Arkansas Becomes 3rd State To Require Medicaid Recipients To Work
UPI Top Stories
Arkansas on Monday became the third state to receive federal approval to require low-income residents on Medicaid to work or volunteer to receive benefits.
"[It's] not about punishing anyone," Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson told reporters on Monday. "It's about giving people the opportunity to work. It's to give them training that they need. It's to help them move out of poverty and up the economic ladder."
Prior to Arkansas, work requirements for Medicaid were approved in Indiana and Kentucky.
Still, Hutchinson predicted that Arkansas would be the first to actually implement the law because it has been preparing to do so for about a year, when it first sought approval for the federal waiver.
The federal waiver signed by U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma on Monday allows Arkansas to require beneficiaries, ages 19-49, to participate in 80 hours per month of community engagement activities such as employment, education, job skills training or community service. The requirement includes exceptions made for elderly, the disabled, children and pregnant women.
The Trump administration began allowing states to move toward requiring Medicaid recipients to work earlier this year.
Latitude Subrogation Services Achieves SOC 2 Type II Certification
From murder capital to retiree haven, how Medellin has outgrown ‘Narcos’
Advisor News
- What’s behind private equity investment in insurance brokerages
- Advisors get a win as NJ Senate passes independent contractor bill
- Why federal retirement benefits are more complex than advisors realize
- Why timing the market is still a retirement mistake and what to do instead
- Business owners may be overlooking a key part of their financial picture
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Best’s Special Report: U.S. Life/Annuity Industry Sees Bottom-Line Growth Despite 18% Decline in Total Income in First-Quarter 2026
- Globe Life Inc. (NYSE: GL) Records 52-Week High Thursday Morning
- Fortitude Re Completes $500 Million FABN Issuance
- Reframing retirement income for greater certainty
- Jackson Introduces Dow Jones Industrial Average Index Option, Flexible Premiums, Six-Year Rate Guarantee in Latest Registered Index-Linked Annuity Launch
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Getting disability benefits got harder after the Social Security Administration changes
- Capitol Beat: Scott's veto signatures piling up
- Rising ACA premiums spur pivot to cheaper plans
- California is getting ready to increase a health insurance tax. Will it affect your premium?
- New Insurance Findings from University of California Described (The impact of Medicaid expansion on coverage among those lacking housing basics, 2010-2019): Insurance
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- OVER $107 MILLION IN LIFE INSURANCE BENEFITS LOCATED FOR TENNESSEANS IN 2025 THROUGH NAIC'S LIFE INSURANCE POLICY LOCATOR SERVICE
- Maryland Heights man pleads guilty in murder-for-hire death of his mom
- AM Best Affirms Credit Ratings of Everlake Life Group Members
- Industry experts warn NAIC: Fix flawed IUL illustrations now
- InsuranceAUM.com Celebrates a Historic 5th Annual Insurance Investment Executives’ Meeting in Chicago, Honoring Outstanding Industry Leaders and Spotlighting Next Event in Austin
More Life Insurance News