‘We’ve seen this play out’: New bill to curtail Idaho’s Medicaid expansion moves forward
A House committee chamber at the Idaho State Capitol was so packed early Tuesday morning that the officer standing guard had to turn people away. Dozens had descended upon the hearing room to testify on yet another proposal to curtail spending on the state’s Medicaid expansion program.
The newest bill, sponsored by
The new bill also eliminates a cap on the number of people who can be enrolled in the program, and a limit on the number of months they can be enrolled over their lifetimes. A prior version sought to restrict it to three years.
But to make up the difference, Redman told committee members, he added new components to the bill, including “managed care,” which provides a network of medical providers and oversight of health care providers to reduce costs. He also added a requirement for Medicaid expansion recipients to report their hours worked.
Those additions drove much of the debate over the bill Tuesday, with lawmakers questioning whether the bill would add red tape, complexity and cost to the Medicaid expansion program. They expressed concerns that the work reporting requirement would be costly to administer, perhaps canceling out other savings the bill could offer.
“When Arkansas implemented their (work requirement), it cost them
Redman’s proposed work requirement is very similar to that of
“We’ve seen this play out,” Hagen said.
Proposals to slash Medicare expansion spark conflict
After Redman’s initial proposal passed the House last month, the chair of the Senate’s Health and
But last week, when the chair, Sen.
“This is passed in the House and Medicaid costs have more than tripled,” said Sen.
Sen.
The moment exemplified sharp tensions inside the
The Affordable Care Act, passed in 2010, required states to expand Medicaid coverage to continue receiving federal funding. But the
The Republican-dominated
That led
But the cost of the program is “not sustainable,” Rep.
Redman has focused on a need to cut the state’s spending on the program’s “skyrocketing” costs, he said at a public hearing.
The federal government pays 90% of the costs of Idaho’s Medicaid expansion. But
“If the federal government reduced Medicaid expansion dollars tomorrow, would
Rep.
“With a taxpayer-funded program, we have people who are funding this — a lot of folks that are working multiple jobs, they’re barely making ends meet in a time of historic inflation,” Cayler told the committee. “Yet, a lot of these people are still being required to pay the tax to fund other people’s health care through the expansion” — even as they “pay out of their own pocket, in many cases, for their private health plans.”
In the same meeting,
“My practice has shown that’s blatantly false,” he said. “Taking away health care coverage does not make people work. In fact, it creates more people that are ill and are unable to address their health care needs, which would allow them to get back to work.”
The committee voted to send Redman’s newest bill to the House floor for consideration.
‘One accident away from bankruptcy’:
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