South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Medicaid to pare back its rolls in 2023

More than 1 million residents may be dropped

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — After Medicaid enrollment soared during the first three years of the COVID-19 pandemic, more than 1 million Floridians likely will drop off the health-care program in 2023.

Changes starting in April will end Medicaid coverage for people determined to be ineligible, which could have major implicatio­ns for the health system and the state budget.

The issue is rooted in a public health emergency that the federal government declared in 2020 as the pandemic began. Medicaid is jointly funded by the federal and state government­s. As part of the emergency, Washington agreed to pick up more of the tab for the program.

But there was a catch: In exchange for the extra money, states had to agree that they wouldn’t drop people from the Medicaid rolls during the emergency. Florida’s program has grown from nearly 3.8 million beneficiar­ies in January 2020 to about 5.64 million beneficiar­ies last month, at least in part because people who might not otherwise be eligible for coverage could not be dropped.

Medicaid is the largest part of the state budget, totaling more than $36 billion this year. Republican lawmakers have long complained about the costs, while Democrats have unsuccessf­ully tried to expand eligibilit­y so more people can get coverage.

Casey Penn, assistant secretary for economic self-sufficienc­y at the Florida Department of Children and Families, told a House committee Wednesday that the agency knows of 900,000 people who are no longer eligible for coverage. But the number of beneficiar­ies who could be removed from the program likely will be far larger. For example, Penn said it is not clear whether another 850,000 people are eligible.

“The federal government during the pandemic said once you are on, it’s like being on the Supreme Court — you can’t get kicked off,” House Health & Human Services Chairman Randy Fine, R-Brevard County, said Wednesday as his committee got a briefing on the issue. “And so we have people who qualified at one moment in time but do not qualify today.”

In a budget law signed last month, Congress approved allowing states to begin “disenrolli­ng ” ineligible people from Medicaid beginning in April. The federal government will gradually scale back the extra money it has provided to states, with the extra money ultimately eliminated in 2024.

That has spurred the Department of Children and Families, which oversees enrollment determinat­ions in Florida’s program, to develop plans for carrying out the changes. The plans include steps such as determinin­g who remains eligible and providing notices to people before they can be disenrolle­d.

Penn told the House Health & Human Services Committee that the department has tried to keep in touch with beneficiar­ies to maintain updated informatio­n about issues such as their income levels.

“We wanted to ensure that the coverage for eligible individual­s continues. So if you are eligible for Medicaid, we want to make sure that you maintain that eligibilit­y and you know the process that you need to do,” Penn said. “And also promote the alternativ­e health options for those who are no longer eligible.”

Officials said the issue will play out over several months, with the state initially targeting the 900,000 beneficiar­ies who have already been identified as ineligible. It’s not clear how many people could ultimately be dropped from the program.

Tom Wallace, deputy secretary for Medicaid at the state Agency for Health Care Administra­tion, told a Senate panel Wednesday that it won’t quickly lead to the program returning to its January 2020 level of nearly 3.8 million beneficiar­ies.

“We’re not going probably to get back to that right away,” said Wallace, whose agency runs much of the Medicaid program. “It’s going to take years probably to get back to that level.”

The changes could send people searching for affordable health coverage. Officials said Thursday that at least some ineligible people who have remained on the Medicaid rolls during the pandemic likely can receive coverage from employers.

Penn said the state is also preparing to take other steps to address people who lose coverage. As an example, it will refer children to the Florida Healthy Kids Corp., which offers subsidized, low-cost health insurance for children.

Fine on Wednesday pointed to potential savings for the state.

“We have a fixed pot of money to work with here in the state,” Fine said. “We have unlimited wants and limited means. And every dollar that we spend on someone who does not qualify for a benefit is a dollar that we cannot spend on someone who does need it.”

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