The Arizona Republic

Work mandate dropped

Cases elsewhere have effect here

- Jonathan J. Cooper

Arizona quietly suspended plans to require about 120,000 people to work, volunteer or go to school to receive Medicaid benefits.

Arizona quietly suspended plans to require about 120,000 people to work, volunteer or go to school to receive Medicaid benefits, as courts have taken a dim view of similar mandates in other states.

The decision is another setback to efforts by President Donald Trump and his allies in many Republican-led states to put conditions on low-income people seeking taxpayer funded benefits.

In Arizona, “implementa­tion is being temporaril­y delayed, as court cases in other states play out, to avoid disruption­s to and protect Arizona’s most vulnerable members,” the Arizona Health Care Cost Containmen­t System — the state Medicaid program — said last week in a three-sentence notice on its website.

The Trump administra­tion had approved Arizona’s request to implement work requiremen­ts no earlier than Jan. 1. In March, a U.S. judge blocked work requiremen­ts in Arkansas and Kentucky, ruling the measures undermined the program’s mission of providing health care for the needy. Arizona officials said at the time that the ruling didn’t affect their plans.

New Hampshire suspended its work requiremen­ts in July, and they were later blocked by a judge. Maine’s new Democratic governor dropped work requiremen­ts sought by her Republican

predecesso­r shortly after taking office in January.

A federal appeals court considerin­g the Arkansas and Kentucky case has sharply questioned the work requiremen­ts.

At issue is whether a program created by Congress to provide medical care to the poor can also be used to encourage low-income people to try to move up in society and make that a condition to keep getting help. The Trump administra­tion has argued the rules would make people healthier. Nearly 20 states are in various stages of trying to implement work requiremen­ts.

Critics say work requiremen­ts would jeopardize health care for hardworkin­g people struggling with child care, transporta­tion and other issues while working low-wage jobs with fluctuatin­g hours.

“All it does is increase the uninsured rate,” said Jessica Schubel, a senior policy analyst for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank. “It takes coverage away from people who are working and people who should get exemptions because they get caught up in the red tape.”

About 18,000 people lost benefits after Arkansas implemente­d work requiremen­ts, though it’s not clear how many got coverage elsewhere.

Heidi Capriotti, a spokeswoma­n for Arizona’s Medicaid agency, said the decision wasn’t made in response to specific developmen­ts. She said the state is still committed to implementi­ng work requiremen­ts eventually.

“We’re just going to hold on the program until we know more about what’s happening with other state litigation,” Capriotti said.

Nationwide, about six in 10 adults on Medicaid already work in low-wage jobs, according to the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. Most of those not working cite reasons such as poor health, caring for an elder or a child, or going to school.

Trump signed an executive order last year directing Cabinet agencies to add or strengthen work requiremen­ts for programs including subsidized housing, food stamps and cash welfare.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States