Warner, Kaine & Colleagues Urge Biden Administration to Help Streamline Health Insurance Enrollment for Low-Income Families
In 2020, the
"Easy Enrollment efforts ultimately aim to let uninsured tax filers request automatic enrollment in Medicaid, CHIP, or zero-premium Marketplace coverage, but these initiatives are facing unnecessary bureaucratic obstacles. To reach as many eligible uninsured as possible, these states seek to limit the need for people who have already filed their tax returns to complete further paperwork before obtaining health care coverage," they wrote.
To help states streamline their Easy Enrollment initiatives, the senators urge the Administration to allow states to:
Verify filers' financial eligibility for programs like Medicaid or the
Confirm their citizenship status using existing electronic records.
Waive tax reconciliation penalties for consumers who choose to automatically enroll in zero-premium Marketplace plans after they have enrolled in health care coverage.
The senators note, "With these three flexibilities, States could strengthen Easy Enrollment programs so that numerous uninsured people who are already known to be
"Given the large and growing number of states pursuing Easy Enrollment initiatives, we recommend that CMS develop one or more templates making it easy for states to obtain federal approvals needed to maximize coverage gains from this promising approach. In the meantime, we urge the Administration to work proactively with states and to quickly approve state proposals to take the above steps. Easy Enrollment requires coordinating policy and operations between state health and tax agencies, so planning for 2024 Easy Enrollment has already begun. Clear and early guidance showing federal support for automating enrollment, as outlined in this letter, would give our states and others the confidence to innovate boldly and effectively in closing America's large, persistent, and inequitable enrollment gap," the senators concluded.
Senators Warner, Kaine, and
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To: The Honorable
The Honorable Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, Administrator,
Dear Secretary Becerra and Administrator Brooks-LaSure:
We are writing to urge the
Such initiatives address a serious problem: America's enrollment gap. Roughly two-thirds of our country's uninsured residents - more than 18 million people -- qualify for but are not enrolled in Medicaid, the
To close that gap, ten states that, together, include one-third of America's Medicaid-eligible uninsured population--
By leveraging income-tax filing to streamline and automate enrollment, Easy Enrollment programs could reach most of America's uninsured families. In 2021, 94% of uninsured adults filed federal income tax returns, including 90% of uninsured adults with incomes below 150% of the federal poverty level, 93% of uninsured people of color, and 93% of uninsured adults who never graduated high school.
The Administration has compiled a remarkable track record bringing health insurance to an ever-widening circle of families in America. To build on that record, we urge the
States should be allowed to verify citizenship through electronic records, without requiring families to submit redundant paperwork. Applicants for health programs must complete forms attesting, under penalty of perjury, to
States should be allowed to base financial eligibility for Medicaid on state income tax records. Financial eligibility for Medicaid reflects current income. A state implementing the option for "Express Lane Eligibility," or ELE, can qualify children as financially eligible based entirely on information from other income-based programs or the family's state income tax return. CMS should make clear that it is willing to grant Sec.1115 waivers permitting states to use ELE's tax return option to establish financial eligibility, not just for children, but for adults as well.
States should be allowed to have tax reconciliation penalties waived for consumers they automatically enroll into zero-premium Marketplace plans. Someone enrolled into a zero-premium plan may owe federal tax reconciliation payments if their annual income turns out to exceed expected levels. For states to reliably promise that zero-premium plans will truly cost enrollees nothing, CMS and the
With these three flexibilities, States could strengthen Easy Enrollment programs so that numerous uninsured people who are already known to be
Given the large and growing number of states pursuing Easy Enrollment initiatives, we recommend that CMS develop one or more templates making it easy for states to obtain federal approvals needed to maximize coverage gains from this promising approach. In the meantime, we urge the Administration to work proactively with states and to quickly approve state proposals to take the above steps. Easy Enrollment requires coordinating policy and operations between state health and tax agencies, so planning for 2024 Easy Enrollment has already begun. Clear and early guidance showing federal support for automating enrollment, as outlined in this letter, would give our states and others the confidence to innovate boldly and effectively in closing America's large, persistent, and inequitable enrollment gap.
Sincerely,
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Original text here: https://www.kaine.senate.gov/press-releases/warner-kaine-and-colleagues-urge-biden-administration-to-help-streamline-health-insurance-enrollment-for-low-income-familiesc
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