Skip to main content
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Poverty-related issues in the news, from the Institute for Research on Poverty

Day: July 2, 2012

Health Care Ruling and Medicaid Expansion

  • Reluctance in some states over Medicaid expansion, By Robert Pear and Michael Cooper, June 29, 2012, New York Times: “Millions of poor people could still be left without medical insurance under the national health care law if states take an option granted by the Supreme Court and decide not to expand their Medicaid programs, state officials and health policy experts said Friday. Republican officials in more than a half-dozen states said they opposed expanding Medicaid or had serious doubts about it, even though the federal government would pick up all the costs in the first few years and at least 90 percent of the expenses after that…”
  • Some GOP states want to abandon Medicaid expansion, By David A. Lieb (AP), June 29, 2012, San Francisco Chronicle: “Republicans in at least four states want to abandon an expansion of Medicaid in President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, and more than a dozen other states are considering it in the wake of the Supreme Court decision removing the threat of federal penalties. The high court upheld most of Obama’s law, but the justices said the federal government could not take away states’ existing federal Medicaid dollars if they refused to widen eligibility to include adults who are only slightly above the poverty line. Some Republican governors and lawmakers quickly declared that they would not carry out the expansion. The states considering whether to withdraw from the expansion include presidential battlegrounds Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Colorado…”
  • Gov. Rick Scott confirms: No Medicaid expansion for Florida, By David Royse, July 2, 2012, Florida Times-Union: “Florida will opt out of spending about $2 billion more to expand Medicaid, and won’t build insurance exchanges, another optional part of the federal health care law, Gov. Rick Scott’s office said Sunday. The Supreme Court ruling last week upholding the massive health care spending overhaul also specifically said the federal government can’t coerce states into expanding Medicaid, as the law requires, by withholding Medicaid money for parts of the program already in existence…”
  • Georgia faces tough call on Medicaid, By Carrie Teegardin and Misty Williams, July 1, 2012, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: “The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld the health care overhaul, but Georgia’s emergency rooms and free clinics may still be jammed with the uninsured years after that landmark ruling. The court on Thursday gave states the authority to opt out of the massive expansion of the Medicaid program that is a key component of the law. In 2014, that expansion would extend Medicaid to about 650,000 poor and low-income Georgians who do not qualify for the program today.  Without the Medicaid expansion, however, Georgia will not come close to extending insurance to most of the 1.9 million residents who do not have it now…”
  • Nevada must confront decision of whether to expand Medicaid, By David McGrath Schwartz, July 1, 2012, Las Vegas Sun: “Gov. Brian Sandoval threw cold water on the celebration of health care advocates for the poor last week by casting doubt on whether Nevada will expand its Medicaid program. Sandoval cited the costs, which he said could eat into other budgets, like education. But health care advocates said not expanding the system would save the state few dollars, compared with the money it would be giving up from the federal government. More importantly, they said, it would leave thousands of Nevadans without insurance…”
  • Medicaid expansion now a vexing issue for Gov. Rick Snyder, Republican lawmakers, By David Eggert, June 29, 2012, Mlive.com: “Michigan no longer has a ‘gun to the head’ forcing an expansion of Medicaid – as Chief Justice John Roberts put it – but it now is facing a political battle.  Add an unprecedented 500,000 low-income residents to a program in 2014 that already serves approximately one in five Michiganders? Or let many of them go without health insurance – since they might otherwise be exempted from the mandate to buy it? Republican Gov. Rick Snyder’s administration and GOP state legislative leaders did not have much to say on the issue Thursday, the day the U.S. Supreme Court upheld most of the federal Affordable Care Act but struck down attempts to penalize states that do not expand Medicaid…”
  • High court ruling could leave 290K Hoosiers uncovered, By J.K. Wall, July 1, 2012, Indianapolis Business Journal: “After last week’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling gave Indiana the option not to expand its Medicaid program and some state legislators promised to do exactly that, Indiana hospitals started to worry. That’s because a decision by Indiana to leave its Medicaid program unchanged could leave as many as 290,000 Hoosier adults, who would have been newly eligible for Medicaid coverage, with no good options…”
  • Virginia faces key decisions on special session, Medicaid, By Michael Martz and Olympia Meola, Richmond Times-Dispatch: “Virginia political leaders and lawmakers may not like the U.S. Supreme Court ruling to uphold federal health care reform, but they face big decisions soon on how to carry out the law in a national election year. The most immediate decision is whether to call a special legislative session this year on creating a state exchange for health benefits. The ruling also gives Virginia an unexpected choice on whether to expand its Medicaid program to cover hundreds of thousands of uninsured Virginians…”

Social Services Reorganization – Kansas

Kansas shakes up its social services system, By Matt Campbell, June 30, 2012, Kansas City Star: “The alphabet soup of agencies that provide social services to Kansans – SRS, KDOA, KDHE – is being scrambled in what officials are claiming is the biggest reorganization in the history of Kansas state government. Effective today, several programs will move from one agency to another and agency shorthand titles will change. The result, officials say, will be a more streamlined and efficient way of delivering services to children, the disabled, the poor and the elderly. The reorganization also is seen as necessary for KanCare, Gov. Sam Brownback’s initiative to overhaul the way Medicaid works in Kansas. Brownback called it ‘a crucial component of KanCare’ in announcing his executive order for the shakeup…”

Summer Food Programs

Summer food programs seeking new ways to assist children, By John McAuliff, July 1, 2012, USA Today: “Summer food programs aiming to keep U.S. children from going hungry have grown 25 percent in the last five years amid a nationwide push by local food banks to change the way they serve food to needy people. Summer food programs aiming to keep U.S. children from going hungry have grown 25 percent in the last five years amid a nationwide push by local food banks to change the way they serve food to needy people. Food banks say the rise in numbers is because of a push to find more creative ways to bring food to an estimated 19 million hungry U.S. children. . .”