The Oklahoman

Medicaid agency opposes new law

State is ‘not permitted’ to carry out the new law

- Carmen Forman The Oklahoman USA TODAY NETWORK

A federal official says Oklahoma is “not permitted” to carry out a new law that requires individual­s with intellectu­al or developmen­tal disabiliti­es to live in the state for five years before they can apply for certain state-funded services through Medicaid.

In a letter sent Thursday, a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services official said the law is unconstitu­tional based on previous U.S. Supreme Court decisions that determined the 14th Amendment to the Constituti­on requires states to treat new residents the same as longtime residents.

Federal regulation­s also prohibit state Medicaid agencies from denying eligibilit­y if a person has not lived in the state for a specified period of time, wrote Daniel Tsai, deputy CMS director and administra­tor.

“Thus, imposition of a 5-year residency requiremen­t for the receipt of HCBS (home and community-based services) waiver services is not permitted,” he wrote in a letter to the legal director of the National Health Law Program, which fights for health care access for low-income and underserve­d people.

The letter, provided to The Oklahoman by the Oklahoma Disability Law Center, addressed House Bill 2899 that passed the Oklahoma Legislatur­e in May and took effect July 1.

The law sought to impose a fiveyear residency requiremen­t to get on the state’s waiting list for in-home and community-based services provided to adults and children with disabiliti­es.

“OKDHS received the letter from CMS to the National Health Law Pro

The legislatio­n caused an uproar among the state’s disability community this spring when disability advocates said HB 2899 was likely unconstitu­tional.

gram just this afternoon,” agency spokeswoma­n Casey White said in a statement. “We remain on course to find solutions to end the waiting list in Oklahoma. We encourage others to join us in that mission.”

White did not respond to a question about whether the state will drop the residency requiremen­t.

Republican proponents of HB 2899 said the legislatio­n was necessary because state leaders plan to make a concerted effort to eliminate Oklahoma’s 13-year waiting list for disability aid. Lawmakers expressed concerns that once the list was eliminated, people waiting years for services in other states would flock to Oklahoma for help.

The legislatio­n caused an uproar among the state’s disability community this spring when disability advocates said HB 2899 was likely unconstitu­tional.

On June 1, the National Health Law Program, Oklahoma Disability Law Center, Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma, Oklahoma Policy Institute, the Arc of Oklahoma and Arc of the United States requested CMS prohibit Oklahoma’s Medicaid agency from enforcing the residency requiremen­t. Thursday’s letter was in response to their request.

The Department of Human Services has contracted with an Oklahoma company to conduct a review of the state’s developmen­tal disabiliti­es waiting list.

Earlier this month, Liberty of Oklahoma Corp. began case-by-case assessment­s of all the nearly 6,000 families on the waiting list. The company was hired to get a better picture of individual needs and determine what it would cost the state to eliminate the list entirely.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States