BY NATHANIEL
WEIXEL - 01/22/20 06:00 AM EST
The Trump
administration is poised to kick off a major partisan feud over Medicaid in
2020, as officials are reportedly planning to soon introduce a way for states
to block grant Medicaid money.
The guidance, which The Wall
Street Journal said could be released as early as this month, will test the
Trump administration’s ability to allow states the flexibility to make drastic
changes to Medicaid.
Imposing block grants in
Medicaid has long been a major conservative goal, and with time running down in President Trump’s
first term the administration is facing pressure to come up with health care
victories, even though some argue the policy may not be legal without
congressional approval.
Administration officials had drafted a guidance that would make it easier for
states to apply for a capped payment or block grants, but the White House
Office of Management and Budget withdrew it in November.
Legal and budget experts
suspected that the administration lacked the evidence needed to make a strong
legal argument defending the policy, but administration officials would not
publicly comment on it.
Health and Human Services
Secretary Alex Azar has been quietly trying to sell states on the merits of
imposing block grants, or a per-person spending cap, without congressional
approval.
Lawmakers in Tennessee have
already submitted a waiver request to the Trump administration to impose block
grants, and administration officials have also been urging Alaska’s governor to
apply.
Congressional Democrats have
warned that they will fight those efforts.
In a letter sent last week,
House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.) and
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) urged the
Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Office of Inspector General to
“exercise vigorous oversight” if Tennessee’s waiver request is granted.
“While the Secretary of HHS does not have legal authority to approve a waiver
that would convert Medicaid’s financing into a block grant, the administration
continues to encourage states to apply for these illegal waivers,” Pallone and
Wyden wrote.
Block grants are popular with
Republicans who want to constrain Medicaid spending but are fiercely opposed by
Democrats, who argue the changes require harmful cuts in the program.
Frank Siano, a principal at
EMD Consulting, said he’s concerned that states with block grants may not end
up spending the money in a way to ensure adequate coverage.
“If you’re leaving it up to
states, are we going to have more problems on health? You’re truly at the whim
of your state legislators,” Siano said.
Medicaid is the main source
of long-term care coverage for low-income Americans and is a guaranteed
benefit.
“I think it’s the holy grail
for some conservative thinkers,” said Jon Alker, executive director of the
Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, about block grants.
“It ends Medicaid’s
entitlement status,” Alker added. “This has been a long-held objective for
those who don’t want to spend a lot of federal funds on poor people.”
A block grant would transform
Medicaid from an open-ended entitlement program into one with capped benefits.
Currently, the federal government matches a certain percentage of state
spending, and the funding is open-ended. In exchange, states agree to cover
specific services and specific types of recipients.
Under a block grant, states
would receive a fixed amount of money from the federal government, regardless
of outside circumstances, that they could spend however they see fit. Critics
fear a block grant would ultimately lead to states kicking people off their
rolls or scaling back services.
Congress already rejected
block grants when the GOP’s ObamaCare repeal bill failed in 2017. Allowing
states to impose those same changes by statutory waiver would be extremely
controversial and have widespread implications about the use of executive
power.
Experts said it’s not clear
if that waiver authority extends to ideas that Congress previously rejected.
Robin Rudowitz, associate
director for the Kaiser Family Foundation’s Program on Medicaid and the
Uninsured, said the waivers the administration grants to allow changes to
Medicaid afford states broad discretion.
However, she said there’s an inherent tension about just how far the
administration can go without Congress, and any changes the administration
approves could wind up in court.
“States always say they want
flexibility, but what does that mean? What are the provisions that will be
waived to grant additional flexibility?” Rudowitz said.
The administration, though,
looks poised to push ahead.
In a recent speech, Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma hinted that the
administration was ready to begin approving proposals like the one in
Tennessee.
“Many states have expressed a
willingness to be held accountable for improving outcomes in exchange for
greater flexibility and budget certainty. Block grant and per capita cap
proposals are two such alternative financing approaches,” Verma said.
“We are encouraged by this
interest.”
https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/479274-trump-poised-to-kick-off-election-year-fight-over-medicaid
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