Latest Medicaid bill advances to Idaho House floor
After around two hours of mostly negative testimony, the
One of those changes would switch administration of
The bill is meant to contain costs of the program.
"This bill actually provides for immediate savings to the state and provides for long-term sustainability and accountability in the entire Medicaid program," Redman told the
HB 345 was introduced after a previous bill that Redman sponsored, HB 138, which would trigger a full repeal of Medicaid expansion if 11 waivers were not obtained by a 2026 deadline, had advanced out the
Redman said HB 345 removed provisions in previous legislation that drew concerns, such as enrollment caps, lifetime eligibility limits and ending most presumptive eligibility.
There were 13 people who testified against the bill and four spoke in favor; of the total who signed up online, 167 signed up in opposition and 15 supported the bill.
Opponents said that provisions like work requirements and increasing frequency of eligibility determinations would increase administrative costs and increase barriers for participants. Supporters have said that the bill will help constrain the program's significant costs while keeping Medicaid in place.
"HB 345 will prevent many needy, deserving Idahoans from getting essential care by snaring them in a web of complicated, unnecessary red tape and barriers to insurance,"
Some testifiers and committee members both questioned if adding work requirements would add more administrative costs than the potential savings would be worth.
The bill would require that able-bodied adults must work at least 20 hours a week to continue to be eligible for coverage. To meet the requirements they could also volunteer for 20 hours a week or work and volunteer for a combined 20 hours or more.
There would be exemptions for those younger than 19, older than 64, parents or caretakers responsible for children younger than 6, parents or caretakers caring for a dependent with a serious medical condition or disability, those receiving unemployment compensation, participating in a drug or alcohol treatment program, or attending college, university or vocational school at least part time.
More than 18,000 Arkansans lost health coverage during the period
"Further studies showed that 56% delayed necessary medical procedures, 64% missed taking prescriptions as prescribed, and half accumulated significant medical debt," Hagen said. "Many also reported missing work because of untreated medical conditions, and there wasn't any evidence of increased hours worked or new employment."
One testifier,
The VCO model was launched in
Rooks said that the current VCO model provides "disproportionate financial risk" to community health care centers, which are nonprofit health centers that focus on high-needs communities and treat patients regardless of their ability to pay.
House Minority Leader
"I've been to a lot of town halls and other gatherings with a lot of angry mobs from previous MCO contracts that were very specially negotiated for
Redman had told committee members that a new contract with an MCO would be better because it would be overseen by the legislative Medicaid review panel formed last year.
Rep.
Rubel then made a substitution to hold the bill in committee. Her motion was quickly followed by an amended substitution motion — which is the maximum number of motions that can be made — by Rep.
Cayler said he wanted to see a hearing on HB 138, which includes a repeal trigger of Medicaid expansion, in the
Rubel's motion to hold the bill failed in a 3-12 vote. The motion to send the bill to the floor passed in with a 13-2 vote, with only the



LendingTree, Inc. Fourth Quarter 2024 Earnings Sharehoholder Letter
NABIP urges congressional action on Medicare Advantage
Advisor News
- IRS CEO FRANK J. BISIGNANO VISITS OHIO TO TOUT WORKING FAMILIES TAX CUTS PROVISIONS ON NO TAX ON CAR LOAN INTEREST, NO TAX ON OVERTIME, ENHANCED DEDUCTION FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
- The hidden flaw in insurance AI adoption for advisors and carriers
- Rising healthcare costs impact 401(k) accounts
- What advisors think about pooled employer plans, alternative investments
- AI, stablecoins and private market expansion may reshape financial services by 2030
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- How annuities can help protect retirees from financial scams
- MetLife Inc. (NYSE: MET) Climbs to New 52-Week High
- The Standard and Pacific Guardian Life Announce Entry into Agreement to Transition Individual Annuities Business
- AuguStar Retirement launches StarStream Variable Annuity
- Prismic Life Announces Completion of Oversubscribed Capital Raise
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- New Mental Health Diseases and Conditions Findings from Temple University Outlined (Using Demand Analysis To Examine Private Practice Mental Health Providers’ Decision To Accept Health Insurance): Mental Health Diseases and Conditions
- Reports from Boston Children’s Hospital Advance Knowledge in Health and Medicine (Disparities in health insurance and healthcare access for immigrant children with special healthcare needs): Health and Medicine
- Oregon health director pens New York Times essay to decry nation’s care for new mothers like her
- Soaring Healthcare Costs Put California School Districts And Teachers At Odds
- New Managed Care Study Findings Recently Were Reported by Researchers at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Rates of fall injuries across three claims databases, 2019): Managed Care
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- U-Haul Holding Company Reports Fiscal 2026 Financial Results
- Symetra Honored as 2026 ‘Community Champion’ by the Puget Sound Business Journal
- Kyle Busch attorney rips ‘false narrative’ around life insurance coverage
- Data verification: Modernizing life insurance for the digital consumer
- The hidden risks of indexed universal life and what advisors should know
More Life Insurance News