Santa Fe New Mexican

Protecting Medicaid and renovating the Affordable Care Act

- Robert Stack is president and chief executive officer of Community Options Inc. in Santa Fe. Community Options is a national nonprofit with the mission of developing housing and employment for persons with disabiliti­es.

You would think that other than being elected, Congresswo­men Michelle Lujan Grisham and Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Sens. Lindsey Graham and Rand Paul have little in common. Grisham is from New Mexico, Sen. Rand Paul, Kentucky, McMorris Rodgers is from Washington, and Sen. Graham is from South Carolina.

The common thread for all of them is that they have been or are directly impacted on a personal level by someone with significan­t disabiliti­es. One had a sister (Grisham); one has a brother (Paul); one had a mother (Graham); and one a child (McMorris Rodgers) who could have benefited from the Medicaid portion of the Affordable Care Act.

These politician­s have written scripts on the Affordable Care Act. They follow the party line and they can work together. In order for Congress to come to agreeable terms on the Affordable Care Act, they need to reconstruc­t, not demolish it, and segregate the Medicaid portion from the rest of the Affordable Care Act.

Medicaid was designed for people with significan­t disabiliti­es. There seems to be a growing stereotype among the general public piled on by media and some congressio­nal leaders that people who “collect” supplement­al security income and are “on” Medicaid are scamming gamers who spend their time doing nothing more than work to avoid working.

Medicaid funding covers a wide range of folks with disabiliti­es, many of them personally touched by members of Congress. It spans from a person with Down syndrome to those who have difficulty conveying complex concepts with chronic health conditions. Some need support to maintain gainful employment, while others require complete and total medical care.

For those who do receive Medicaid-funded services, staff work tirelessly for an average of $12 an hour to provide these supports. In our quest to repeal “Obamacare,” we have forgotten, or we are choosing to forget, that the very safety net that Congress is proposing to unravel is built specifical­ly for their friends, family members, neighbors and loved ones with disabiliti­es.

People with disabiliti­es are faced with a double-edged sword. They often need to overcome the assumption of a typical employer believing they cannot do the job. If they are turned down repeatedly, they are confronted with a public mispercept­ion that they are looking for a handout from Medicaid. They could benefit from “adapted apprentice­ships.”

President Donald Trump knows that sometimes you do not need to tear down a building to improve it. You can use portions, demo parts and rehab the rest. One example is the renovation of the former post office in Washington, D.C. It is a beautiful hotel and a perfect applicatio­n of taking an obsolete structure and making it gorgeous, relevant and useful.

We can renovate, not demolish, the Affordable Care Act by keeping what works and repealing the rest. It is possible to reform systems not only to support, but also to promote and invest in people with disabiliti­es.

President Trump has the ability to build consensus on both sides of the aisle by reviewing what can be renovated rather than destroyed. Some aspects, such as over-regulation, can be removed, but elements promoting employment and quality of life are salvageabl­e.

Medicaid providers spend more time documentin­g the care than providing it because of government­al regulation­s. If Medicaid is to be reformed, we need to redirect public resources to provide supports that are better, not necessaril­y more expensive.

There are states in our country where people live in institutio­nal settings that would remind one of a developing country, and yet these settings are very expensive. The president could incentiviz­e states to close these large institutio­nal settings that simply are not necessary or conducive to the provision of quality assistance.

Congress needs to renovate the Affordable Care Act by carving out Medicaid. They need to act in a bipartisan effort rememberin­g the constituen­ts who have touched their lives.

We can renovate, not demolish, the Affordable Care Act by keeping what works and repealing the rest.

 ??  ?? Robert Stack
Robert Stack

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