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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    GOP Governors Seek Leeway to Cut Medicaid Rolls

    JANUARY 7, 2011.

    GOP Governors Seek Leeway to Cut Medicaid Rolls

    By JANET ADAMY

    Republican governors are pressing the Obama administration to make it easier for states to cut Medicaid enrollment, setting up a fight over one of states' costliest programs.

    On Friday, 33 Republican governors and governors-elect plan to send a letter to the White House and congressional leaders asking them to remove a part of the health-care overhaul law.

    Under the rule, states that drop enrollees from the program would lose the federal money that accounts for the bulk of Medicaid funding, an unthinkable scenario for states staring down unprecedented budget shortfalls in 2011.

    "The effect of the federal requirements is unconscionable," the governors wrote. "The federal requirements force governors to cut other critical state programs, such as education, in order to fund a 'one-size-fits-all' approach to Medicaid." The signatories include all 29 of the GOP governors who will hold office this year, plus four who are leaving office soon.

    Supporters of the current rule said states shouldn't be allowed to chop millions of poor people from the rolls when the weak economy makes Medicaid coverage critical. They also fear that loosening the rule could undercut the health overhaul, which is designed to expand Medicaid to an additional 16 million Americans starting in 2014.

    But states say that swell in enrollment could make the program unmanageable. Another problem for states: An extra $26 billion they got from the federal government last year to prop up Medicaid expires in June.

    Medicaid, which provides health insurance and covers nursing-home costs for the poor, has become most states' top spending conundrum. Although the federal government pays 57% on average of states' Medicaid costs, states are straining to cover the other 43% because Medicaid enrollment continues to rise.

    Medicaid enrollment rose to 47.8 million people in 2009 from 42.6 million in 2008, according to the Census Bureau. The percentage of Americans on Medicaid is the highest since 1987.

    Prevented from paring enrollment, states have cut services, including Arizona's limiting of Medicaid coverage for organ transplants.

    In New York, Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo is considering a cut of about $2.1 billion in the state's projected spending on Medicaid in the upcoming fiscal year. He has asked union leaders and hospital executives for cost-cutting ideas.

    At least a half-dozen states have publicly discussed withdrawing from the Medicaid program altogether because of its expense.

    "For most governors, this is the biggest budget problem, and federal mandates are a huge part of that," Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour said in an interview.

    Mr. Barbour, a potential Republican presidential contender in 2012, said lifting the requirement would allow his state to move enrollees to more efficient health programs, and wouldn't necessarily increase the ranks of the state's uninsured.

    The Obama administration said it was trying to help states tame rising Medicaid costs. "We understand that states are facing extraordinarily tight budgets, and that's why we supported measures like enhanced" Medicaid funding, said Reid Cherlin, a spokesman for the White House. "We're exploring options to continue to assist states."

    Congress would need to pass legislation to approve the change. So far there's no sign that congressional Democrats would give it the support it needs. The health overhaul does contain a provision that allows states with budget deficits to seek permission from the federal government to limit Medicaid eligibility, but only for relatively higher-income adults who are not pregnant or disabled.

    Under the current requirement, a state effectively can't change its Medicaid eligibility rules until it has one of the new health-insurance exchanges created by the overhaul law. That's expected to happen in 2014.

    States are pressing forward with deep cuts to the few parts of Medicaid they can change without risking losing their federal matching funds. Those including trimming nonessential benefits for adults—such as prescription, vision and dental coverage—and shaving the rates Medicaid pays health-care providers.

    Texas estimates that it will cost an additional $9.1 billion to retain its current Medicaid service levels through 2013. If it tried to plug that gap by cutting health-care provider rates, it would have to reduce them by 48%— and that might drive care providers to stop accepting Medicaid patients, according to the governors' letter. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, has threatened to pull out of Medicaid.

    Write to Janet Adamy at janet.adamy@wsj.com

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... TopStories
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  2. #2
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    It's not just the GOP. CA. Gov.Brown is a Democrat.
    (Medicaid is called Medi-Cal in CA.)


    Monday, January 03, 2011

    Brown Expected To Propose Cuts to Medi-Cal, Other Programs

    Gov.-elect Jerry Brown (D), who will be sworn in today, is expected to propose broad budget cuts that could affect Medi-Cal and nearly all other programs that receive state funding, according to a source familiar with Brown's proposal, the Sacramento Bee reports.

    Medi-Cal is California's Medicaid program.

    Budget Background

    California faces an 18-month deficit that is estimated at more than $25 billion. A portion of the shortfall stems from overly optimistic budget assumptions that outgoing Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) and state legislators included in the budget plan for the current fiscal year.

    The estimated deficit also accounts for an expected imbalance between the amount the state will receive in taxes during the next fiscal year and the amount it would spend under current law.

    Possible Cuts to Health Programs

    In his forthcoming budget plan, Brown is expected to propose wide-ranging cuts to nearly all state services, including several health care programs.

    For example, Brown is expected to call for reductions in Medi-Cal spending by:

    â–*Limiting visits to physicians;
    â–*Reducing rates paid to health care providers; and
    â–*Requiring patients to provide copayments for services.
    Brown's plan also could include changes to Healthy Families, California's Children's Health Insurance Program. The changes could eliminate vision benefits and require enrollees to pay higher premiums for care.


    In addition, Brown is likely to propose reductions in the number of hours that In-Home Supportive Services workers can care for disabled and elderly residents. The governor-elect also could attempt to divert certain funds from voter-approved accounts that fund mental health care and early childhood development.

    Eye on June Ballot

    Brown's proposal to cut nearly all state programs could be part of an effort to encourage voters to approve revenue-raising ballot measures in June, according to the Bee (Yamamura, Sacramento Bee, 1/3).

    Such ballot measures could include extensions to temporary income, sales and vehicle taxes that are slated to expire in July. Voters rejected similar initiatives last year (Williams, AP/Los Angeles Daily News, 1/2).

    Editorial

    After he takes office, Brown "will have to get specific about what he will cut and how he will keep the money flowing for education, social services, law enforcement and other basic state services," a San Francisco Chronicle editorial states. It continues, "Now it's time for Brown to reveal his own secrets and fix the mess he was elected solve" (San Francisco Chronicle, 1/2).

    http://www.californiahealthline.org/art ... z1AJPlRqDH
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