Chicago Sun-Times

JUDGE ORDERS ILLINOIS TO START PAYING $586 MILLION A MONTH FOR MEDICAID

- BY SAM CHARLES Staff Reporter Email: scharles@ suntimes. com Twitter: @samjcharle­s

As the deadline to pass a budget before another credit downgrade approached, a federal judge ordered the state of Illinois to make more than $ 500million each month in Medicaid payments.

U. S. District Judge Joan Lefkow ordered the state to pay $ 586 million a month for Medicaid vouchers that come in after June 30. On top of that, Lefkow ordered the state to pay another $ 2 billion toward the more than $ 3 billion Illinois owes to managed care organizati­ons, which process payments to Medicaid providers, according to court records.

Her order came after hearings this week in Chicago in the decades- old lawsuit over $ 2 billion in unpaid Medicaid bills.

At a hearing Wednesday, an attorney for the state said Illinois can’t come close to finding a spare $ 500 million

“FRIDAY’S RULING BY THE U. S. DISTRICT COURT TAKES THE STATE’S FINANCES FROM HORRIFIC TO CATASTROPH­IC.” COMPTROLLE­R SUSANA MENDOZA

— it could pay $ 150 million at best, with half of that coming from the federal government.

Earlier this month, Lefkow ruled that Illinois was not in compliance with court orders to pay health care bills for low- income and other vulnerable groups.

She previously wrote that state officials “have not lived up to their agreements” in the civil case that dates back to the 1990s, when Illinois first entered into a court enforced consent decree requiring that it keep up Medicaid payments even through the kinds of financial crises the state is currently in.

“The state has failed to fund the state Medicaid programs in a manner sufficient to meet the federal mandates embodied in this court’s consent decree and previous orders,” Lefkow wrote Friday.

More than 60 percent of the 3million Medicaid recipients in Illinois receive care through a managed care organizati­on, Lefkow wrote.

“The backlog of unpaid claims which the state owes to the MCOs directly … is crippling these providers and thereby dramatical­ly reducing the Medicaid recipients’ access to health care,” she added.

A spokeswoma­n for Gov. Bruce Rauner declined to comment on the ruling.

In an emailed statement, Illinois Comptrolle­r Susana Mendoza said, “Friday’s ruling by the U. S. District Court takes the state’s finances from horrific to catastroph­ic.”

Mendoza further warned of cuts necessary to make the Medicaid payments.

“Payments to the state’s pension funds; state payroll including legislator pay; General State Aid to schools and payments to local government­s — in some combinatio­n — will likely have to be cut,” she said.

Payments to the state’s bond- holders, Mendoza added, will continue uninterrup­ted.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States