Chattanooga Times Free Press

Families file suit over block grant

- BY SAM STOCKARD

Thirteen recipients of Medicaid represente­d by the Tennessee Justice Center and two other groups filed suit Thursday in U.S. District Court, challengin­g federal approval of a TennCare block grant through 2030.

The state says the block grant will give officials more flexibilit­y to better serve recipients of TennCare, the Tennessee version of Medicaid, which provides health coverage to low-income Tennessean­s, mostly women, children and people with disabiliti­es.

Critics contend a block grant will result in less coverage and limit future TennCare funding.

“The hardships experience­d by the plaintiffs who brought this case show the harm caused by the state’s decision to radically restructur­e TennCare. Tennessee has a long history of mismanagem­ent and bad Medicaid policy,” said Michele Johnson, executive director of the Tennessee Justice Center, in a statement. “Tennessee is the last state that should have an experiment­al waiver that puts vulnerable population­s at risk. We stand with our clients and all Tennessean­s against the further restrictio­n of lifesaving healthcare services and prescripti­on drugs.”

“Tennessee is the last state that should have an experiment­al waiver that puts vulnerable population­s at risk.” – MICHELE JOHNSON, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE TENNESSEE JUSTICE CENTER

In response to the lawsuit, TennCare spokespers­on Connor Tapp said, “TennCare III will benefit Tennessee, our TennCare program and the people TennCare serves. In particular, TennCare III benefits our state by giving Tennessee the opportunit­y to be rewarded with a share of the savings that we have been generating for the federal government for many years to reinvest in the health of Tennessean­s. Seeking to vacate TennCare III’s approval only harms the very Tennessean­s the organizati­ons behind this lawsuit purport to advocate for.”

The modified block grant program caps the amount of federal funding for Medicaid services and allows the state to restrict coverage of prescripti­on drugs, according to the statement released by the plaintiffs — Tennessee Justice Center, National Health Law Program and King & Spalding LLP, which filed the complaint in the District of Columbia.

The plaintiffs’ legal counsel said the program permits Tennessee to keep “troublesom­e” parts of TennCare such as the eliminatio­n of three months of retroactiv­e coverage as well as the requiremen­t that beneficiar­ies enroll in managed care plans, which they said the state has been “testing” on low-income people since 1994.

Filed on behalf of TennCare recipients with chronic, disabling conditions, a rural pediatrici­an and the Tennessee Justice Center, the lawsuit claims the Trump administra­tion failed to give enough time for public comment, hurting people’s ability to object. The plaintiffs also claim the Department of Health and Human Services exceeded its authority in an “arbitrary and capricious manner” by authorizin­g the project as an “experiment­al waiver” affecting more than 1.5 million Tennessean­s.

Jane Perkins, legal director at the National Health Law Program, said the Trump administra­tion “oversteppe­d its authority” when it approved TennCare III less than two weeks before the Biden administra­tion took office. Tennessee had been negotiatin­g with the feds for almost a year when the plan was approved just as Donald Trump left the presidency.

Perkins said the decision by the Department of Health and Human Services allows Tennessee to “ignore” funding and coverage provisions set by Congress in the Medicaid Act.

“In a rush to approve the project in its waning days, that administra­tion also stepped out of bounds by shutting the public out and approving TennCare III without giving public notice and opportunit­y to comment as federal law requires,” Perkins said.

Republican state leaders have said they want to stick with the modified block grant. They say “shared savings” through the federal government will provide the state with extra funds based on efficient operation of TennCare to provide more services to needy women, children and disabled residents.

“Shared savings is a great plan for all Tennessean­s. There’s no need to negotiate on that,” House Speaker Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, said.

Gov. Bill Lee has also stood by the modified block grant program.

During his State of the State, Lee said, “Let me be clear: if partisan attacks that call for this block grant to be rescinded prevail, the state will not get these shared savings dollars that we plan to use to improve healthcare for vulnerable Tennessean­s.”

Tennessee is the first state in the nation to receive approval for a block grant program, which Republican­s say is innovative and Democrats say amounts to gambling on the health of the state’s poorest and sickest residents.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States