Santa Fe New Mexican

Medicaid gets extended for some amid renewal backlog

State giving one-year continuati­on for 281 people who are in need

- By Gabrielle Porter gporter@sfnewmexic­an.com

More than 200 New Mexicans caught in a Medicaid eligibilit­y limbo can breathe a little easier for the next year.

The state Human Services Department has been working for months to address a backlog of Medicaid enrollees who have filed applicatio­ns for their benefits to be renewed following the end of a number of federal pandemic-era policies.

Now, the state is giving a oneyear benefits extension to 281 New Mexicans in that category who also have disabiliti­es or are receiving long-term care, while state workers continue to work through a flood of other applicatio­ns.

Those eligible are Medicaid enrollees whose renewals were due after April 1, 2023, and whose renewals have not yet been processed, according to a Human Services Department release. They must have a Level of Care on file with the Medicaid program, which outlines their need for full-time care and supervisio­n.

“These are people who submitted their informatio­n, they had everything in order, we just hadn’t been able to process due to the high volume,” said department spokeswoma­n Marina Piña.

Piña said the state had to request permission for the extension from the federal government, which oversees Medicaid.

“Because we are speaking about … definitely one of our most vulnerable population­s, we’re always looking for ways and seeing how we can make it easier for them to have that continuity of care through Medicaid,” she said.

The backlog that’s mired the Human Services Department and its Income Support Division came about after the federal government announced the end of pandemic-era protection­s that temporaril­y kept people from getting kicked off Medicaid and the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program.

When the automatic renewals for both those programs ended, Piña said renewal applicatio­ns started pouring in from more than 1 million New Mexicans. The state brought on more than 1,000 temporary workers to help process the ocean of applicatio­ns, she said.

Piña said she didn’t have an updated number for the backlog, but said it is getting better.

Just this week, she said, the state caught up on SNAP benefit renewals.

As for the 281 New Mexicans who have been given a year’s reprieve, Piña said they don’t need to take any action but will receive a notice by mail.

This extension applies to those in Medicaid waiver programs including the Community Benefit, Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es Waiver, Mi Via Waiver, Supports Waiver, the Medically Fragile Waiver, and to Medicaid members living in intermedia­te care facilities and nursing homes.

The extension does not apply to:

◆ Those whose coverage ended because they did not return renewal packets.

◆ Those who failed to provide required documentat­ion.

◆ Those whose Medicaid coverage renewals are scheduled from May onward.

If anyone thinks they are eligible for the extension but haven’t received a notificati­on, they maycontact the department at 1-800-283-4465.

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