Contractors who built the glitch-filled HealthCare.gov website have a clear message for Congress Thursday: don’t blame us.
Officials from CGI Federal, Optum/QSSI, Equifax Workforce Solutions and Serco appeared at a hearing before the House Energy and Commerce Committee Thursday morning to explain what went wrong, but they weren’t eager to take any responsibility.
Cheryl Campbell, a senior vice president of CGI, which built the site, said her company isn’t the one to blame.
The Department of Health and Human Services “serves the important role of systems integrator or quarterback on this project and is the ultimate responsible party for the end-to-end performance,” she said Thursday.
She also pointed to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services –the government agency tasked with running the healthcare exchanges, for pushing the site to go live. “It was not our decision,” said Campbell.
The hearing is the first public inquiry into the flubbed website that took years to build and cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
Republicans have blamed Health and Human Services head Kathleen Sebelius for the failure — and the contractors Thursday were eager to agree it wasn’t their fault.
Andy Slavitt, of QSSI—which designed a part of the website that looks into applicant’s personal details like income—partially blamed the administration, arguing a late decision mandating potential customers to make accounts before looking at specific health plans may have contributed to the overload.
“This may have driven higher simultaneous usage of the registration system that wouldn’t have occurred if consumers could window-shop anonymously,” he said.
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, who has come under fire for the glitches and is expected to testify in front of Congress as early as next week, told CNN on Tuesday that Obama was unaware of the technical problems until the website launched. A group of 32 Republican congressmen have gone as far as to sign a letter to the president calling for Sebelius’ resignation, citing the problems with the website.
During Thursday afternoon’s White House briefing, spokesman Jay Carney said the administration knew there was always the possibility of some glitches but “what we did not know was that we would encounter problems on the scale that we’ve seen.”
Republicans took the opportunity to ding the White House.
Republican Rep. Fred Upton of Michigan, the committee’s chairman, said
he was repeatedly assured by contractors and Obama administration officials that “everything’s on track. Except it wasn’t, as we all know too well.”









