States Sue Over Overhaul That
Will Bust State
Budgets
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Alert: (Bloomberg) President Barack Obama faces a fight over the
health-care overhaul from states that sued today because the
legislation’s
expansion of Medicaid imposes a fiscal strain on their cash-strapped
budgets.
Florida, Texas and Pennsylvania are among 14 states that filed suit
after
the president signed the bill over the constitutionality of the burden
imposed
by the legislation. The health-care overhaul will make as many as 15
million
more Americans eligible for Medicaid nationwide starting in 2014 and
will cost
the states billions to administer.
States faced with unprecedented declines in tax collections are
cutting
benefits and payments to hospitals and doctors in Medicaid, the health
program
for the poor paid jointly by state and U.S. governments. The costs to
hire staff
and plan for the average 25 percent increase in Medicaid rolls may swamp
budgets, said Toby Douglas, who manages the Medicaid program for
California,
which hasn’t joined the lawsuits.
“The states are coming through the worst fiscal period in the
history of
record keeping,” said Vernon Smith, a former Medicaid director for
Michigan and
now a principal at the research and consulting firm Health Management
Associates
in Lansing, Michigan. “Medicaid is the most significant, most visible
and most
costly part of this expansion and states fully expect to see increases
in their
spending.”
California’s Deficit
For California, with a $20 billion budget deficit, the extra load
will cost
at least an additional $2 billion to $3 billion annually, said Douglas,
chief
deputy director for California’s health care programs. He said the
overhaul is
currently projected to add 1.6 million people to the 7 million enrolled
in his
state’s program.
“We face enormous challenges just sustaining our existing program,”
said
Douglas in a March 18 telephone interview. “I just don’t see states
having the
capacity to move forward on these changes in this environment.”
The numbers of new enrollees because of the overhaul are based on
current
estimates and may be low, he said in an e-mail. The estimate doesn’t
incorporate
the growth that the program, known in California as Medi-Cal, may
experience
even without the new federal legislation, he said.
Medi-Cal recipients are projected to increase 4.3 percent to 7.3
million in
fiscal 2011, which begins July 1, spokesman Norman Williams said.
Court Challenge
Douglas’s state is battling in court over Medicaid spending cuts it
tried
to make this fiscal year. The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on
March 3
barred California from reducing payments to doctors and hospitals,
saying
federal law required states to maintain “equal access to basic health
care” for
the poor. California is appealing the decision to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
The federal government mandates that states provide health coverage
under
Medicaid to children, pregnant women, and the elderly and disabled poor.
States
set the rules on eligibility and decide which benefits to provide,
making for a
complex hodge-podge of coverage standards across the nation. The health-
care
overhaul simplifies the system by setting a minimum national floor and
requires
that all states cover childless adults, who will make up almost all of
the
expansion enrollees.
Medicaid Spending
Medicaid spent more than $344 billion in 2008, about 15 percent of
total
national health-care expenditures that year, according to the Centers
for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, which administers the program. It
currently
covers 60 million, about the same as Medicare, the federal program for
the
elderly and disabled, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation in Menlo
Park,
California. The U.S. government covered about 57 percent of Medicaid’s
cost in
2008, the foundation said.
Florida will have to spend an additional $1.6 billion for Medicaid
and hire
1,000 new workers to accommodate the overhaul, the state’s Attorney
General Bill
McCollum said yesterday in Orlando, Florida.
“This is a bad bill,” he said. “That’s a political determination
and a
practical one.”
The states that sued are Alabama, Colorado, Florida, Idaho,
Louisiana,
Michigan, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas,
Utah,
Virginia and Washington, McCollum said in a statement on his office’s
Web
site.
The complaint posted on the Florida attorney general’s Web site
called the
legislation an “encroachment on the sovereignty of states,” and said
Florida
will be asked to “broaden its Medicaid eligibility standards to
accommodate
upwards of 50 percent more enrollees.”
Insurance Mandate
Besides the added Medicaid costs, the states are also challenging
the right
of the federal government to impose a mandate requiring individuals to
buy
health insurance. Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, whose state
filed a
separate lawsuit today challenging the law, called the health
legislation an
“unconstitutional overreach” of the federal government’s authority.
Nancy-Ann DeParle, director of the White House Office of Health
Reform,
said the president isn’t “concerned” about the potential legal
challenges.
Congress has the “inherent authority” to mandate coverage under the
commerce
clause that allows the federal government to regulate interstate
commerce, she
told Bloomberg Television yesterday.
The historic health-care bill, which the House passed March 21
after 13
months of debate and discord, marks the biggest expansion of health
coverage
since enactment of Medicaid and Medicare in 1965. Obama signed it into
law
today.
Legislation Amendments
The House on March 21 also passed legislation amending the
overhaul,
expanding the number of those who will be covered by insurance and
raising the
total cost to $940 billion. The Senate is scheduled to take up these
amendments
this week. The package of bills would increase the number of Americans
insured
by 32 million, raising the portion of people under the age of 64 with
insurance
to about 94 percent.
The bills raise the threshold for people to qualify for Medicaid to
133
percent of the federal poverty level, which was $22,050 for a family of
four and
$10,830 for an individual for the 48 contiguous states in 2009,
according to
guidelines set by the Department of Health and Human Services.
The biggest challenge states face is dealing with a program where
the
growth in annual spending regularly exceeds the growth in state revenue,
said
Smith of Health Management Associates.
“It has been a very, very difficult period for the states,” Smith
said.
“They had to cut spending at a time when significantly more people
needed
it.”
Falling State Revenue
Most states have confronted drops in revenue since the beginning of
the
recession in late 2007 as tax collections fell for an unprecedented
fifth
straight quarter by the end of December last year, according to the
Nelson A.
Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, New York. In the first
nine
months of 2009, states suffered the biggest decline in revenue ever
recorded.
In fiscal 2009, Medicaid enrollment increased a record 3.29 million
nationally, with another rise of 1.29 million the year before, based on
reports
compiled for the Kaiser foundation.
Medicaid spending accounts for about 22 percent of state spending,
according to the National Governors Association, which said it doesn’t
expect
revenue to return to pre-recession levels until at least 2014. Budget
directors
estimate the fiscal 2011 budget gap could expand to $102 billion and may
even
reach $180 billion, the Kaiser study said. States by law, unlike
Washington,
must balance their budgets.
“In the past, Medicaid was only as strong as its weakest link,”
said
Stephen Somers, president of the health-policy nonprofit Center for
Health Care
Strategies Inc. in Hamilton, New Jersey. “ Now, there is the first
universal
floor and it will form the foundation for universal coverage.”
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