Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
8.5.17
LA Medicaid work requirements good, if done right
Work requirements in Louisiana for able-bodied adults without
disabilities to enroll in Medicaid make a lot of sense, even if it would not
save much money. It’s just its effective implementation that gets tricky.
SB 188 by
state Sen. Sharon
Hewitt would require this category of Medicaid enrollees to fulfill a “community
engagement” standard, defined as employment, volunteer work, caretaking, job
training, education, or job search activities comprising at least 20 hours a
week. The bill would exempt many from the requirement, essentially those who
care for dependents of some kind. Last week the Senate Health and
Welfare Committee took
up the bill, but in the face of opposition Hewitt deferred the bill in
favor of a study resolution.
The notion build upon successful
application of work policies in other federal programs such as the Supplemental
Nutritional Assistance Program that distributes vouchers for food and drink for
lower-income households. However, it would not act as a panacea to rein in runaway
Medicaid costs, given the tightly drawn nature of this measure, which mimics
those in a handful of other states. Only roughly 11 percent of current Medicaid
recipients – jobless able-bodied adults without dependents (ABAWD) – fit the
bill, and using a slightly lower percentage the Legislative
Fiscal Office saw for next year only about $7 million saved, not including
$4 million in initial costs, nor a small annual cost to review client eligibility,
nor continuing reduction in the 5.5 percent premium tax charged on managed care
policies into which Medicaid clients enroll.
Achieving these small savings also runs into the
reality of Louisiana’s outdated laws regarding indigent
provision of health care that allow free treatment of anybody with less than
200 percent of Federal Poverty Limit income. That is, somebody in that income
range, if not meeting a requirement like that in SB 188 to sign up for
Medicaid, simply opts out and whenever feeling the need just shows up at a
charity hospital for free. As for people below the 138 percent level, they also
can pass and in the future take advantage of the Emergency
Medical Treatment and Labor Act to receive all but primary care from any
qualified provider without cost.
In other words, tying the requirement directly
onto Medicaid would provide little incentive to work, then additionally
launches a political argument about denying care to individuals with serious
conditions only because they do not work. Savings might dwindle to the point
the additional eligibility determination costs actually exceed these.
A better approach piggybacks on information collection
efforts already underway. For example, Medicaid clients almost universally
qualify as SNAP beneficiaries, and, courtesy of an executive
order from Gov. John
Bel Edwards last year, the same population envisioned as covered under SB
188 must meet certain eligibility standards.
Yet the order
imposes such weak requirements that it does next to nothing to encourage work
and discourage dependency. Unlike places such as Maine,
where SNAP eligibility requirements for ABAWD clientele as does SB 188 ask for
20 hours a week minimum of work, training, or service, Edwards’ order merely
requires affirmation of looking of work if not training. Thus, while Maine’s SNAP ABAWD caseload
dropped around 80 percent in just a few months after the reform, Louisiana’s
adult clientele totals hardly have budged from last June
through this March,
actually increasing slightly in the 491,000 range.
Going forward, future legislation should not
reinvent the eligibility determination wheel by tying into for ABAWD something
like information already gathered for SNAP, but at the realistic standard
proposed in SB 188. Other approaches largely would negate the beneficial impact
of the idea that Medicaid recipients should make a good-faith effort to
contribute to society in exchange for the gift of health care.
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