Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

15 Ky. residents sue over new Medicaid work rule

- By Noam N. Levey Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Kicking off what will likely be a long legal battle over the Trump administra­tion’s push to reshape Medicaid, 15 low-income Kentucky residents sued the federal government Wednesday, challengin­g the recent move to allow states to impose work requiremen­ts on some Medicaid enrollees.

The lawsuit, spearheade­d by three publicinte­rest legal groups, accuses the federal Department of Health and Human Services of violating the core purpose of the halfcentur­y-old government health plan for the poor by granting a request from Kentucky to impose the work mandate.

It charges federal officials in Washington and state officials in Kentucky with taking steps designed to reduce access to Medicaid’s protection­s, including complex reporting mandates, higher costs and the work requiremen­t.

“Allowing the state to ignore fundamenta­l Medicaid protection­s will result in large numbers of lowincome individual­s and families losing health care coverage,” said Jane Perkins, legal director of the National Health Law Program, which is representi­ng the plaintiffs alongside the Kentucky Equal Justice Center and the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

The Trump administra­tion this month granted a request from Kentucky to break with decades of Medicaid policy and require working-age adults who are not disabled or acutely ill to work a minimum number of hours each week or participat­e in other “community engagement” activities, such as seeking work, going to school or volunteeri­ng.

Those who don’t meet the requiremen­ts or don’t provide adequate documentat­ion will lose coverage.

Kentucky has projected significan­t cost reductions under the new policy, largely because growing numbers of poor Kentuckian­s will be caught up in the complex reporting requiremen­ts and paperwork, causing them to lose coverage.

But Trump administra­tion officials said in approving Kentucky’s proposal that the change would “promote Medicaid’s objective of improving beneficiar­y health” and “provide incentives for responsibl­e decision-making.”

The state will also be able to charge Medicaid recipients premiums for their coverage, joining several other states that have begun imposing more costs on poor patients.

The new requiremen­ts have been controvers­ial as there is little evidence that such approaches improve Medicaid patients’ health.

That is central to the lawsuit, whose outcome may hinge on whether courts view the Trump administra­tion’s decision to grant Kentucky’s request — or waiver — as consistent with the program’s goals.

“The purpose of Medicaid is to provide medical insurance to people who cannot afford it, not to create barriers to coverage,” said Anne Marie Regan, senior attorney for the Kentucky Equal Justice Center.

The plaintiffs also argue that the administra­tion, which has pledged to “fundamenta­lly transform Medicaid,” has oversteppe­d its authority.

A spokesman at the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, whose director Seema Verma is named in the lawsuit, said the agency’s policy is not to comment on pending litigation.

Kentucky has seen some of the biggest gains in coverage since full implementa­tion of the Affordable Care Act, often called Obamacare, began in 2014. The state’s uninsured rate fell by more than half.

But Gov. Matt Bevin, a Republican who inherited the expansion from his Democratic predecesso­r, has been a critic of the health law, arguing it is unaffordab­le.

Now, unless stopped in the courts, the state’s plan to introduce work requiremen­ts to Medicaid may pave the way for as many as 10 additional states to impose similar requiremen­ts.

 ?? ADAM BEAM/AP ?? Acting Health and Human Services Secretary Eric Hargan, left, and Gov. Matt Bevin defend the Medicaid waiver Wednesday in Frankfort, Ky. Hargan said the rule is legal.
ADAM BEAM/AP Acting Health and Human Services Secretary Eric Hargan, left, and Gov. Matt Bevin defend the Medicaid waiver Wednesday in Frankfort, Ky. Hargan said the rule is legal.

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