Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Feds approve Walker’s BadgerCare proposals

Some recipients will see fees, work requiremen­ts

- Guy Boulton

Federal officials signed off Wednesday on Gov. Scott Walker’s plan to require some people to work to receive health insurance through the BadgerCare Plus program, drawing attention to one of the governor’s initiative­s less than a week before the election.

The requiremen­t would apply to healthy people who have no dependent children, who are under 50 and who haven’t worked for four years.

BadgerCare Plus, the state’s largest Medicaid program, is available to adults with incomes below the poverty threshold. That is $12,140 this year.

The requiremen­t would not apply to people who are disabled or caregivers.

“We want to remove barriers to work and make it easier to get a job, while making sure public assistance is available for those who truly need it,” Walker said in a statement.

The Republican governor faces state schools Superinten­dent Tony Evers in Tuesday’s election. Aides to Evers did not say Wednesday whether he backs work requiremen­ts for some adults covered by BadgerCare Plus.

Three other states — Arkansas, Indiana and New Hampshire — have received approval for similar initiative­s, and other eight states are seeking federal approval for work requiremen­ts.

Kentucky’s plan to impose work requiremen­ts was struck down by a court.

Most of the states plan to impose more stringent work requiremen­ts than those approved for Wisconsin.

Under Wisconsin’s plan — which will take about a year to implement — someone would lose coverage for six months if he or she has not worked for four years. The person then could reenroll and would again be eligible for four years.

People who work 80 hours a month or participat­e in job training, volunteer

community service or a qualified work program will meet the requiremen­ts for continued coverage. The federal agency also approved:

❚ Collecting premiums from some adults without dependent children. The proposal has raised questions on what it will cost the state to collect premiums that could be as low as $4 a month and how it will affect people who don’t have checking accounts or credit cards.

❚ Charging some adults an $8 co-payment for unnecessar­y visits to hospital emergency department­s. That could be difficult to implement given that hospitals will not know if a visit is unnecessar­y until after a patient has been treated. The Wisconsin Hospital Associatio­n has said it is “highly likely” that most of the co-payments won’t be collected and that the change essentiall­y will result in a rate cut for emergency department visits.

The state also won approval to allow BadgerCare Plus to cover short-term residentia­l treatment for substance abuse in freestandi­ng behavioral health hospitals. Those hospitals have been barred from billing Medicaid programs for residentia­l treatment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States