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Senate Delivers Fourth Compromise Proposal on Healthcare Reform to House

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Senate Delivers Fourth Compromise Proposal on Healthcare Reform to House,

House and Senate Sign Placeholder ‘Medicaid Tech’ Bill

Jackson, Miss.—Senate Medicaid Chairman Kevin Blackwell delivered another signed compromise proposal to the House on healthcare reform.

The newest proposal is a version of the Senate compromise delivered to the House on Friday, April 26. The House objected to the requirement that the Attorney General appeal to the federal courts if CMS denied the waiver. The new compromise would require the state, if the waiver was denied, to reapply only if another state’s work requirement was approved by CMS instead of contesting through the courts.

The newest proposal would also move the work requirement—which already contains significant exceptions for students, parents of children who are not school-age, and others—to 100 hours a month from 120 hours a month.

“We have provided three conference reports over the past three days. The House got back to us this afternoon countering with, essentially, their original bill,” Blackwell said. “We now submit a fourth report, which provides a path to implementation and is reflective of an attempt to compromise between the two chambers.”

All four signed Senate conference reports will be published online for the public to review: https://www.legislature.ms.gov/calendars-and-schedules/senate-committee-agenda/.

“A compromise requires concessions between the chambers. The Senate requires a real work requirement, but our plan now covers individuals up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level,” Lt. Governor Delbert Hosemann said. “This is a good step which would cover thousands more Mississippians than our Medicaid program covers now—and we hope the House will sign on to give us the opportunity to vote on the bill.”

The three previous proposals included the following:

 

 

The House and Senate also signed a placeholder bill updating the Medicaid statutes (commonly known as the “Medicaid tech bill”). The legislation as drafted by the Senate it easier for children who are severely disabled to receive coverage; increase reimbursement rates for physicians and certain services, including services for patients with autism; include new areas of coverage, like glucose monitoring; and preserve the changes made last year to the hospital tax, which allows for additional revenue for hospitals.

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