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Some good news from DC...

Wednesday, March 10, 2010
 
A key bill passed the U.S. Senate today...

OK, it's not the big health reform bill, or even a comprehensive jobs bill, but it was a portion of a jobs package that would provide big benefits for health care in California.

One in a series of bills on jobs, this emergency relief package, the “American Workers, State and Business Relief Act,” was approved by a vote of 62-36. Much thanks to Senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein for their support. It will go to the House of Representatives, who have passed their own version of a jobs bill, before it goes to the President for his signature.

The legislation, (H.R. 4213), has an extension of unemployment and benefits and contains several health-related provisions that are of particular importance to California, including:
* Extending the COBRA subsidy from the earlier stimulus bill. For unemployed California families, the average monthly COBRA premium is $1,107. The COBRA premium assistance reduced this cost to $388 per month, and without this benefit, unemployed Californians could lose $720 a month.
* Providing help to the state budget through a six month extension of the enhanced Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) enacted under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which otherwise would end on December 31, 2010. This extension through June 2011 would provide an increase of $1.5 to $2 billion in federal funding for California's 2010-11 budget.
* Delaying a 21.2 percent cut in payments to physicians who treat California's 4,672,923 Medicare beneficiaries and many TRICARE enrollees in California.

A detailed summary of the benefits for California can be found online at: http://dpc.senate.gov/docs/states-sr-111-2-33/ca.pdf

The COBRA subsidy will be welcome for California, with our high unemployment rate. And the relief for our state budget is crucial, to help close our deficit and prevent much, much worse budget cuts. The House had passed these elements in other bills, but it's very good news that the Senate has finally acted.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 6:14 PM


 
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Speaker Perez in his own words on health budget cuts...

Tuesday, March 09, 2010
 
Our new California Assembly Speaker John Perez visited the editorial board of the Los Angeles Times late last week.

While acknowledging that he has voted for unthinkable cuts, and that there will be awful cuts going forward, the Speaker showed some impressive knowledge and passion about some of the health care cuts proposed in the past year. He talked personally and policy-wise about proposals to cut kidney dialysis, and about other cuts from AIDS drug assistance, and family planning.

It's worth a listen:
Where to cut $15 billion (5:00)

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 6:16 PM


 
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The *big* impact of budget cuts...

 
Our colleagues at Western Center on Law and Poverty released a report today providing a disturbing view of the dramatic impacts of the Governor's budget proposal.

If California does not get enough money from the federal government, the Governor has proposed to "trigger" a range of cuts and eliminations of programs. The proposal would eliminate the Healthy Families program, and cut Medi-Cal eligibility to the federal Medicaid minimum--a place where no state, no matter how conservative or financially strapped, has gone.
The answer is in the report's title: The Governor’s Proposal to Eviscerate Medi-Cal to the Federal Minimum Would Cut More Than 1.7 Million Poor People From the Medi-Cal Program.

And with the elimination of the Healthy Families program which covers over 900,000 children, and the total who would lose coverage under the Governor's proposal is 2.7 million Californians. It's a staggering impact.

And let's not forget: even with *all* the federal funds the Governor has requested, the Governor's proposal would cut over 300,000 Californians from coverage.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 1:25 PM


 
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Judges rule for and against cuts...

Wednesday, March 03, 2010
 
In the courts, we've won one and lost one.

First, the victory: Kevin Yamamura reports in sacbee.com's Capitol Alert that today the federal appeals court ruled against Governor Schwarzenegger's cuts to health and human services that include Medi-Cal reimbursement rates for hospitals and pharmacists and In-Home Supportive Services wages:

"The Ninth Circuit agreed with lower court decisions that granted preliminary injunctions against the cuts because California did not comply with the federal Medicaid Act. The cuts were contained in budget agreements over the past two years.

The court decisions not only have blocked past budget cuts, but they could also preclude the state from pursuing similar ways of solving its current $19.9 billion budget deficit. Schwarzenegger, for instance, proposed cuts to IHSS to save roughly $950 million in his January budget plan, but court rulings for now suggest that those solutions will be legally difficult to impose.

The court previously determined that under the Medicaid Act the state Department of Health Care Services must set rates "that bear a reasonable relationship to efficient and economical hospitals' costs of providing quality services, unless the Department shows some justification for rates that substantially deviate from such costs.

The Ninth Circuit on Wednesday determined that the state did not conduct the analysis required under the Medicaid Act to consider the impacts of cuts to IHSS wages or reimbursement rates. In the case California Pharmacists v. Maxwell-Jolly, Judge Milan D. Smith wrote that the court now has handed down "multiple decisions" on how to comply with the Medicaid Act.

Schwarzenegger, for instance, proposed cuts to IHSS to save roughly $950 million in his January budget plan, but court rulings for now suggest that those solutions will be legally difficult to impose."


On Tuesday, Yamamura writes of a different outcome in court regarding the governor's cuts: This time a judge ruled Schwarzenegger's line-item vetoes to reduce funding for several programs were constitutional:

"In a 3-0 decision, Justice J. Anthony Kline wrote that the challenge failed to show that Schwarzenegger had overstepped his executive authority in further reducing expenditures during last July's budget revision. The case, St. John's Well Child and Family Center v. Schwarzenegger, called into question seven line-item vetoes worth $288 million, cutting programs ranging from the Office of AIDS to Healthy Families.

Last year's situation was unique because lawmakers and Schwarzenegger approved the budget act in February, four months early. Because of a further drop in revenues and voter rejection of budget solutions, state leaders had to solve for a new $24 billion deficit last summer.

The language of the July budget revision contained reductions of the budget act, whereas normally the summer budget agreement spells out how much money the state will spend on each program. Governors have the ability to use their line-item veto on "appropriations." Democrats and social service groups claimed that the July reductions did not qualify as appropriations."

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 6:11 PM


 
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The new Speaker on reform...

Monday, March 01, 2010
 
Assemblyman John Perez of Los Angeles was sworn in as Speaker this afternoon.

His eloquent speech described his journey to be one of the most powerful people in California. It also started to outline procedural reforms, especially around the budget process. It's worth reading:

In addition to focusing on solving our budget crisis and creating jobs, I want this to be a year of reform, real reform!

I envision a three pronged attack.

There are reforms the people in their wisdom must vote on.

For example, I believe that California’s budget should be approved by a simple majority, just like 47 other states and the federal government. As history has shown time and again, if the people lose confidence in the majority party, that party will soon find itself in the minority.

There are reforms the legislature can adopt in a bipartisan, bicameral way—and we will be finalizing some of those proposals in the next couple days.

However some reforms must be made immediately.

I’ve already announced that the budget will not be written behind closed doors in Big 5 meetings. A full budget committee and subcommittee process will ensure all members get to participate and there is time for public input and independent review of the proposals.

Hearings will be held around the state so that everyday Californians have the opportunity to look us in the eye and tell us how our budget proposals will affect their lives. And more importantly, they will have the chance to offer new ideas to us.

We will broadcast our budget hearings and deliberations on the web and where possible on TV. Posting information on the Internet will make it easy for Californians to view the budget, see our proposals for themselves and evaluate the impact on their lives.

Now I’m a big believer in technology, but sometimes we need to limit its reach. Another essential reform we must make immediately is to limit the use of certain technology on the floor and in hearings.

Starting today, text messages from lobbyists are banned while we’re on this floor or in committee doing the people’s business. Californians expect us to pay full attention to the issues and to each other -- and they deserve to know who is involved in the debate. They need not worry that special interest lobbyists are secretly sending messages of opposition or support to us as we deliberate.

At each of these levels – with the voters, with our Senate colleagues and in our own house, we must work together to produce a package of reforms that each and every one of us can be proud of and that allow us to serve our constituents better.


We wish Speaker Perez well in his new position!

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 1:20 PM


 
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A sigh of relief over a bit of good news

Wednesday, February 24, 2010
 
Back the California Legislature, a collective sigh of relief wafted from around the Capitol this week as the Assembly and Senate wrapped up their work on mid-year budget cuts.

Meeting the deadline for the eighth special session set by Gov. Schwarzenegger -- yes, that was eight in one year -- Assembly members and state senators advanced a range of "budget solutions."

For now, they avoided the uproar that followed the Legislature's acquiescence to Schwarzenegger's harsh budget cuts last year on health and human services programs. Many advocates, commentators and members of the public pointed out that those were exactly the kinds of programs California families need to survive this punishing recession. The Senate and Assembly appropriately delayed discussion of the proposed health and human services cuts and eliminations until June, after the governor's May revision of his proposed budget is released.

Let's hope that come June, their wisdom holds.

For a brief but detailed overview of the mid-year budget cuts that did pass, see the California Budget Project's analysis at http://www.cbp.org/

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 7:01 PM


 
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Your schedule in conferences...

Friday, February 19, 2010
 
Two upcoming conferences of note for advocates for health and human services:

The California Working Families Policy Summit 2010, on February 25th, will feature Keynote Speaker Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis, a former California Congresswoman and state legislator. It will also include a taped message from First Lady Michelle Obama.

It is free, although there is a charge for the luncheon. You can register for the conference online at http://www.ccrwf.org/ or download the agenda and mailing or faxing it with payment if it applies. The early registration deadline is Friday, February 19 and registration closes on Friday, February 22.

The California Budget Project 2010 Conference, "The 3 Rs: Recession, Recovery, Reform: What's in Store for California?" on March 25th, features the health policy-obsessed Washington Post reporter, commentator and blogger Ezra Klein, a native Californian.

Sign up by February 20 to attend CBP's one-day public policy conference at the early bird price of $90. Sign up online or by faxing or mailing the form in our conference brochure.


While we have presented at past versions of these conferences, we aren't this year, but we encourage your attendance regardless... We are simply posting these because they provide good, solid information, and they are are worth your time.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 6:16 AM


 
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More federal help...

Thursday, February 18, 2010
 
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced that states are able to claim enhanced funds for Medicare Part D drug payments. This should allow California to get $680 million additional money from the federal government.

This decision could mean an additional $160 million more if the enhanced Medicaid match--which the states get through December 2010 due to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act--is extended by Congress for an extra six months. The House has passed such an extension in both its health reform bill and its jobs bill as well.

After some unfair and harsh statements, Governor Schwarzenegger struck an appreciative tone: “Today’s announcement shows that our bipartisan efforts for a more fair and equitable relationship with the federal government are paying off. Together, state legislative leaders and our Congressional delegation, especially Senators Feinstein and Boxer, have been working to bring California more of the federal dollars we are owed. These funds are important, and while we still have more work to do, I appreciate the commitment of the Obama Administration in responding to our requests for these much-needed funds that are owed to our state.”

This doesn't solve our state budget crisis, but it certainly helps.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 6:05 PM


 
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Assemblymembers on Guv's budget: "Not the wisest thing"

Friday, February 12, 2010
 
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s self-described “draconian” budget proposals began sounding a little less inevitable by the end of Thursday’s lengthy Assembly Budget Subcommittee hearing at the Capitol.

A strong showing of citizen-advocates opposed many of the cuts, emphasizing the benefits of threatened health programs ranging from one that provides infected jail inmates with HIV and AIDS drugs to the widely accessed Adult Day Health Care program.

Members of the subcommittee chaired by Assemblyman Jerry Hill (D) noted that if the governor’s proposals were to be adopted, the costs for alternatives would be higher in the long run.

Cases in point:
* The Office of AIDS program buying discounted HIV-AIDS drugs for county jail inmates prevents costly and hazardous outbreaks of disease. The governor would cut the entire $9.5 million portion of the program for counties – and then would also transfer more prison inmates to county jails, which cannot afford the drugs.

* The governor would eliminate vision coverage for kids whose families buy discounted health insurance through the Healthy Families SCHIP program. Lawmakers noted that this move would cost the state uncounted federal dollars by preventing better classroom performance by children who need glasses.

* A proposal to eliminate Adult Day Health Care drew one of the largest crowds of opponents, who testified that the option of long-term housing was unaffordable. Another option, for household members to quit their jobs to care for the participants 24-7 would cost California productive workers and income taxes.

* Administration spokesmen argued that Family Planning Services funded by a 9-to-1 federal match needed to be eliminated because “coming up with 10-cents on the dollar in this environment” was difficult. Legislators questioned that assessment, and suggested the Administration go find even more programs with a $9 federal match for every $1 spent by the state.

Assemblyman Jim Beall Jr. (D) noted that moving ahead with health program cuts would be short-sighted because of the likelihood of federal health reform creating opportunities to restructure delivery of health care in California.

In particular, Beall said, new federal rules about mental health care getting parity with physical health care should pave innovative paths for blending delivery of care.

The final segment of the 6-hour hearing, interrupted by the second Assembly floor vote on Sen. Abel Maldonado’s nomination for lieutenant governor, was dedicated to the last item on the agenda: a proposed shift of at least $1 billion from Proposition 63 Mental Health Services Act dollars to the general fund.

The item brought out perhaps the largest turnout of the day, with advocates from Long Beach to Sonoma lining up to tell stories of how the MHSA saved money, and lives. After a Sacramento woman tallied the cost – over $2 million -- of her mentally ill mother’s numerous hospitalizations, she made the point that early intervention through MHSA-style programs would have led to far less costly, and tragic, outcomes.

Of the proposal to shift MHSA dollars to the general fund, Assemblyman Wesley Chesbro (D) said “The impact of this will be severe if it’s allowed to go forward.”

Following the entire presentation, Hill said, “We fully understand the governor’s request,” regarding the mental health funds. “This is probably not the wisest thing to do.”

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 4:34 PM


 
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Personal testimony...

 
Below is an account from Nellie Price, a colleague of ours at Health Access, perhaps showing that advocacy runs in the family:



On Tuesday evening, my Aunt called me to let me know she and my Uncle would be in Sacramento the next day visiting with legislative offices and testifying before a committee regarding Adult Day Health Care (ADHC).

My Aunt and Uncle live in Chico, where I grew up. They, along with numerous other members of my family, were born in Chico and have lived there for their entire lives. My Aunt’s sister, who is 70 years old, is schizophrenic, diabetic and an amputee. She lives in Butte County and travels 40 miles Monday through Friday to attend the Peg Taylor ADHC Center. At the center, she is able to receive blood sugar and blood pressure monitoring, care for her amputee stump, monitoring of her diet and her medications.

Just recently, she fell and fractured her left humeral head. After a month at a convalescent hospital, she was released and given physical therapy. The Peg Taylor Center was able to provide the care for her and she currently has full range of motion.

My Aunt and Uncle have both recently retired, and My Aunt’s sister is able to be part of the community and an active part of family activities. But I wonder about people who don’t have these “simple” luxuries. And families who aren’t able to take time to advocate for other family members.

I attended the Assembly Budget Subcommittee on Health and Human Services today with my Aunt and Uncle. It seemed as if the majority of the room was there to testify on behalf of ADHC. The committee had to interrupt the testimonies for an hour to get back to the Assembly to try and reach a verdict on the Maldonado nomination, and then returned. My Aunt was not discouraged, thankfully, and we hurriedly got her back in line to testify in front of the committee.

Though she was briefly cut off with one sentence left, she was able to say exactly what she wanted and felt good about her visit to Sacramento.


After all the other testimonies were heard, the committee had interesting things to say. Assemblyman Hernandez stated he was very unsure that ADHC can be completely eliminated after what he’d heard and the personal visits he’d made to ADHC centers in the area. He thought cuts could possibly be made, but not a complete elimination. Whispers of relief were heard throughout the room.

Assemblyman Chesbro opened a discussion about particular costs, which Assemblyman Beall quickly joined, adding that perhaps we should add up all the costs of people already in ADHC versus those not in ADHC and look at the differences. Assemblyman Beall thought there might be higher costs without ADHC, and more costs of programs in isolation. He also stated this was something to look at within the Waiver, and that we need a more integrated approach to serving people and saving money.

Overall, the process for my Aunt and Uncle was long and exhausting and they learned a lot. They know it is far from over legislatively, but they are not finished either.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 2:16 AM


 
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The mid-year budget package comes together...

Thursday, February 11, 2010
 
The Senate and Assembly are starting to move on mid-year budget package of cuts, as reported by Shane Goldmacher in the Los Angeles Times and Wyatt Buchanan in the San Francisco Chronicle.

The Senate budget committee moved on a mid-year budget package yesterday. The Assembly Budget Subcommittee on Health and Human Services meets this afternoon to consider elements of the Assembly package.

The worst of the health and human service cuts--like cuts to Medi-Cal and Healthy Families eligibility and benefits--look like they are being deferred to the bigger budget fight later this year, in deciding the 2010-11 budget. This doesn't mean these programs are safe, merely that the day of reckoning is delayed for a few months. Health and human service advocates need to stay vigilant through the next week of negotiation around a mid-year package, and need to continue our work through May Revise and the spring-summer negotiations.

We'll keep you posted from today's budget hearing this afternoon.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 10:37 AM


 
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Anthem Blue Cross is talk of the town..

Wednesday, February 10, 2010
 
The plight of millions of Californians who are uninsured was front and center at the annual Insure the Uninsured Project conference held Wednesday in Sacramento, where hundreds of advocates, state officials and health industry professionals gathered to discuss what’s next for federal health reform.

“Timing is everything,” one panelist declared -- and indeed that proved to be the case during talk of industry abuses that continue to underscore the need for rate regulation and broader reform. The recent widely publicized move by Anthem Blue Cross to raise rates by up to 39% on individual policies was cited frequently by speakers as evidence that federal health care reform must move forward.

Anthem Blue Cross has been at the center of a whirlwind of criticism from President Obama on down. On Wednesday, the subsidiary of Indiana-based WellPoint continued to attract sustained attacks at the conference by consumer advocates, state legislators and even industry representatives.

Assembly Health Committee Chair Dave Jones (D) announced a hearing for February 23, saying he would demand justification for the hefty rate increase from executives of Anthem Blue Cross and of the industry in general. Jones noted that WellPoint pulled in $2.4 billion in profits last year, and that the 39% increase follows years of double-digit premium increases by the company.

State Senator Mark Leno (D), who touted his bill for a single-payer system, said he would join Jones in backing legislation to consider imposing disclosure rules and rate regulation on health insurance plans. Jones said he also planned to continue his push for legislation to require more transparency from the industry and place caps on out-of-pocket costs for consumers.

Several panelists spoke of the deep divides between Democrats and Republicans, expressing hopes that those divides could be bridged by reason.

An afternoon panel of stakeholders was tasked with discussing what shape federal health reform may take. Some snippets included:

--John Arensmeyer of Small Business Majority said including provisions to make insurance affordable was absolutely necessary for small businesses to be able to hire quickly.
-- Pat Johnston, head of the California Association of Health Plans, said cost-containment initiatives both on base health costs, and including efforts by health plans to cut back their average 12% overhead costs, would be “a vast improvement over the status quo.”
-- Elizabeth McNeil of the California Medical Association said requiring health reform to offer the same level of benefits that members of Congress have would win over the public.
-- Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access, advised conferees to offer support to their representatives in Washington and suggested that, with vocal constituent backing, a comprehensive reform package could pass Congress in March, by Easter break.

Judging from reports by several speakers, the death of health reform is way premature, and the discussion was a reminder of its necessity and urgency, given the severity of the health crisis here in California. The Anthem Blue Cross rate hikes is just a symptom of the situation.

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 8:43 PM


 
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A checks-and-balances kind of thing...

Monday, February 08, 2010
 
Assembly Budget Committee Chair Noreen Evans (D) and others assailed the administration Monday for making cuts to a breast cancer screening program for low-income women against the Legislature’s wishes.

The Department of Public Health in December decided to reduce access to the “Every Woman Counts” early detection program by freezing enrollment until June 2010, and limiting enrollment to only women 50 and older.

For the past decade, the program had offered annual breast cancer screening to low-income women who lacked health insurance and were at least 40 years old. Statewide, 1.2 million are eligible for the program through about 1,000 locations, including community health clinics. The program served 249,000 in fiscal year 2006-2007; 270,000 in fiscal year 2007-2008 and then 310,000 in 2008-2009.

With the demand increasing, however, the Schwarzenegger Administration decided to shift some EWC funding to other programs, thus freeing up some money to help plug the growing budget deficit. This was done even though the Legislature had rejected the cutbacks outlined by the administration during budget negotiations after the governor submitted his May spending-plan revision.

At a hearing well-attended by breast cancer survivors and supporters, an irked Evans told bureaucrats that “It’s unacceptable to me that these screenings won’t take place…In my opinion, we’ve had way too much testosterone in the budget talks….and enough of the macho knife-waving, alpha-male politicians in the process. How many Californians will have to die for budget negotiators to see it’s time for us to grow up?”

Despite having been told by Evans that the planned program cutbacks would not be approved by the Legislature, the Department of Public Health “suddenly and surprisingly changed” the program, Evans said.

Assemblyman Hector de la Torre (D) added, “The administration is not allowed to run around making unilateral decisions. There is a checks-and-balances thing going on here.”

A round of applause broke out in the hearing room after Assemblyman Sandre Swanson (D) said the cutbacks in services would cause greater expenditures in the final analysis, as women get sicker and require extensive treatment. “You’re just shoving these costs off onto other programs – and you are costing lives, too.”

Several medical experts and community providers testified that women who are diagnosed with breast cancer in their 40s are more likely to have aggressive forms of the disease and therefore need early detection to survive. Many also testified that the age-group accessing services through Every Woman Counts are more likely to be women of color with few economic resources.

The hearing came after a bake sale held by Evans, other legislators and breast cancer awareness representatives to raise money and awareness about the program cutbacks. Following the hearing, a large rally was held outside, where several other legislators, including Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, declared their opposition to the cuts and support for restoring the program. The rally ended with the Capitol being bathed in pink light, a color of significance for breast cancer survivors. Meanwhile, two bills -- with a third likely to come -- have been proposed to reinstate the program, Evans said.

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 6:04 PM


 
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Budget Burdens from DC to Sacramento...

Thursday, February 04, 2010
 
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATE
Thursday, February 4, 2010


BUDGET ACTION HEATS UP AT STATE & FEDERAL LEVEL
* Chiang Tells Budget Committee of Cash Crisis, Urges "Credible" Action
* Obama's Federal Budget Includes Health Reform and Help for California
* Other Items: CBP Report on Growing Need for Services; Single-Payer Bill Advances

* Read Our Health Access Blog for updates on state budget, the latest in D.C.
* Join Us on Facebook! Follow Us on Twitter!



ASSEMBLY BUDGET COMMITTEE REVIEWS THE BIG PICTURE: Budget Chair Noreen Evans (D) led committee members Wednesday in a sharply focused Q-and-A with State Controller John Chiang, Legislative Analyst Mac Taylor and representatives with the state Department of Finance.

Not since July 12, 2007, has California actually had cash on hand, Chiang said. Since that date, the Department of Finance has relied on "external borrowing and internal borrowing" from various special funds. In answer to lawmaker's queries, the controller said the state's finance department has identified 710 of the state's 1,000-plus special funds from which it can borrow internally.

Repeatedly, Chiang told legislators that California "needs credible and sustainable budget solutions" that do not include past-year gimmicks such as proposing to sell off the state compensation fund, or EdFund (the state's guarantor of student loans) or the state Lottery -- all of which were said by the administration to be worth far more money than they actually were, and attracted no buyers anyway.

Chiang was firm in telling the budget committee that members needed to make "tough choices" to buck up the state's economic and educational future, as well as to ensure its quality of life does not decline sharply. "We've lost 1 million jobs.... We need to decide what kind of state do we plan to have -- and if we are going to fund essential services, we really need to address the question of revenue."

Both Republicans and Democrats made remarks indicating they've had enough of cutting state services for taxpayers, the disabled, the elderly, and K-12 students as well as university-bound students. Assemblyman Jim Silva (R) said as a teacher he is tired of "seeing students are getting short-changed. I get my back up with I hear that California students are at a disadvantage in getting university educations."

Assemblywoman Diane Harkey (R) noted that she only joined the Legislature about a year ago, but already she'd been through three cycles of closing budget deficits. "We're not just in a budget problem. We are overloaded with debt." Others, including Democrats Jerry Hill and Robert Blumenfield, pointed out that some of the harsh health care service cuts that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is championing will cost the state more money in the long-run as people seek care in emergency rooms or long-term care facilities.

Chiang said Wall Street financial experts do not consider the governor's demand for $6.9 billion from the federal government an intelligent answer to California's perennial deficit woes. "When the governor issued his '6.9 billion solution,' it was not viewed as a totally credible solution, leading Standard & Poors to downgrade California's rating from A to A-."

"We're going to have to educate our students for new economies," Chiang said, "Your actions can make the difference in setting this generation on the right fiscal path. For too long, when people don't make tough choices, students, the aged, disabled and taxpayers all end up suffering."

Evans, the committee chair, said sub-committees will begin meeting next week to scrutinize details of the governor's budget proposal. Regarding an unprecedented Department of Finance letter requesting blanket authority to defer payments to various state creditors, Evans said "I will clean up my language from what I said when I first saw this request for the Department to have legislative authority. I'm extremely skeptical and I suggest you come back with an actual plan." Vice Chair Jim Nielsen (R) joined Republican colleagues in attempting to distance himself from the administration's request for open-ended authority to defer payments. "This is a breath-taking application," Nielsen said. "To just ask us to give you a blank check ... we can't afford that anymore."

PRESIDENT OBAMA PUTS FORWARD FEDERAL BUDGET PROPOSAL: Earlier this week, President Barack Obama released his proposed federal budget. The proposal attempts to balance short-term economic stimulus with long-term efforts at deficit reduction. In attempting to reducing the deficit by $1.25 trillion over 10 years, the proposal lets the Bush-era tax cuts expire, and prioritizes the passage of pending health reforms in Congress. To deal with the immediate recession, the budget proposes a variety of provisions, such as continuing COBRA subsidies to help the unemployed purchase health coverage. It would also extend enhanced Medicaid federal matching funds from the stimulus for six additional months to states, providing $25.5 billion nationally, and at least $1.5 billion to California in the budget year through June 2011.

The Office of Management and Budget has a specific fact sheet on the federal budget and California. Health Access has more about the federal budget on our blog.

CUTS PROPOSED AT TIME OF GROWING NEEDS: The cyclical, seemingly never-ending state budget grind has Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger stuck in a rut, still swinging away with an ax at the safety net at the time it is needed most. That's the basic message that comes through from a report released Tuesday by the California Budget Project.

California has lost 1,000,000 jobs since the start of the recession, the report says. People need help, families need help, whole communities need help as they scramble against the tide of economic devastation. Cuts, the CBP says, will only further weaken the economy and could impede the national recovery.

The CBP report says that 100 prominent economists of all ideologies recently warned that,"It is economically preferable to raise taxes on those with high incomes than to cut state expenditures [during a recession] ... Steep state budget cuts will exacerbate the economic downturn."

The report noted that California now has 3.6 million more working-age individuals than 10 years ago, but is now down to approximately the same number of jobs as 10 years ago. More than one in five working-age Californians -- or 21.4 percent -- were either unemployed or underemployed in December 2009. (The calculation includes 354,000 jobless people who want and are able to work, but who are left uncounted in official statistics because they have not searched for work in the last month.)

As need grew, California unfortunately responded by cutting off programs -- suspending enrollment in Healthy Families, for example, even though the number of children whose low-income families bought coverage through the program increased steadily by nearly 100,000 kids from July 2007 to July 2009, the report says. To read it and view helpful charts and graphics, go to www.cbp.org.

SINGLE-PAYER, OTHER LEGISLATION STARTS TO MOVE AGAIN: With the new year, bills are starting to move again, including SB 810, the single-payer health reform bill authored by Democratic Senator Mark Leno of San Francisco. That bill looks to be headed to the Governor's desk again this year. It's onto the Assembly after passing the Senate last week, the last week a bill was eligible to pass out of its house of origin. While it still faces the barriers of a two-thirds vote for financing, and a probable gubernatorial veto regardless, it does keep a broad range of health reform options in the policy conversation, and highlights the deteriorating status quo of our health system. If anything, some advocates hope it will provide a lesson from state legislatures to their federal counterparts, that they should not quit just because of a setback.


For more information about anything in this update, contact its author, Cynthia Craft, at ccraft@health-access.org.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 7:55 AM


 
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It's complicated...

Monday, February 01, 2010
 
Here's the opening of an article by Brian Rokos in the Riverside Press-Enterprise on the potential local impact of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's proposed cuts into programs for individuals and families in need of adult day health care and home-care health services:

"Frail, elderly people and mentally ill adults could be forced into hospitals and nursing homes if day-care services close because of the state's budget cutting, care providers say."


But the article goes on to explain that there's a whole lot more involved than just the black-and-white scenarios: There's a domino effect of consequences should clients lose access to adult day health care. There's also the physical and emotional toll on the elderly and frail. Many may not survive a relocation from their own homes.

And, significantly, there's the stress placed on relatives at home who may have no choice but to restructure their lives to care 24-7 for their loved ones. When adult clients no longer are able to attend day-care health centers, the tasks of providing oversight and activities fall on family members who may have to give up their jobs and free time to provide the care.

The article is illuminating when it comes to explaining this toll on caregivers, some of whom are apparently outlived by the person they attend to, due to the added stress: One man told the Riverside P-E that he grew frustrated reinventing himself as a housewife and a cook and keeping an eye on his wife at all times: "There were times I just wanted to go out and yell," the man said. Without having a day-care health program to take his wife to, "I'd be back to the old daily going crazy." With the service as an option, he's been able to gain some of his free time back -- making life easier on him and his wife.

State budget drafters should always consider the multi-tiered human impacts of cutting deeper and deeper into health and human services programs. Represented on the spreadsheet, the programs may look like numbers yet, in actuality, they represent people. And not just people, but whole neighborhoods, cities and -- in the final analysis -- our level of empathy for fellow Californians.

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 10:23 PM


 
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Obama releases his federal budget...

 
President Obama released his proposed federal budget today.

Here's the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities' inital commentary, which states, "The President’s budget reflects both the short-term priority of boosting the economy and creating jobs and the longer-term priority of bringing deficits under control while meeting important national needs... The budget would reduce deficits by $1.25 trillion over 10 years, compared to what they would be by continuing current policies."

The Office and Management and budget has a specific fact sheet on the federal budget and California.

In the budget, President Obama reiterates that he is “committed to ensuring that every American has access to affordable health care,” and his FY 2011 budget proposal continues investments to this end in the health care of Californians. Specifically, California would receive $29.4 billion to provide health coverage to low-income families [Source: OMB factsheet]. In addition, other funding would be used to improve and increase the public health workforce, encourage health centers and providers to provide care to underserved populations, fund initiatives to achieve higher quality care at lower costs, and strengthen regional and local partnerships in rural areas.

STATE RELIEF FOR MEDI-CAL COSTS

Of particular note to those of us who deal with the state budget, there is some continued state relief through Medicaid.

Under the economic stimulus package (ARRA) passed last year, the federal matching rate for California’s Medi-Cal expenditures was increased from 50 percent to 61.6 percent. This totaled $1,991,907,534 for the two quarters from October 1, 2008 through March 31, 2009. In all, California was allotted $11.23 billion for the increased Medicaid match rate that is set to expire on December 31, 2010. [Source: http://www.statehealthfacts.org/]

President Obama’s FY 2011 budget proposal includes about $25.5 billion to extend the increased Medicaid matching rate for another six months until June 30, 2011 [Source: OMB]. This means California could receive an addition $2 billion to $3 billion in federal Medicaid relief under the President’s proposal, depending on actual expenditures and the formula for apportioning the grants to states.

This six-month extension of enhanced Medicaid matching funds is one of the requests for additional federal funding that Governor Schwarzenegger requested, and one that has also been included in other legislative vehicles, including health reform and jobs. However, Governor Schwarzenegger's state budget requested many other funding increases and policy changes, totaling nearly $7 billion. Given the political and procedural barriers in Washington, DC, some are more likely than others, but getting the enhanced Medicaid matching funds is a good first step.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 12:28 PM


 
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Deja vu all over again...

Friday, January 29, 2010
 
It's still worth sharing more tidbits from the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, chaired by Sen. Denise Moreno Ducheny, (D) earlier this week. Though the hearing was scheduled to last three hours, it ended up being twice that long -- such was the passion of the stakeholders and the complexity of the fiscal topic.

A few of the governor's proposals were raked over the coals, in some cases because the math didn't add up to equal the level of hardship the administration would impose by cutting crucial programs. Other proposals, glimpsed through the lens of recent history, seemingly deflated on the basis of that historical fact alone.

Consider the governor's persistence on the matters of zapping Proposition 10 and Proposition 63. Remember, these were two propositions placed before the voters in the true Democratic tradition of a) allowing folks to vote yea or nay, and b) tallying up the results and c) committing the results to official record.

Proposition 10, otherwise colloquially known for creating the First Five Commission, established programs that Californians believed were needed to help our kids get the leg-up on a world, not to mention a nation, that has been swiftly overtaking us in educating our next generations. California voters first approved it in 1998, rejected overturning it in 2000, and then later once again reiterated their approval of the program to begin nurturing and schooling children ages birth through age 5 in preparation for a robust education.

Proposition 63, the Mental Health Services Act, was approved by the voters and, then again, last May, was also protected when voters rejected the budget initiative to raid the mental health fund to help cover the general fund deficit.

Certainly, in Yogi Berra's terms, as someone pointed out in committee testimony, the governor's proposals are looking like "deja vu all over again."

County spokespeople testified it cost them $68.1 million to put the budget initiatives on the ballot last May -- only to see voters reaffirm what they said they wanted in the first place. Lo and behold, that $68.1 million has yet to trickle down to the counties as reimbursement from the state for holding the May 2009 special election, though one county spokeswoman testified hopefully, "It's in the governor's budget now. . . for that we are grateful."

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 3:00 PM


 
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A big budget turnout...

Wednesday, January 27, 2010
 
More on the budget hearing from Jessica Rothhaar, who directs our budget organizing for Health Access California:

The hearing room was overflowing with Californians from around the state. The big turnout conveyed the severe impact of the cuts absolutely clear.

Senators Ducheny, Leno and Lowenthal also repeatedly expressed disbelief that the LAO was recommending adoption of the Governor’s cuts without accounting for the additional costs of consequences they admitted would happen, such as additional ER admissions, uncompensated care, homelessness, HIV/AIDS infection rates, etc. or the political impossibility of others, such as the taking of Prop. 10 and Prop. 63 money to backfill other programs. On the flip side, Senator Ducheny did ask several times whether less drastic cuts might be possible to several of the programs under discussion, such as to Healthy Families vision coverage.

Among the groups speaking against the cuts at yesterday's hearing included: AIDS Healthcare Foundation; Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE); AltaMed; Alzheimers Association; The ARC; Asian Pacific American Legal Center (LA); Bayview Adult Day Health Care; CA Alliance of Retired Americans; CA Association of Adult Day Services; CA Association of Family Health Centers; CA Association of Health Plans; CA Association for Health Services at Home; CA Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems; CA Commission on the Status of Women; CA Disability Community Action Network; CA Hospital Associationl CA Immigrant Policy Center; CA Medical Association; CA Primary Care Association; Casa Pacifico ADHC; Children Now and the 100% Campaign; Children’s Specialty Care Coalition; County Health Directors Association of CA; County Mental Health Directors Association of CA; County Welfare Directors Association of CA (CWDA); Developmental Disabilities Council of Alameda County; Easter Seals; Elderday ADHC; Futures Explored; Graceful Senescence ADHC; Hemophilia Council of CA; Loma Linda University Medical Center; National Alliance for the Mentally Ill; Oral Health Access Council; Para Los Ninos; Placer Independent Resource Services; Planned Parenthood Affiliates of CA; Resources for Independent Living; Sacramento CARES; San Diego Council of Community Clinics; San Francisco AIDS Foundation; United Association of California Care Providers (UACC); and Western Center on Law and Poverty.

There was particularly awesome turnout and testimony organized by the California Association of Adult Day Services, which had members there from just about every district represented on the Budget Committee, including San Diego, San Bernardino, Santa Cruz, San Francisco, Contra Costa and Los Angeles. Let's keep it up!

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 3:31 PM


 
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Blunt language about a blunt budget...

Tuesday, January 26, 2010
 
There was no escaping the sharp wit and quick tongue of Sen. Denise Moreno Ducheny (D), chair of the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, on Tuesday as the panel heard its first airing of the rationale behind the governor's budget proposals to drastically slash taxpayer-funded health services -- for the second year in a row.

Again and again, Ducheny offered succinct retorts that, in effect, signaled to the admininstration that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's ideas amounted to little more than glasses-half-empty. In nearly every area of cuts described, Ducheny demanded more data before moving forward on the governor's punishing health-care cuts for California's most vulnerable populations at a time when the prolonged recession continues to drag down the state's economy.

More than once, Ducheny and other senators questioned why revenue-raising options were not considered as alternatives to decimating services to taxpaying, lower-income citizens. "Most of these programs were started in the first place with the theory that they would save us Medi-Cal dollars in the long run," Ducheny said, demanding more concrete figures from the administration's Department of Finance as it outlined proposed cuts in adult day health care, Healthy Families coverage for children, mental health programs, HIV-AIDS drug assistance and more.

"It's a pig in a poke, is what it is," Ducheny said, chiding the finance department and the Legislative Analyst's Office representatives for not presenting more details to support the claim of potential savings. "It's a bit of an irony that, if we're the seventh-richest state in the union, why the people who put us there couldn't help us more, by paying a [higher] Vehicle License Fee, for example."

Said Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco): "When the governor talked about 'Sophie's Choices,' he didn't suggest revisiting the tax breaks for revenues. He didn't say that was one of 'Sophie's Choices.'"

Still, time and again, both the LAO and DOF representatives fell short in their explanations of how the puzzle pieces of the governor's proposed budget cuts fit together in a way that made sense in helping Californians weather the tsunami of a persistent recession.

Those offering testimony against the governor's cuts raised the discussion to a blunt level not frequently heard in such a formal setting. They spoke of the elderly and the frail expiring before being able to find a bed in a long-term nursing home. They spoke of children being left behind to fail in classrooms; they spoke of more and more people becoming homeless, hopeless, ailing and unjustly relegated to being second-class citizens. Phrases like "fiscally foolish," "morally reprehensible" and "appalling and horrific" replaced the more polite, mutually beneficial language that advocates typically offer up in legislative hearings.

Regarding the proposal that Healthy Families vision care benefits be dropped for children whose low-income parents pay 150% more in premiums than they did a year ago, Ducheny said, "How are the children going to 'Race to the Top' if they can't read?"

Senator Roderick Wright, a Democrat from Los Angeles, provoked the most heated discussion in dismissing what he called "the euphemisms regarding 'reduction of services.'"

Should the governor's proposals be adopted, Wright said, "We are voting to let people die. If we don't face the consequences of these cuts, if we don't face the fact that we are discussing life or death for some folks. . .we are doing a disservice to the public."

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posted by Cynthia Craft | Permalink | 9:40 PM


 
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"This is a budget with a body count."

Wednesday, January 13, 2010
 
That's how Assemblywoman Noreen Evans began her statement as chair of the Assembly Budget Committee, as they started deliberation.

She was clear that the budget proposal was not acceptable, that "there was a lot of sacrifice, but it isn't shared." She said that since the Governor's proposal wasn't acceptable, the Legislature would not use the Governor's budget as a framework, and would have to take it upon themselves to craft somthing that then the Governor would respond to.

We'll keep you posted.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 1:44 PM


 
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Budget blues...

Tuesday, January 12, 2010
 
Here's a one-page factsheet on the health care budget cuts, and what is at stake. It's a good companion to our recent report about the past health cuts. As the Los Angeles Times noted this weekend, many of the cuts are to programs that have already been hit hard.

Our Facebook (www.facebook.com/healthaccess) page has some of the many news clips from the eleven events last week from around the state by health and human service advocates.

There will be more to come in the weeks ahead. Budget hearings are starting this week...

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 12:33 AM


 
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You've Got to Be Kidding...

Friday, January 08, 2010
 
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATE
Friday, January 8, 2010

GOVERNOR ANNOUNCES BUDGET FOR MORE "MONSTER" FY10-11 CUTS
* Gov. Schwarzenegger Has Budget Proposal Similar--but More Severe--Than Last Year
* Millions of Californians Could Lose Coverage and Care; Dramatic Impacts
* Details Below on $2.9 Billion in Health and Human Services Cuts
* An Additional $3.5 Billion of HHS Cuts Would Be Triggered Without Federal Funds

* For News on the Budget, Read Our
Blog! Join Us on Facebook! Follow Us on Twitter!

With California bogged down by a $19.9 billion deficit for the next 18 months, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Friday once again proposed balancing the state’s budget not with new revenues back with devastating cuts to the state’s least-fortunate -- including up to 6.4 billion dollars of cuts in health and human services. Under the cuts, over 1.5 million Californians, and likely many more, would have their coverage eliminated, other key services would be scaled back, and California would lose jobs and federal matching funds.

As he has in last year's budget cycles, Schwarzenegger proposed severe cuts to health and human service programs, the kinds of safety-net services Californians expect their government to extend to the public in times of deep need, that provide help in getting the state and its people back to work.

In some of the governor’s harshest budget scenarios threatened to shut down altogether a range of existing essential health and human services if the federal government did not respond favorably to his demand for $6.9 billion in federal tax dollars.

“Tough times still lie ahead,” Schwarzenegger proclaimed in announcing a package of budget proposals that included some “monster” cuts that would either lead to “real reform” or a continuation of “the budget roller coaster.” Schwarzenegger said he would declare a fiscal emergency and call a special session of the Legislature so lawmakers would be forced to focus on solutions to the deficit.

Afterwards, Democratic Assembly Speaker Karen Bass succinctly said of the governor’s proposals: “I call this budget a big pile of denial.” Bass said the governor’s budget plan was simply and plainly “a non-starter” because “it’s calling for the virtual elimination of the safety net.” Besides Bass’ comments, early indications were that Schwarzenegger’s plan had fallen flat with the Legislature’s Democratic leadership, whose cooperation the governor will need to adopt the state’s annual budget.

Senate President Pro Tempore Darrell Steinberg opened his statements to reporters with a blunt: “You’ve got to be kidding me.” He later noted that the governor’s budget solutions lacked “creativity.” Senator Denise Ducheny, chair of the Senate Budget Committee, said she saw in the budget “a recycling of exactly the same proposals he’s had before.” The main difference, Ducheny said, was that previously Schwarzenegger tended to blame the Legislature for a lack of fiscal solutions and, on Friday, the governor focused on blaming Washington D.C.

Indeed, Schwarzenegger did everything but identify the federal government as a foe, leaning heavily on the theme of fiscal fairness. This lead Bass to note that the governor struck a nearly inappropriate tone: “Typically he threatens the Legislature. Now he’s threatening the president of the United States.”

The governor pledged to fly to Washington D.C. with all four partisan legislative leaders to demand the $6.9 billion he said the federal government owes California. Schwarzenegger made the case that, for every $1 Californians pay in federal taxes, the state only gets an average of 78 cents back. (Ironically, his cuts would cause California to lose even more in federal matching funds.)

The governor is also seeking more reimbursement funds for Medi-Cal expenses, saying California receives only 50 cents on the dollar, while the average for states is 57 cents.
Chief among the governor’s deep cuts are those that would eliminate coverage and care to millions of Californians, ironically forgoing substantial matching federal fund dollars as a result.

The Governor plans to ask for a $2.9 billion cut in health and human services (including $1.1 billion in Medi-Cal), and an additional $3.5 billion cut in health and human services if California does not get the federal money he seeks.

But even with a massive infusion of federal funds, the Governor would still propose to eliminate coverage to hundreds of thousands of Californians, including children. Health experts say these devastating cuts would further unravel the health care system that we all rely on, where we have already seen services scaled back and full clinics close. Health Access recently released an assessment of the health cuts in the 2009-10 budget, six months in.

THE GOVERNOR'S PROPOSED "TRIGGER" CUTS

The following is a list of proposed cuts and eliminations that the governor proposes to be "triggered" if additional federal funds are not forthcoming:

* Eliminate coverage and benefits for millions in Medi-Cal ($532 million), including:
* Reduce Medi-Cal eligibility to the minimum allowed under current federal law (about 72% of the Federal Poverty Level for most adults and 133% FPL for children and pregnant women). For example, this would reduce eligibility for low-income parents from an income of up to $18,310 for a family of three to around $13,000. While this tightening of eligibility standards would not be allowed under the stimulus package until January 1, 2011, it would eliminate coverage for 250,000 Californians in the first six months, coverage for 450,000 in the year after that, and hundreds of thousands more in future years.
* Eliminate many Medi-Cal programs (including the Family PACT program for family planning services, the CHDP Gateway for transitional children's coverage, Breast and Cervical Cancer Treatment Program, and the Medically Indigent long-term care program).
* Eliminate many remaining optional benefits (including medical supplies like diabetic test strips, prosthetic limbs, orthotics, wheelchairs and other durable medical equipment, hearing aids and other benefits).

* Eliminate the Healthy Families Program, affecting all 874,762 children currently enrolled ($126 million);
* Eliminate various health services programs, (including Access for Infants and Mothers, MRMIP's high-risk pools for those denied coverage for pre-existing conditions, Every Women Counts, Asthma control program, and Expanded Access to Care Program), funded by Proposition 99 (tobacco tax) funds, subject to voter approval ($115 million);
* Eliminate mental health services funded by Proposition 63 (Mental Health Services Act), shifting the $847 million to fund existing mental health services;
* Eliminate CalWORKS, the state's welfare-to-work program ($1.044 billion); and
* Eliminate the In-Home Supportive Services programs that provides home care to those not able to assist themselves. ($495 million)


BASE BUDGET PROPOSAL
(REGARDLESS OF WHETHER FEDERAL DOLLARS ARE FORTHCOMING)

Specifically, as described below, the budget proposal makes a number of cuts to health and human services programs, redirects funding from other sources to health care programs, and relies on significant receipt of federal funds.

Cuts to Medi-Cal:
· $750 million in cuts to Medi-Cal by placing limits on services and applying utilization controls, increasing cost-sharing for Medi-Cal beneficiaries, and making “other programmatic changes,” potentially affecting the 7 million Californians on Medi-Cal;
· $118 million to eliminate Medi-Cal coverage for recent legal immigrants, effective March 1, 2010, affecting about 90,000 legal immigrants;
· $104 million to eliminate the Medi-Cal adult day health care benefit, effective March 1, 2010, affecting about 35,000 frail adults;
· $55 million to delay payment to Medi-Cal institutional providers, requiring doctors and hospitals to “float” the state;
· $26.4 million from aggressive elimination of fraud in Medi-Cal; and
· $28.7 million to rescind a rate increase for Medi-Cal family planning services.

Cuts to the Healthy Families Program:
· $85.3 million (including $10.5 million for the current fiscal year) by tightening eligibility requirements for the Healthy Families Program from 250% of the federal poverty level (FPL) to 200% of the FPL, effective May 1, 2010, affecting roughly 225,000 children, plus an additional corresponding $3.9 million cut to the California Children’s Services program for Healthy Families-eligible children;
· $21.7 million by eliminating vision coverage from the HFP benefit package and increasing monthly premiums in families 151-200% of the FPL, effective July 1, 2010, affecting 167,000 children.

Other cuts to Health and Human Services programs:
· $950.5 million in reducing eligibility, payments and services in the In-Home Support Services (IHSS) program;
· $146.1 million by reducing benefits for CalWORKS recipients;
· $306.9 million by reducing benefits for recipients of SSI/SSP;
· $60 million by eliminating the California Food Assistance Program;
· $200 million by reducing support for Regional Centers;
· $18 million by eliminating the Substance Abuse Offender Treatment Program.

A redirection of funding to avoid more health care cuts:
· Reduce $240 million from children’s health coverage to be replaced by newly enacted hospital fees;
· Reduce $36 million from Medi-Cal to be replaced by one-time Proposition 99 (tobacco tax) reserve funds;
· Reduce $25 million from the Access for Infants and Mothers (AIM) program to be replaced by one-time use Proposition 99 (tobacco tax) reserve funds;
· Reduce $550 million in General Fund expenditures on high-priority health and social programs serving children to be replaced by state and local Proposition 10 (California Children and Families Act) funding, subject to voter approval; and
· Reduce $452.3 million in General Fund expenditures on EPSDT services for children and mental health managed cared to be replaced by Prop 63 (Mental Health Services Act) funding, subject to voter approval.

A reliance on federal funding to avoid more health care cuts:
· $1 billion from federal funds owed to the state for disabled Medicare-eligible individuals and the rate of Medicare Part D coverage
· $1.8 billion from increasing the standard federal matching assistance percentage (FMAP) for Medi-Cal from 50 to 57 percent;
· $1.5 billion from continuation of an increased FMAP (through June 30, 2011) as part of ARRA, the economic recovery act.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 9:35 PM


 
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A shocking and severe budget...

 
Governor Schwarzenegger released his proposed 2010-11 budget today, which includes severe cuts and no new revenues.

As part of the cuts, the Governor proposes a $2.9 billion cut in health and human services (including $1.1 billion in Medi-Cal), and an additional $3.5 billion cut in health and human services if California does not get a major infusion of federal funds.

The Governor proposes shocking cuts eliminating coverage and care for millions of Californians, which will have dramatic impacts on not just these families but on the health system on which we all rely. Even *with* a massive infusion of federal funds, the Governor would still propose to eliminate coverage to hundreds of thousands of Californians, including children.

These devastating cuts would further unravel the health care system that we all rely on, where we have already seen services scaled back and full clinics close. Health Access recently released an assessment of the health cuts in the 2009-10 budget, six months in.

This is an anti-jobs budget that not just harms California families and our healthcare system, but our economic recovery. The most effective way to create jobs is invest in Californians, and in their health and in services to help all of us get through a tough time. This proposal completely undermines our economic recovery efforts.

The economic impacts of these health and human service cuts would be multipled because we would not just lose jobs but billions in federal matching funds.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 4:50 PM


 
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Apples and apples...

 
Governor Schwarzenegger's office came out with a statement accusing Health Access California of "twisting the facts" and comparing "apples and oranges" about the Governor's stance on health reform. Carla Maranucci at the San Francisco Chronicle has the back-and-forth. We stand by our statements, and here's the facts:

Two years ago, as part of his health reform proposal, ABx1 1, the Governor was willing to raise the revenues to expand the same Medicaid program to the same population, and was willing to raise the revenues to do it, with a 50% of the cost paid for by the federal government.

The current health reforms will expand the same Medicaid program to the same population with the federal government paying for 100% of the expansion population for the first several years, and over 80% from the eighth year on. Much of that small cost to the state--much smaller than what the Governor projects--would be offset by savings elsewhere.

This isn't apples and oranges. The comparison isn't even apples and apples. We are talking about the very same apple.

To be clear: we support and prefer the House health reform proposal that would provide even more assistance to states, by having the federal government pick up over 90% of the cost of the newly eligible population in the eighth year on. That would be a productive means of advocacy for the Governor, rather than attacking the overall health reform package that would provide a new infusion of billions of dollars in needed subsidies to California families, small businesses, and yes, the state of California.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 12:39 PM


 
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The week in review, awaiting the budget...

Thursday, January 07, 2010
 
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATE
Thursday, January 7, 2010

2010: THE NEW YEAR BRINGS MORE CUTS TO CONTEST
* Gov. Schwarzenegger To Unveil FY10-11 Budget Proposal on Friday, 11:30 a.m.
* Health Access Reveals "The Damage Already Done" Six Months Into 2009-10 Budget
* Stakeholders Meet for First Medi-Cal Waiver Committee Meeting

* 2010 Promises to be a Big Year! Join Us on
Facebook! Follow Us on Twitter!

BUDGET TO BE ANNOUNCED FRIDAY: California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger announces the release of his new FY2010-2011 budget around 11:30 a.m. on Friday. All expectations are that the budget proposal will include more painful cuts in programs vital to California's health and struggling economy. Health Access will review and report later tomorrow on the proposal's impact on health and human services, with quick reactions on our blog and on Twitter.

ASSESSING "THE DAMAGE ALREADY DONE" BY CUTS BEFORE CONTINUING: In anticipation of that announcement, Health Access California today released a new report detailing the six-month impact of nearly $2 billion in cuts already made to the state’s healthcare system in the current budget year. Entitled “The Damage Already Done: A Report on the Impacts of the 2009 Health Care Budget Cuts, Six Months In,” the report documents many of the effects these cuts have had on individual patients, families, health providers, and our economy.The finding? Just six months into the 2009 budget, hundreds of thousands of Californians have been denied care or coverage for key services, and we see indications of the health system we all rely on is crumbling, with five clinics closing. These cuts are starting to ripple through the health system and our economy, as we lose health jobs and federal matching funds, and people don’t get the help they need to get through these tough times. Six months into those cuts, families are suffering harmful impacts of being denied access to a range of critical services such as dental care, basic prevention and affordable health care options. We hope this assessment informs the discussion about whether the state can afford to cut more.

THE GOVERNOR'S ANTI-JOBS, ANTI-HEALTHCARE STATE OF THE STATE: But the indications are not positive. Yesterday, the Governor presented his State of the State address. The Governor focused on jobs, but by suggesting tax breaks and credits that would only make the deficit bigger and force additional cuts. He conveyed that the budget will include painful cuts, but did not acknowledge the lost jobs and lost federal funds that would result.

The Governor took the opportunity to oppose the health reform proposals in Congress, completely contrary to the health plan he supported merely two years ago. Health Access believes his reasoning is based on faulty assumptions, and has very different numbers of the fiscal impact of Medicaid expansions in health reform on California. Beyond that, California--with its large percentage of uninsured people and low-wage workers--is likely to disproportionately benefit from the billions of federal dollars to help families and small business, and the state, afford coverage.

MEDI-CAL WAIVER STAKEHOLDER PROCESS STARTS: In this busy week, Thursday marked the first gathering of the stakeholder committee appointed to help guide the state Department of Health Care Services in its 1115 Medi-Cal federal waiver process. The renegotiation of our state's Medi-Cal waiver with the federal government will provide challenges and opportunities regarding the Medi-Cal coverage of 7 million California children, parents, seniors, and people with disabilities. More information is at the Department of Health Care Services website.

OTHER ITEMS TO READ: The Health Access Blog has additional updates about:
* Speaker Pelosi and the House of Representatives' take on negotiating a final health reform bill.
* Rush Limbaugh's accidental endorsement of health reform and Hawaii's employer mandate.
* Health Care for America Now's marathon-themed "Let's Finish Health Reform Right" TV ad.
* Thoughts about how health advocacy has changed and stayed the same, in the past ten years.

A REQUEST FOR THE NEW YEAR: From fighting budget cuts to fulfilling the promise of health reform, 2010 will be a very busy year. We’ll need your help, so resolve to join and contribute: Consider contributing to the Health Access Foundation!

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 9:17 PM


 
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The Damage Already Done by the 2009-10 Health Cuts...

 
As Governor Schwarzenegger is poised to release his proposal for next year’s state budget, the proposal is expected to include a slew of additional cuts to health and human services.

In anticipation of that announcement, Health Access California today released a new report detailing the six-month impact of nearly $2 billion in cuts already made to the state’s healthcare system in the current budget year. Entitled “The Damage Already Done: A Report on the Impacts of the 2009 Health Care Budget Cuts, Six Months In,” the report documents many of the effects these cuts have had on individual patients, families, health providers, and our economy.

The finding? Just six months into the 2009 budget, hundreds of thousands of Californians have been denied care or coverage for key services, and we see indications of the health system we all rely on is crumbling, with five clinics closing. These cuts are starting to ripple through the health system and our economy, as we lose health jobs and federal matching funds, and people don’t get the help they need to get through these tough times. We deserve a budget that supports, not undercuts, the health of our communities.

Since the Governor signed the budget in July 2009, slashing nearly $2 billion from the health care system, some cuts have been partially averted through various actions. The delay and uncertainty, however, have generated grave consequences. In many cases, cuts were made, resulting in very real human hardships and economic impacts for Californians.

Those impacts include:

* Almost three million low-income adults have lost ten important benefits, such as dental care, vision care, speech therapy, and psychological services – in the last six months, over 450,000 Californians in poverty have either had to forego or pay for dental care; another 240,000 have lost coverage for prescriptions eyeglasses;
* About 93,000 children waited uninsured for Healthy Families coverage until the cut was averted by non-government donations and higher cost sharing for 269,000 children on the program;
* Five community clinics in the state have already been forced to shut down and hundreds of workers have been laid off, an additional 10 clinics are on the brink of closure;
* Thousands of AIDS/HIV patients have been denied access to needed services and affordable medications they rely on;
* About 300,000 low-income women no longer have access to life-saving breast cancer screenings;
* Six domestic violence shelters were temporarily closed while the Legislature passed a bill to find ways to keep shelters open, and even afterwards, most have been forced to reduce services;

The ripple effects of these cuts will continue beyond these short six months, as we see more layoffs and closures of services, and the impacts of people not getting care or preventative services comes to back to haunt us.

“The Damage Already Done” will be distributed at multiple press conferences this week held to address the broader topic of health and human service cuts. Events are scheduled for San Francisco, San Bernardino, and Sacramento this Thursday morning as well as Bakersfield, San Diego, Los Angeles, Fresno, and Modesto on Friday, January 8th.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 10:10 AM


 
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The Anti-Jobs, Anti-Healthcare Speech...

Wednesday, January 06, 2010
 
Governor Schwarzenegger's State of the State speech today was anti-jobs and anti-healthcare.

The most effective way to create jobs is invest in Californians, and in their health and in services to help all of us get through a tough time. The investment's impact would be multiplied because of federal matching funds, further helping our economic recovery.

Yet the Governor proposed tax cuts and credits that would force even deeper reductions in health and human services, resulting in not just more lost jobs but also lost federal matching funds needed for our economy. And the Governor opposed a healthreform that would actually provide significantly more money for California families, our health system, and our economy.

THE FACTS ABOUT HEALTH REFORM: The pending health reforms in Congress would provide billions of dollars in new and necessary help to California families and small businesses struggling to afford their premiums. As a state with a high uninsured rate and large population of lower-wage workers, California will likely disproportionately benefit.

Health reform would also expand Medicaid for 1.5 million low-income uninsured Californians in 2013 or 2014, with the federal government picking up the full cost of that expansion for the first several years. Only eight years from now--two Governors from now--would there be any additional cost to the state of California, and those dollars will be matched at more than a 4:1 rate.

For California, health reform is a benefit, not a burden--and its a bargain to boot. Any additional costs are minimal and don't even take effect until eight or nine years from now, and would be offset by savings in other areas. And in return for such investments, our state would cover over 1.5 million more low-income Californians through Medi-Cal, with the federal government picking up over 80% of the tab--a better match than our current programs now.

The Governor's hypocrisy on health reform is stunning. Two years ago, the Governor was willing to raise the revenues needed to expand Medicaid to cover the same population--with the federal government contributing 50% of the cost. Now, the Governor opposes the same expansion when the federal government is offering well over 80% of the cost.

In the health reform bill, some states do better than California, some do worse. We support additional federal assistance for California, but the way to argue for more money is not to misrepresent the bill. And the best way to get more money from our health care system, and our economy, is to make the health care investments now that will bring in the federal money that is already sitting there with our name on it--and prevent the cuts that make us lose even more jobs and federal funds.

Health Access refutes the Governor's numbers about the fiscal impacts of health reform on California, which are based on faulty assumptions. Health Access recently published an analysis of the cost of implementing national health reform in California, which show the dramatically different estimates than what the Governor has stating. The cost to CA in the year 2019 ranges from a savings of almost $200 million under the House bill with moderate take-up rates to costs of about $800 million under the Senate bill with high take-up.

The Governor’s estimate of $3 billion assumes that outpatient Medi-Cal provider rates would be 80% of Medicare and that 100% of those eligible for Medi-Cal would enroll. While Health Access supports Medi-Cal provide rate insurances, federal health reform does not require Medi-Cal provider rates to be 80% of Medicare. Health Access supports maximizing enrollment in Medi-Cal but CBO assumes that only half of those eligible will enroll. The Governor also ignores the fact that for the first several years, the federal government will pick up 100% of the cost of newly eligible populations.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 10:47 AM


 
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State of Denial...

 
We'll tweet some intial thoughts about the Governor's State of the State today, at www.twitter.com/healthaccess, with more on this blog later. I'll be on KPCC later this afternoon with some reaction as well.

Until then, here's a political cartoon by Steve Greenberg.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 9:46 AM


 
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Catching up...

Monday, January 04, 2010
 
For those who stopped paying attention since the Senate passed its version of health reform on Christmas Eve, here's some links of articles to catch up:

On the process from here, the likelihood in that the House and Senate do not go into a formal conference--which would simply let the Republican opposition put up more procedural roadblocks. Instead, the House and Senate leadership would hold informal negotiations, and they would amend an existing bill to be a final compromise to then get the two final floor votes--the 218 votes in the House and the 60 votes in the Senate. Jon Cohn at The New Republic has more about this game of "ping pong," and David Dayen of FireDogLake (formerly of Calitics) has a detailed report and quotes from CA Representative and House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman.

Other articles of note, that were also spotlighted on our Twitter feed at www.twitter.com/healthaccess:

On health reform:
* I had a post on Calbuzz urging advocates to stay active in the health reform fight--that there is still lots to win and lots to lose, and we can't let our frustration with the procedural barriers get in the way of an analysis and strategy for winning health reform.. and a good health reform at that.
* Hanh Kim Quach at the California Budget Project describes the affordability issues in the health reform bills that need to be addressed.
* Former Sacramentan Jordan Rau and others at Kaiser Health News breaks down how the health reform proposal would affect you.
* Bobby Calvan at the Sacramento Bee writes about how health reform can help improve healthy living.
* The Kaiser Family Foundation has a side-by-side comparison of the House and Senate bills
* We posted some of the ways to fix the Senate health reform bill.

On the budget crisis:
* Kevin Yamamura of the Sacramento Bee looks at the lawsuits stemming from state budget decisions.
* Judy Lin at the Associated Press previews the awful state budget that looms, and the fights that are expected, given the procedural barriers.

And on both:
* Ezra Klein in the Washington Post suggests that California's budget woes are really political woes, and will soon be the nation's.
* Dick Flacks, UC-Santa Barbara sociology professor emeritus, has trenchant commentary about both health reform and California's budget woes.
* Jon Cohn at The New Republic spotlights a California story and suggests some medical providers--including ones in California--that may be worthy of support.

At this blog, we posted a year in review and thoughts about how things have changed, and didn't in the last decade.

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 6:00 AM


 
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2009 Year in Review: The Best & Worst of Times...

Wednesday, December 30, 2009
 
HEALTH ACCESS UPDATE
Wednesday, December 30, 2009

2009 YEAR IN REVIEW ON HEALTH ACCESS ISSUES
* The Hope of Federal Health Reform: Further Than We've Been Before
* California's Budget Blues: Medi-Cal Benefits Eliminated, Clinic Funding Zeroed
* Some Progress on State Consumer Protections...

* Much To Do for 2010: Join Us on
Facebook! Follow Us on Twitter!
*
Include Health Access Foundation in Your Year-End Giving!

For health care in California, the year 2009 was the best of times, and the worst of times.

The year began with the hope and excitement of new Obama Administration—especially, for health advocates, for a new president that made health reform a central part of his campaign. The good news from Washington, DC, started quickly, with the reauthorization of the SCHIP program that covers low-income children, which had been vetoed in previous years.

But the California budget crisis loomed, with nothing more symbolically showing the disconnect between the federal possibilities and state problems than Governor Schwarzenegger’s budget proposal to eliminate the state’s SCHIP coverage for a million low-income children in its entirety—and actually have that program, Healthy Families, close enrollment and be a week away from sending out hundreds of thousands of disenrollment notices. That roller coaster continued as the same Governor and Legislature that approved steep cuts in the program earlier in the year then passed a fix to temporarily prevent kids from being kicked off coverage—and then wait with concern about federal approval. Given everything, it’s gratifying that at year’s end, Healthy Families’ waiting list has been cleared and children are being covered and enrolled—even if some families are now paying more, and future funding in uncertain.

The work started in 2009 is not yet finished, but here are some other highlights:

HEALTH REFORM: It’s not done, but comprehensive health reform has never made it so far in the legislative process, going through five policy committees and full floor votes in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. It’s not finished, but the final product is likely to provide more security and stability for people with health coverage, and include be the biggest expansion of health coverage (both public and private) ever, to around 30 million Americans—and nearly 4 million Californians.

Health advocates, including the state's Health Care for America Now! campaign, succeeded in having our two Senators be champions on key issues, and getting all Democratic Representatives from our 53-member House delegation—including all 7 “Blue Dogs”—to vote for the House version of reform. With the exception of the anti-abortion Stupak amendment, the House reform is a very strong bill that meets consumer advocacy principles, from affordability and employer responsibility to providing a public health insurance option. Californians took the lead in the House, and were in leadership positions—Chairmen Miller, Waxman, and Stark—in each of the three House committees of jurisdiction. From Speaker Pelosi to the chairs of the key Asian, Black, and Progressive caucuses, the House did its job and is looking to make final bill better than what passed the Senate, which needs improvement in key areas.

The work for health advocates now is to help our sizable California House and Senate members improve the final bill while passing it in early 2010, and then begin the longer effort to implement and improve it here at the state level, through legislation and regulation.

CALIFORNIA'S BUDGET CRISIS: In both February and July, the Legislature passed and the Governor signed two budget packages to solve a combined $60 billion deficit—with many cuts, including to health care—for the year-and-a-half period of January 2009-June 2010.

The first February package of $42 billion included significant health and human service cuts that were "triggered"—including the full elimination of ten benefits for three million adults with Medi-Cal coverage, including dental, vision, podiatry, speech therapy—as well as some temporary taxes. The package also placed six propositions on the May ballot, including a spending cap (and two others to divert funding away from mental health services and health and social services for young children). The only one that passed was to prevent increases legislator salaries in deficit years.

A July package was needed to address over $20 billion more in deficits, and that led to even steeper health and human services cuts, and no new revenue. The reductions in health included cuts to coverage, hospitals, AIDS and mental health programs, and the zeroing out of state funding for community clinics.

For 2010, a new $20 billion hole is projected for the next year-and-a-half. Health Access plans to release a report next week, “The Damage Already Done,” to start to document the effect of the cuts in just six months. This will be part of sustained coalition efforts this year to detail the impact of these budget choices on California families, on our health system, and on our economy.

STATE CONSUMER PROTECTIONS: Regarding consumer protections, the year 2009 started with a significant Supreme Court ruling prohibiting the practice of “balance billing.” It ended on a position note with the Department of Managed Health Care about to announce newly-finalized, first-in-the-nation rules on insurers to require timely access to care. Mid-year, Health Access introduced a new website to help patients with their hospital bills.

As for state legislation that was considered, the budget did take up much of the attention and energy. Key legislation was passed and signed into law, attempting bring in more federal money for children’s coverage, hospital Medi-Cal reimbursement, and individual’s COBRA coverage.

Some consumer protection bills were vetoed, on issues like insurers rescinding coverage, and proposals to mandate key benefits, from maternity coverage to mental health parity. But a few good bills were passed and signed into law, including a prohibition on gender rating—which will stop insurers from charging men and women differently.

In 2010, there are existing bills that will start moving again, from SB810, Senator Leno’s single-payer legislation, to bills like Assemblyman Jones' bill on better labeling coverage and limiting "junk" insurance, AB786, and Assemblyman Lieu's bill on prohibiting patient overcharging in the emergency room, AB1503. New bills are expected that will seek to start the implementation of federal health reform. A related effort is the renegotiation of our state's Medi-Cal waiver with the federal government, which provides challenges and opportunities regarding the Medi-Cal coverage of 7 million California children, parents, seniors, and people with disabilties.

AN END-OF-YEAR INVITATION: There's no shortage of work. To prevent the worst in budget cuts, and organize for the best in terms of health reform, 2010 will be a very busy year. We’ll need your help, so resolve to join and contribute:
* Join Health Access on Facebook: (www.facebook.com/healthaccess)
* Follow Health Access on Twitter: (www.twitter.com/healthaccess)
* Consider Health Access Foundation in your end-of-year giving!

Thank you for your support and consideration, and have a healthy and happy new year!

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posted by Anthony Wright | Permalink | 2:39 AM


 
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Anthony Wright is the executive director,
with a background as a consumer advocate and community organizer on many issues, including health issues for the last ten years in California and New Jersey.