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Florida’s Governor No Longer Supports Expanding Medicaid

A little more than two years ago, Florida Gov. Rick Scott made an announcement that shocked the political world: the Republican, who had spent a portion of his personal fortune to oppose Obamacare when it was being drafted in Congress, now supported expanding Medicaid in his state.

And it wasn’t just the policy announcement itself. It was the emotional way in which Scott described his conversion from Obamacare hater to Medicaid expansion supporter, speaking about the loss of his mother just months earlier. Expanding Medicaid to nearly 1 million low-income adults was just a matter of doing what’s right, he said in February 2013.

“While the federal government is committed to paying 100 percent of the cost of new people in Medicaid, I cannot in good conscience deny the uninsured access to care,” said Scott, a former chief executive of the nation’s largest for-profit hospital chain. Scott advocated a temporary three-year program that could be reversed in case the federal government reneged on its funding promise.

But the Florida state legislature didn’t go along, passing up tens of billions of dollars in federal support. Florida is one of 22 states that haven’t joined the Medicaid expansion.

And yet the Florida legislature now appears to be reconsidering its stance, or at least debating it again.The Senate has passed a budget that includes federal expansion funding, but the plan faces stiff opposition in the House, which shut down the expansion two years ago. And Scott’s administration is in talks with federal health officials to extend a $2 billion funding pool for health-care providers treating uninsured residents. Those providers receiving funds from what’s known as the Low-Income Pool (LIP) would presumably benefit from expanded Medicaid. The Obama administration, which wants every state to expand Medicaid, has said it won’t continue LIP funds beyond this June.

Amid these discussions, Scott now says he opposes the Medicaid expansion. Citing the LIP negotiations, Scott issued a statement that he doesn’t think the federal government will live up to its funding promise, the Associated Press reported. The federal Department of Health and Human Services pushed back in a statement, saying that “the law is clear” on how much support the federal government must provide for the Medicaid expansion.

In a way, Scott’s change of heart isn’t all that surprising. After giving that emotional speech more than two years ago, Scott didn’t campaign for expansion or pressure lawmakers from his own party. Meanwhile, two Republican governors, John Kasich of Ohio and Jan Brewer of Arizona, made full use of their executive powers to expand Medicaid in their states (and faced lawsuits from state lawmakers because of it).

Read the full article here.

Contact Steven G. Cosby, MHSA with questions or to request more information and to schedule a healthcare plan evaluation, savings analysis or group plan solution for your company.

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