurance until March 31.

In a statement, Larson urged discouraged Vermonters to return to the website in light of the upgrades.

โ€œThe recent improvement to Vermont Health Connect is good news for small businesses and their employees,โ€ Larson said. โ€œWe encourage Vermont small businesses and their employees who were encountering errors to log back in to Vermont Health Connect. We appreciate Vermontersโ€™ patience as we continue to make Vermont Health Connect better.โ€

Previously VTDigger's deputy managing editor.

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