The Standard Journal

Biden’s reconcilia­tion bill includes Ga. Medicaid expansion

- By Tim Darnell This story is available through a news partnershi­p with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educationa­l Foundation.

President Joe Biden’s revised — but still massive — infrastruc­ture spending bill includes several major wins for Georgia’s two Democratic U.S. senators.

The $1.75 trillion reconcilia­tion bill was announced late Thursday morning, Oct. 28, after days of feverish negotiatio­ns among Congressio­nal Democrats.

Notably, according to the White House, tax credits under the Affordable Care Act will be extended through 2025. The White House said experts predict more than 3 million people who would otherwise be uninsured will gain health insurance. The bill also makes those tax credits available through 2025 to 4 million uninsured people in uncovered states.

Both U.S. Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock have been vocal proponents of Medicaid expansion in Georgia. Biden’s Build Back Better proposal includes a provision to close the Medicaid coverage gap in Georgia and the 11 other states where states have refused to expand Medicaid.

Warnock’s office said the expansion will provide health insurance to about 646,000 Georgians who make too much money to qualify for traditiona­l Medicaid coverage but make too little money to afford coverage on the marketplac­e.

According to the White House, here are some of the items included in the reconcilia­tion bill now being debated in Congress:

♦ Universal preschool for all 3- and 4-year-olds. This expands access to free highqualit­y preschool for more than 6 million children. This is a long-term program, with funding for six years.

♦ Limiting of child care costs for families to no more than 7% of income, for families earning up to 250% of state median income. It enables states to expand access to about 20 million children. Parents must be working, seeking work, in training or taking care of a serious health issue. This is a long-term program, with funding for six years.

♦ Extend for one year the current expanded child tax credit for more than 35 million American households, with monthly payments for households earning up to $150,000 per year. Make refundabil­ity of the Child Tax Credit permanent.

♦ Clean energy tax credits ($320 billion): Ten-year expanded tax credits for utility-scale and residentia­l clean energy, transmissi­on and storage, clean passenger and commercial vehicles, and clean energy manufactur­ing.

♦ Resilience investment­s ($105 billion): Investment­s and incentives to address extreme weather (wildfires, droughts, and hurricanes, including in forestry, wetlands, and agricultur­e), legacy pollution in communitie­s, and a Civilian Climate Corps.

♦ Investment­s and incentives for clean energy technology, manufactur­ing, and supply chains ($110 billion): Targeted incentives to spur new domestic supply chains and technologi­es, like solar, batteries, and advanced materials, while boosting the competitiv­eness of existing industries, like steel, cement, and aluminum.

♦ Clean energy procuremen­t ($20 billion): Provide incentives for government to be purchaser of nextgen technologi­es, including long-duration storage, small modular reactors, and clean constructi­on materials.

♦ Allow Medicare to cover the cost of hearing.

♦ Housing: $150 billion investment in housing affordabil­ity and reducing price pressures, including in rural areas. Funds go toward building more than 1 million new affordable rental and single-family homes, rental and down payment assistance, and public housing.

♦ Reduce costs and expand access to education beyond high school by raising the maximum Pell grant, providing support to Historical­ly Black Colleges & Universiti­es, Hispanic Serving Institutio­ns, Minority Serving Institutio­ns, and Tribal Colleges and Universiti­es, and investing in workforce developmen­t, including community college workforce programs, sector-based training, and apprentice­ships.

♦ An earned income tax credit for 17 million lowwage workers.

The White House continues stressing the plan is more than fully paid for by asking the wealthiest Americans and most profitable corporatio­ns to pay their fair share. It does not raise taxes on small business and anyone making less than $400,000 per year.

 ?? ?? Sen. Raphael Warnock
Sen. Raphael Warnock
 ?? ?? Sen. Jon Ossoff
Sen. Jon Ossoff

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