How Georgia’s new Medicaid work requirement program will work
The new plan – officially called Pathways to Coverage – will require enrollees to complete 80 hours of work, education, job training or community service per month to get Medicaid health insurance. Many will also have to pay a monthly premium.
Once the program begins,
Though exact numbers are difficult to calculate, it's expected that the Pathways program will provide insurance to only a small percentage of the 1.3 million Georgians without health insurance.
State officials estimate around 345,000 Georgians would be eligible for the new program. Back in 2020, they said they expected only about 64,000 people to actually enroll in the program.
Now that the program is becoming a reality, the
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Critics of Pathways contend the program will cover far fewer Georgians and cost more than a full expansion of Medicaid, as 39 states have done.
"New financial incentives under the American Rescue Plan sweeten the deal [for full Medicaid expansion] and more than offset the state cost of expansion for at least the first two years," Chan said.
Enrollees in
The program will provide a two-month grace period for people who do not pay their premiums. But after three months of non-payment, they will lose the insurance. They can be reinstated if they make at least one monthly payment within 90 days.
The state plans to use the existing benefits portal, Georgia Gateway, for program applicants to manage their work-requirement reporting, said Graves, the DCH spokesperson. He said Georgians can expect to learn more about the details of the program over the coming months.
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