The Sentinel-Record

More than 4,600 lose Medicaid in Arkansas over work rule

- ANDREW DEMILLO

LITTLE ROCK — More than 4,600 people were kicked off Arkansas’ Medicaid expansion for not complying with a work requiremen­t last month, state officials said Monday, bringing the total number of people who have lost coverage since the rule was enacted this year to nearly 17,000.

The Department of Human Services said nearly 2,000 more people face the risk of losing coverage if they don’t comply this month with the rule, which requires them to work 80 hours a month. Beneficiar­ies lose coverage if they don’t meet the requiremen­t three months in a calendar year, and they can’t re-enroll until January.

The latest numbers were released by the agency days after it announced it set up a new helpline for people to call in and report their hours worked, along with a new advertisin­g campaign aimed at letting beneficiar­ies know how to comply. Advocacy groups have criticized Arkansas’ reliance on a website for reporting hours worked, saying it penalizes beneficiar­ies who don’t have access to the Internet.

“Basically, it shows that the state’s announceme­nt last week was overdue,” said

Bruno Showers, senior policy analyst with Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. “They should have been allowing reporting through different means and they should have invested in advertisin­g and outreach on the front end instead of waiting for all these coverage losses to happen.”

Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson said more than 4,100 people on the program have found work and that the percentage of those subject to the work requiremen­t who are complying has increased from 73 percent in August to 87 percent last month.

“This is a strong indication that more and more people are learning about the requiremen­t and following through with their reporting,” he said in a statement.

Arkansas was the first state to enforce the requiremen­t after the Trump administra­tion allowed states to tie Medicaid coverage to work. The requiremen­t is being challenged in federal court, and a federal advisory panel last month urged the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to temporaril­y stop Arkansas from enforcing the rule.

Arkansas’ requiremen­t applies only to the state’s Medicaid expansion, which uses federal and state funds to purchase private insurance for low-income residents, and not the traditiona­l Medicaid program. More than 234,000 people are on the expansion program, and more than

64,000 of them were subject to the work requiremen­t last month.

Once fully implemente­d, Arkansas’ requiremen­t will affect able-bodied enrollees on the program, ages 19 to 49, with no children. The requiremen­t is being enforced on participan­ts ages 30 to 49 this year and will expand to include those

19 to 29 years old next year.

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