Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lawmakers expect challenge in renewing Arkansas Works

- DOUG THOMPSON

Expect the fight to renew the Arkansas Works health care program in this year’s legislativ­e session to be tougher than in 2019, said the incoming chairwoman of the Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee.

And the 2019 effort was no cakewalk, said state Sen. Cecile Bledsoe, R-Rogers.

Bledsoe will preside over the committee, which will oversee efforts to extend the program. Arkansas Works uses federal taxpayer money from the so-called Obamacare federal legislatio­n of 2010 to help pay for private insurance for lower-income Arkansans.

Arkansas Works covers those who earn enough money to render them ineligible for Medicaid. The program provides health insurance to about 290,000 Arkansans. Medicaid was an already existing state-administer­ed program

largely financed with federal taxpayer money. It pays a portion of health care expenses for the poorest Arkansans.

Opting into Obamacare was left to the discretion of state government. As designed, the program expanded Medicaid to those making up to 138% of the federal poverty level. The current threshold for a household of four is $26,200.

Arkansas accepting the program created controvers­y from the beginning. Opponents criticized the measure as a government takeover of health care and an increasing­ly expensive propositio­n, as federal support for it is scheduled to be reduced over the course of years. The current two-year budget for the program is $1.945 billion, which includes both state and federal taxpayer money.

The measure went into effect in 2014 after the federal government allowed Arkansas to use the Obamacare money to subsidize private insurance policies.

Renewing the program faces a challenge every regular legislativ­e session. Gov. Asa Hutchinson first proposed a work requiremen­t in March 2017, to require beneficiar­ies to hold a job or seek one to participat­e, with exceptions. The federal government approved adding the requiremen­t a year later. Adding the work rule garnered enough votes to win renewal of the program in 2019.

The incoming administra­tion of President-elect Joe Biden will likely not approve any such waiver, Bledsoe said.

Approval to renew the program without the requiremen­t will be challengin­g, Bledsoe said.

Sen. Greg Leding, D-Fayettevil­le, agreed with Bledsoe’s assessment.

“I don’t want to doom it by saying it can’t pass without the work requiremen­t, but it’s a huge hurdle,” Leding said. He opposes the work requiremen­t and would “like to see it go away,” but acknowledg­ed it was the political price of passage in the last renewal.

Cindy Gillespie, secretary of the Arkansas Department of Health, is working on changes to the program to render it more acceptable to opponents, Bledsoe said. Those proposals are a work in progress, the senator said, and no details have been released.

“I have a lot of confidence in Cindy Gillespie,” Bledsoe said.

The growing strength of the Republican Party at the statehouse adds to the challenge of renewal, Leding said.

“The governing Republican Party added to their majority,” he said. The Senate will have nine Democrats among its 35 members when the session begins, while the House will be down to 22 Democrats out of 100. Democrats generally supported the health care expansion plan.

“This is the governor’s final session,” Leding said, referring to the two-term limit Hutchinson faces. “We’ve already seen the Legislatur­e asserting itself a bit,” being less deferentia­l to the governor, he said. The governor’s influence in 2019 was a big help in getting renewal passed, Leding said, and that influence is waning.

Both Bledsoe and Leding said the ongoing covid-19 pandemic could weigh in on lawmakers’ decision on renewal, but whether it will and how much are unknown. Opponents might be more reluctant than normal to reduce health care coverage while the disease is so widespread. The pandemic has placed health care providers around the state under economic strain while dealing with the crisis, they said.

Underlying Arkansas Works and most issues coming up in the legislativ­e session will be the overall budget picture, Sen. Lance Eads, R-Springdale, said in a separate interview about the session in general.

Overall revenue appears strong now, but those figures are skewed by federal pandemic relief, both directly to the state and indirectly through tax collection­s relief provided to businesses and individual­s.

Biden’s incoming administra­tion will likely change future relief efforts, which will change the fiscal picture, Eads said. The Legislatur­e will have to outguess what changes the administra­tion and Congress will make before making up its own mind about the budget, he said.

“The budget appears to have held up really well, but is it a little inflated? It’s hard to tell,” he said.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staton Breidentha­l) ?? Brent Stamp, director of facilities for the state Capitol, assembles signs Friday to inform visitors about elevator etiquette ahead of the start of the legislativ­e session.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staton Breidentha­l) Brent Stamp, director of facilities for the state Capitol, assembles signs Friday to inform visitors about elevator etiquette ahead of the start of the legislativ­e session.
 ?? Legislativ­e forecast ?? A look ahead at the 93rd General Assembly
Legislativ­e forecast A look ahead at the 93rd General Assembly
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Bledsoe

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