Chattanooga Times Free Press

Warnock, Dems are ‘gravely concerned’

- BY JILL NOLIN GEORGIA RECORDER Read more at GeorgiaRec­order.com.

U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Georgia, sent a letter to Biden administra­tion officials expressing concern about how Georgia is handling the phasing out of a federal rule that had previously blocked states from dropping a person’s Medicaid coverage during the pandemic.

“We write to express our concern with new data confirming that Georgia has not been following federal requiremen­ts through the Medicaid unwinding process, putting vulnerable Georgians —especially children — at risk of losing their health care,” the letter says.

The letter, dated Friday, was signed by fellow Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Georgia, and Georgia’s five Democratic congressio­nal representa­tives and sent to Xavier Becerra, secretary of health and human services, and Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, who is the administra­tor of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

The letter is referencin­g a state systems issue flagged a month ago by BrooksLaSu­re’s agency after it was discovered some states may not be auto-renewing enrollees on a person-by-person basis and regardless of the eligibilit­y of others living in their household.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced last week that about a half million people, including children, who lost Medicaid coverage because of the error are now expected to regain it.

Georgia is one of 29 states that told federal officials they were doing the auto-renewals incorrectl­y or were still working to reinstate those dropped, according to an update released last week by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “Household members with different eligibilit­y statuses” were affected here, but Georgia was one of a handful of states marked as “still assessing” the potential number of people affected.

The lawmakers wrote that they were “gravely concerned” that the error has caused thousands of children to lose coverage.

In July, the state released numbers for the first full group of people to go through the renewal process, revealing that more Georgians lost coverage than kept it in June. About 96,000 people were disenrolle­d, with 89,000 dropped from the Medicaid rolls because of missing informatio­n and not necessaril­y because they were ineligible.

And children accounted for about two-thirds of all Georgians who lost their Medicaid coverage that month. Most of these young Georgians — 63,481 of them — had their health insurance terminated for procedural reasons.

Those younger than 18 years old represent nearly 69% of the more than 2.7 million people covered by Medicaid while the pandemic-era rule was still in place, according to analysis from the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute.

“We are concerned that the unwinding process already has deprived Georgia children of health care coverage for which they are eligible, and that this will continue,” the Georgia Democrats wrote in the letter.

In the letter, they asked for the federal agencies to do more “to ensure Georgians are not unnecessar­ily stripped of their health care through no fault of their own.” And they said lawmakers had given the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Service “the authority to exercise robust oversight of states” as the unwinding plays out.

The state agencies responsibl­e for the unwinding have said previously that some of the people who have lost coverage for procedural reasons on paper are likely no longer eligible. Those agencies also sent out a news release this month promoting the state’s use of federal waivers to improve the renewal process and avoid unnecessar­y denials for eligible Georgians.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON ?? On Thursday, Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., speaks with reporters at the Capitol.
AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON On Thursday, Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., speaks with reporters at the Capitol.

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