CMS: No Deadline for States to Launch Medicaid Expansion
By Jane Norman, CQ HealthBeat Associate
Editor
There’s no deadline for a state to tell the federal government whether or
not it plans to expand its Medicaid rolls under the health care law, Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services Acting Administrator Marilyn Tavenner wrote
state governors on Friday.
Tavenner also said a state can receive extra funding to help pay for
Medicaid Information Technology and exchange implementation even if it has not
yet decided whether it will expand Medicaid eligibility or run a state-based
exchange. “And if a state ultimately decides not to do so, it will not have to
pay those resources back,” Tavenner said in the letter to the chairmen of the
National Governors Association, Republican Governors Association and Democratic
Governors Association. The NGA begins a meeting today in Williamsburg , Va.
Administration officials had said on background earlier that there wouldn’t
be a deadline for states to inform the Department of Health and Human Services
of their intentions. But the letter from Tavenner represents the first official
statement.
The letter from Tavenner begins to answer some of the many questions that
states, the health care industry and policy experts have been raising since the
June 28 Supreme Court decision that upheld the health care law but said states
could opt out of the Medicaid expansion. Under the law, states will receive
federal funding to expand their programs to adults earning under 138 percent of
the federal poverty level.
About a half-dozen Republican governors have said they are opposed to the
Medicaid expansion, and others have hinted they are considering opting out.
Some Democratic governors have not yet stated a position.
Tavenner, in her letter, said that as states study their options, “they
will recognize this is a good deal” because the costs of the expansion will be
funded 100 percent by the federal government for the first three years, then
gradually phased down to a minimum of 90 percent in 2020 and thereafter.
“The hospitals will get paid for what would otherwise be uncompensated care
provided to uninsured patients,” she added. “Their local economies will benefit
and jobs will be created when their hospitals remain viable and their workers
remain healthy.”
She added: “We hope states will not turn down the resources and flexibility
offered in the Affordable Care Act and will put aside old political battles to
move forward with implementation.”
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