Some Texas counties want Medicaid expansion
Washington Post:
The people pushing the program are happy to spend other peoples money whether it is from the feds or the state, but someone has to pay for it eventually. Not accepting the program also makes it easier to unwind Obamacare once it is repealed.
Local officials in Texas are discussing whether to band together to expand Medicaid coverage in some of the state’s biggest counties, making an end run around Gov. Rick Perry’s opposition to the expanded program included in President Obama’s health-care law.
For years, Texas’s six most populous counties, as well as some smaller localities, have offered free or low-cost health care for uninsured residents with incomes as much as three times the federal poverty level, or about $57,000 for a family of three. The cost of the programs: about $2 billion a year.
If some of the patients were enrolled in Medicaid, the state-federal health-care program for the poor, it could be salve for cash-strapped county budgets and a boon for local taxpayers.
George Hernandez Jr., CEO of University Health System in San Antonio, came up with the idea of the alternative, county-run Medicaid expansion, and said he has been discussing it with other officials in his county, Bexar. “They are all willing,” he said. He added that he has also been talking up the proposal with officials in other big counties, such as those including Houston and Dallas, and is optimistic they’ll support the idea.
Robert Earley, CEO of JPS Health Network, the public hospital system serving Tarrant County, which includes the Fort Worth area, said he could see the idea catching on.
The Medicaid expansion is a key part of the Obama health-care law, but its fate was thrown into question when the Supreme Court in June ruled that states could refuse to take part without being penalized by the federal government. Half a dozen Republican governors, including those in Florida, Louisiana and Texas, have already declared their opposition to the expansion, while several other governors, including some Democrats, have remained noncommittal.
The county-led effort would require the consent of both the White House and the Texas legislature. Federal officials would have to waive requirements that states apply the same eligibility standards statewide.
Whatever the plan’s fate, it shows that frustrated local officials don’t necessarily want to give the governor the last word on whether to accept millions of federal health aid that could ease local burdens.
...The chances of this happening are remote. It is unlikely the legislature would go along and if they did gov. Perry could still veto it. The objections to the Obamacare plan is that while initially fully funded, it is expected that the state would eventually be on the hook for a significant portion of the cost as they are now with existing Medicaid which is taking up an ever increasing percentage of the state budget.
The people pushing the program are happy to spend other peoples money whether it is from the feds or the state, but someone has to pay for it eventually. Not accepting the program also makes it easier to unwind Obamacare once it is repealed.
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