Times (Munster, IN) December 2, 2019
Dec.
2--The state is preparing to seek federal approval to continue the Healthy
Indiana Plan through 2030, even as Attorney General Curtis Hill Jr. is backing
a lawsuit that could eliminate nearly all funding for the health program that
covers some 418,000 low-income Hoosiers.
On Nov.
6, the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration posted notice of its
intent to request a 10-year extension of the federal Medicaid waiver that
established the current HIP program, which otherwise would expire Dec. 31,
2020.
Indiana
also is proposing to extend the expanded substance abuse and serious mental
illness components of HIP through 2025, according to the notice.
FSSA
expects to submit Indiana's HIP extension request shortly after the public
comment period on the state's application closes Dec. 6.
An
independent evaluation of HIP that's set to accompany Indiana's renewal
application finds the program has improved health care access in Indiana,
particularly for people previously uninsured.
Records
show the state's HIP renewal application will go to the U.S. Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services.
That
agency took eight months to consider and approve Indiana's last HIP renewal
request in 2018.
In the
meantime, however, a lawsuit nearing a final decision by the Fifth Circuit
Court of Appeals could eliminate nearly all federal funding for HIP, if the
court -- as requested by Texas, Indiana and other states -- strikes down the
Affordable Care Act in its entirety.
That's
because HIP is an approved alternative to the Medicaid expansion provided for
by the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, and nearly all the costs
of HIP -- which total more than $3 billion a year -- are paid for by the
federal government.
FSSA
spokesman Jim Gavin said the agency is monitoring the lawsuit and remains
committed to HIP.
But
without federal funding, Indiana likely could not afford to continue HIP,
absent tax increases or significant spending cuts, since its general fund
spending for all state services amounts to $17 billion a year.
That
doesn't bother Indiana's Republican attorney general.
Hill
said earlier this year that regardless of any good it does, the Affordable Care
Act remains a federal government overreach.
"This
law's obvious incompatibility with the Constitution was the reason my office
chose to challenge it," Hill said.
"Congress
should never have imposed the one-size-fits-all mandate in the first place.
Choice, freedom and the roles of the individual states must remain part of the
health care equation in America."
No
matter how the court rules, it's unlikely HIP would disappear immediately since
any decision probably will be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
(c)2019
The Times (Munster, Ind.)
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