DHS: 140,000 Minnesotans could lose health insurance under federal tax cut and spending package
Jul. 29—By
Close to 140,000 Minnesotans are likely to lose health care coverage under Medicaid cuts that are expected to cost the state
The
The legislation also imposes work requirements on adult Medicaid enrollees, caps provider taxes that help states pay for the program, increases costs on low-income enrollees and reduces compensation to states for providing care to immigrants with life-threatening emergencies.
Some 1.2 million Minnesotans depend on Medicaid, meaning more than 10% of them are now expected to lose their coverage.
Over the first four years,
Costs to enrollees are expected to rise, said
"That's bad for people seeking care, and also bad for health care providers, and it's bad for the state budget," Connolly said.
The bill Trump pushed through the
The likely increase in the number of uninsured Minnesotans going to emergency rooms for treatment, Connolly said, will mean hospitals won't be reimbursed for more of their services. That in turn will increase costs for individuals on private insurance as hospitals increase prices to cover their costs, he added.
"This is going to be hugely expensive to cover fewer people," said state Sen.
State Rep.
"I'm quite concerned right now that there's a lot of doom and gloom before we have all the data and so forth," said Backer, the Republican co-chair on the
Bierman, the Democratic co-chair of the House committee, noted the huge increase to the national debt projected from the bill.
"What we're achieving is simply taking health care away from the poorest of the poor in this state ... and giving it to some of the wealthiest people in the country, so it's mind-boggling to me," he said.
Sen.
"These changes will cut hundreds of millions of dollars in funding and add hundreds of millions in new costs to state and county budgets, all with the goal of removing health care access to Minnesotans currently relying on it," she said.
Sen.
He said government creates issues for providers in the Medicaid program by not reimbursing them at high enough rates for their services.
"The reconciliation bill is not doing anything unreasonable," Utke said. "There's a whole lot of people running scared, but they need to look at what it is."
"It will exacerbate that challenge," Connolly said.
© 2025 the Albert Lea Tribune (Albert Lea, Minn.). Visit www.albertleatribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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