Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Georgia Faces $506M Medicaid Gap; Top Health Official Urges Tax Hike

By SHANNON McCAFFREY - Associated Press
The Macon Telegraph
January 22,2010

ATLANTA — Facing a massive gap in Medicaid funding, Georgia’s top health official on Thursday urged state legislators to adopt a tax hike on hospitals and health- care plans.

The state is staring down a $506 million shortfall in Medicaid funds for the fiscal year that begins July 1, according to state Health Commissioner Rhonda Medows.

The recession has caused enrollment in the health program for the needy to soar. Medicaid rolls for low-income residents have jumped 7.7 percent from June 2009 to 2010 to more than 1 million people.

Meanwhile, hundreds of millions of dollars in federal stimulus money are about to dry up.

The state has few options. To participate in Medicaid, it must provide services to the aged, blind, disabled and low-income children. And because Georgia accepted stimulus cash from Washington, it cannot cut back eligibility on optional programs such as dental coverage and prescription drugs, Medows said.

“We are in a box,” Medows told a joint budget panel of state legislators Thursday.

“I cannot find $506 million to fill that hole through cuts, program reductions, layoffs.”

Gov. Sonny Perdue has put forward a proposal that would charge hospitals and health insurance plans a 1.6 percent fee on their total revenues.

The Republican governor has been careful to label it a fee but Medows called it a tax Thursday, a word that’s not popular in the GOP-led state Legislature.

It’s the second year Perdue has pushed the proposal, which would leverage additional federal matching dollars. Last year the plan died amid opposition from conservative Republicans. But federal money also came to the rescue. This year, unless Congress approves another infusion of federal cash, Georgia will be left to fend for itself.

State Rep. Mickey Chanell, who oversees health spending on the House Appropriations Committee, said legislators are looking at possible alternative to Perdue’s so-called bed tax.

“The need additional revenue is real,” the Greensboro Republican said. “Our options are all pretty painful.”

Channell did not elaborate but one alternative in the past has been an increase in the tax on tobacco products.

Federal and state governments share the costs for Medicaid, the health program for needy residents.

Medicaid spending accounts for 9.8 percent of all state general revenue spending in Georgia.

The recession has placed is straining social service programs at the same time state coffers are running dry.

State Human Services Commissioner B.J. Walker told the legislative budget panel Thursday that during the last two years Georgia has seen a 39 percent jump in demand for social services programs such as Medicaid, food stamps and welfare.

http://www.macon.com/741/story/994648.html

Macon.com copyright notice
Material published on Macon.com, including articles, photos, graphics, videos, bulletin board postings and other content, is copyrighted by The Telegraph or by other information providers who have licensed their content for use on Macon.com. The entire contents of Macon.com are also copyrighted as a collective work under the United States copyright laws.

No comments: