{"id":45472,"date":"2019-03-26T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-27T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/capitol-live-members-from-both-parties-form-innovation-caucus\/"},"modified":"2019-03-27T15:09:59","modified_gmt":"2019-03-27T23:09:59","slug":"capitol-live-members-from-both-parties-form-innovation-caucus","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/capitol-live-members-from-both-parties-form-innovation-caucus\/","title":{"rendered":"Capitol Live: Dunleavy’s proposed Medicaid cuts would be made in two phases"},"content":{"rendered":"
3 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n Steward says the entire process of eliminating preventative dental care would take about six months after it goes through.<\/p>\n “Because we are eliminating one of those services that is optional service, the regulation and the state plan change could go through at the same time… it could be a compressed timeline,” Steward says.<\/p>\n Seven hospitals would be subject to a 5 percent rate reduction, she says.<\/p>\n Phase one reductions would total $186 million. <\/p>\n — Mollie Barnes<\/em><\/p>\n 2:40 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n “If we send people out of state we’re not going to have as many providers here… but there may be a bigger cost savings. I just want to put everything on the table,” Wilson says regarding looking at possibilities of sending people to the Lower 48 for medical care.<\/p>\n Steward says Alaska will join 18 other states in which emergency dental care is provided. But preventative will not care.<\/p>\n Rep. Dan Ortiz says it’s safe to say there will be an increase in emergency dental care costs based on the fact preventative care will no longer be provided.<\/p>\n “Teasing out what that change would be would be difficult,” Steward says. Josephson wants to know what other states we are joining.<\/p>\n “Are the states we think of typically poor like Mississippi? Are they affluent states?”<\/p>\n Steward says there are eight states that do not even provide emergency dental care, either. So she can provide the list of 26 states.<\/p>\n “This is a retreat of some sort, isn’t it?” Josephson says.<\/p>\n “It is a policy decision,” Efird says. “I’m sure you’ve heard the governor’s tenant. Our direction was to meet our core services… we are trying to protect the core services for low income Alaskans for their health care coverage. Yes, cutting the adult preventative dental could increase costs in other areas… however it is an optional service under our Medicaid program and it is a more recent service that has been covered in Medicaid.”<\/p>\n Steward says dental is not required under the Affordable Care Act, so it is truly optional.<\/p>\n — Mollie Barnes<\/em><\/p>\n 2:20 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n “We attempted to apply any other rate adjustment across other providers (besides primary care and critical access hospitals) as fairly as possible,” Steward says.<\/p>\n She says there has been an increase in payments to hospitals from 2015 to 2019, some of which is due to the expansion of eligibility of Medicaid.<\/p>\n She says direct comparisons really can’t be done to hospitals in the Lower 48 due to the system that Alaska uses for payments.<\/p>\n “Across the board in their state Medicaid program they pay all providers, services below Medicaid rates,” Steward says of Washington state hospitals.<\/p>\n Rep. Tammie Wilson, R-North Pole, says that Alaska’s system incentivizes people to go out of state to have procedures done.<\/p>\n “Our insurance tries to push you out, and Medicaid they try to keep you in,” Wilson says.<\/p>\n Steward says she has not looked at whether it would be cheaper to send patients out of state for certain services. But there are certain things that aren’t available in Alaska, so they do send patients out of state for those types of services.<\/p>\n Wilson says she thinks something needs to be done to look at whether or not it’s cheaper to send certain patients out of state for certain services.<\/p>\n — Mollie Barnes<\/em><\/p>\n 1:55 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n There’s a big slide in their presentation that says “The Department is not recommending any adjustments to Medicaid program eligibility.”<\/p>\n That’s been a big question when people hear about cuts to the Medicaid program.<\/p>\n Steward says this applies to phase one as well as phase two.<\/p>\n “We wanted to make sure no matter what we do we protect primary care, small hospitals, access to services and to make sure we align payment with other public payers,” Steward says, other public payers being the Medicare program.<\/p>\n Rep. Ortiz is asking for clarification about protecting small hospitals because he’s heard from hospitals in his district that they might be in jeopardy if Dunleavy’s budget is enacted.<\/p>\n Steward says critical access hospitals are ones they will be protecting.<\/p>\n “Critical access is a specific designation for hospitals,” Steward says. “It is typically due to the size. By size I mean the number of in patient beds… the threshold is 25 beds. So a critical access hospital has 25 or fewer beds available for service.”<\/p>\n — Mollie Barnes<\/em><\/p>\n 1:45 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n The House Finance committee is meeting today and receiving an overview of Medicaid services from the Administrative Services Director Sana Efird and Deputy Commissioner for the Department of Health and Social Services Donna Steward.<\/p>\n They’re discussing a proposed 32 percent reduction to the Medicaid budget.<\/p>\n The proposed budget would eliminate adult dental medicaid benefits (about $8.2 million of state funds and $18.7 million federal funds), but Steward says emergency dental procedures would still be covered.<\/p>\n “A budget is our plan, it’s our best estimate…but claims might not come in to the exact number that we’ve aligned,” Efird says.<\/p>\n To implement the Medicaid program adjustments, Steward says they will be implementing the changes over two phases. Phase one is attainable in fiscal year 2020, Steward says. It involves familiar strategies plus new approaches, she says.<\/p>\n — Mollie Barnes<\/em><\/p>\n 12:20 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n Coghill says there’s 80 different sections of the ethics code that they need to deal with.<\/p>\n He’s encouraging legislators to vote for the bill, imperfect as it is.<\/p>\n The bill passes 15-4, with Kiehl, Kawasaki, Olson and Wielechowski voting nay.<\/p>\n — Mollie Barnes<\/em><\/p>\n 12:10 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n Kiehl says he thinks a reset on HB 44 is too far. Kawasaki says that HB 44 never even mentions official action, which is something the lawmakers are really “spun up” about.<\/p>\n He says they can easily cure the issues by simply redefining what official actions mean.<\/p>\n “We can do that simply without undermining the people’s intent to put (a legislator’s accountability initiative) on the ballot,” Kawasaki says. “This goes a step too far.”<\/p>\n They’re taking a brief at ease now.<\/p>\n — Mollie Barnes<\/em><\/p>\n 12:05 p.m.<\/strong><\/p>\n “It really comes to your constitutional duty to be able to speak freely as a member of Alaska’s Senate or House,” Coghill says. “When do you throttle back the 32,000 people and their voice? And when is it a real conflict with you? I don’t know that we’ve got the perfect balance… It’s meant to be accountability structures… that if you’re grandizing yourself at the state expense with your authority, you should be held accountable.”<\/p>\n He says last year the definition was too broad and it put a cloud over legislators’ heads. This new bill up for vote would “reset” that.<\/p>\n This bill goes back to some of the original language that the state had before HB 44.<\/p>\n Majority Leader Mia Costello says the reason this bill is before the senate today because senators realized they need to return some common sense to unintended consequences of HB 44.<\/p>\n She says she’s unable to have conversations about aviation in her office because he husband works for the industry.<\/p>\n “My representing the district that has the Ted Stevens International Airport… means that I need to be able to talk about aviation,” Costello says. She says people knew her husband worked for the aviation industry when they voted for her, so it’s not a conflict of interest.<\/p>\n