Welcome to the 2014 version of the ObamaCare debacle. Yes, there is yet another ObamaCare “glitch.”

WASHINGTON (AP) — There’s another quirk in the Obama administration’s new health insurance system: It lacks a way for consumers to quickly and easily update their coverage for the birth of a baby and other common life changes.

With regular private insurance, parents just notify the health plan. Insurers will still cover new babies, the administration says, but parents will also have to contact the government at some point later on.

Right now the HealthCare.gov website can’t handle such updates.

It’s a reminder that the new coverage for many uninsured Americans comes with a third party in the mix: the feds. And the system’s wiring for some vital federal functions isn’t yet fully connected.

It’s not just having a new baby that could create bureaucratic hassles, but other life changes affecting a consumer’s taxpayer-subsidized premiums. The list includes marriage and divorce, a death in the family, a new job or a change in income, even moving to a different community.

Such changes affect financial assistance available under the law, so the government has to be brought into the loop.

This is what happens when the government imposes itself on your daily life. It must be “brought into the loop” and, of course, the ObamaCare “loop” is incompetent. And that’s the just beginning of the problems with this misguided, job-killing, failed policy. We must reverse course and implement a consumer-driven approach to providing a menu of insurance options based on customer wants and needs.