DeSantis health officials to delay KidCare expansion until after Trump takes office
The approval issued Monday by the federal
But that approval is contingent on
Gov. Ron DeSantis’ health care administrators want to wait until Trump is in office, and to understand what his administration thinks of the “continuous coverage rule,” before acting.
The federal agency is “making a concerted effort to advance the political priorities of the
“It would be wise for CMS to show deference to the incoming administration by allowing them the opportunity to review and approve significant policy initiatives that are likely to impact their time in office,” Collins said.
The state agency plans to ask for a 30-day extension of its deadline “to ensure we have an opportunity to work with the new administration on this issue,” she added.
But child advocates say families have already waited nearly two years since the Legislature approved the expansion, and the state should jump at the federal offer.
“This is truly welcome news for tens of thousands of children in
“Florida leaders should accept the terms to this waiver approval, including preserving 12 months of continuous health care coverage for children, no matter what,” agreed
The federal government’s decision this week comes on the heels of the state canceling Medicaid for some 532,000 children due to a controversial Medicaid redetermination process called “unwinding” that critics decried as flawed and inhumane.
The continuous coverage rule, which was supposed to go into effect Jan.1, applies to Medicaid recipients who are under 18 as well as KidCare recipients. It means that states can no longer disenroll participants during periods of continuous eligibility, except in certain circumstances. It applies to current recipients whose income is between 133% and 200% of the federal income level for a family of three, as well as those who would be eligible under the expansion.
New payment tiers for the program were supposed to take effect at the first of this year, the same time a new federal law took effect that requires states to provide 12 months of continuous eligibility to children under 19 who are enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP, without exception. Non-payment of premiums was not an exception to the new continuous eligibility rule, the federal agency said.
State health officials claimed the state would have to give up
The lawsuit was dismissed by a federal judge in
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