Skip to content
Advertisement

FILE - In this Feb. 3, 2014, file photo, Yvette Calderon, right, an In Person Counselor for President Barack Obama's new health care law, speaks with taxi driver David Bilewu, a 39-year-old Nigerian immigrant at a city office where Chicago taxi drivers go to renew their license. For Illinois and more than 30 other states that defaulted to the federal government under Obama’s health care law, time may be running out to decide whether to adopt and control their own state-run insurance exchanges.The Illinois Legislature needs to act to approve a new state insurance exchange by May 31, 2014, or the state could lose up to $500 million in federal funding. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 3, 2014, file photo, Yvette Calderon, right, an In Person Counselor for President Barack Obama's new health care law, speaks with taxi driver David Bilewu, a 39-year-old Nigerian immigrant at a city office where Chicago taxi drivers go to renew their license. For Illinois and more than 30 other states that defaulted to the federal government under Obama’s health care law, time may be running out to decide whether to adopt and control their own state-run insurance exchanges.The Illinois Legislature needs to act to approve a new state insurance exchange by May 31, 2014, or the state could lose up to $500 million in federal funding. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

Featured Photo Galleries