Lawmakers asking for $42 million in Medicaid savings

By Brad Iverson-Long
March 4th, 2010
Lawmakers on the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee
Lawmakers on the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee

Idaho lawmakers turned their sights Thursday to the second-largest spending item in the state budget, health and human services. That includes Medicaid, which the state spends close to $300 million on. Medicaid provides health care for low-income children and adults as well as people with disabilities and other special health needs. The federal government currently covers 79 percent of Medicaid spending. The Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee (JFAC) is asking Gov. Butch Otter and the Department of Health and Welfare (DHW) to find $42.3 million in savings in Medicaid, due to rising costs and dwindling state revenues.

“We are trying our best to make sure the people who need these services are getting these services,” said Sen. Joyce Broadsword, R-Sagle, who helped put together the Medicaid budget. Overall state spending for Medicaid would see a $10 million, 3.5 percent reduction in the next budget approved by JFAC Thursday.

The $42.3 million in savings would be split between one-time savings needed due to the larger 7.5 percent cut in Medicaid spending in the current budget and permanent reductions. Lawmakers would give the governor and DHW the authority to find those savings, with a some restrictions and suggestions. They would need to start looking for savings by reducing prices for medical services. That would include negotiating lower payments to doctors and health care providers for some services.  After that, benefits for Medicaid members could be trimmed. Eliminating entire services, including developmental disabilities, mental health, or physical therapy, would be a last resort. Eligibility requirements for Medicaid can’t be changed due to federal rules. State lawmakers would review all the adjustments made by the governor and DHW next year.

Rep. Fred Wood, R-Burley, said one of the largest savings would be in switching to a more limited prescription drug plan. He said the state currently has few limits on medications for Medicaid and that the state could behave like some private providers and put in limits and bargain with pharmaceutical companies for lower prices. He said he has faith that DHW director Richard Armstrong can find those savings, and is willing to give him and the governor flexibility to find savings. “We have to look at the stark economic reality that the state finds itself in,” he said. “As much as we don’t like it … we have to be creative in trying to figure out how we can maintain as many services as we can.”

Sen. Nicole LeFavour, D-Boise, voted against the Medicaid budget and said she’s not sure where the governor and DHW will make reductions. “We’re reducing the budget beyond where we know how to make it work,” she said. “We’re just going to put it out there and hope the governor and the Department (of Health and Welfare) can figure it out.” She said reductions to Medicaid would could harm the most vulnerable people in Idaho.  “We’re talking about people’s lives and their health.”

Broadsword responded that lawmakers should give DHW more authority. “We can’t micromanage the department and tell them each and every thing they should and shouldn’t do,” she said, adding that the budget approved by JFAC gives them some guidance. “We’re saying, don’t rush out there and eliminate programs. Do a thoughtful approach.”

Wood said he and other lawmakers don’t enjoy making budget cuts, but they are necessary this year. “This is very difficult on all of parts to do this, but the fact of the matter is that we have to do it,” he said.

5 Responses to “Lawmakers asking for $42 million in Medicaid savings”

  1. [...] am being pushed absolutely to the edge of a very, very serious cliff,” Armstrong said. Lawmakers on the Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee (JFAC) gave DHW and the governor the authori…. “The notion that we can solve these problems, I think, is not real. There are so many barriers [...]

  2. [...] micromanage the department at times like this,” he said. Wood also helped set a budget that would ask DHW to find $42 million in Medicaid savings. The cystic fibrosis program spending would come out of a different agency budget, though lawmakers [...]

  3. [...] DHW budgets haven’t changed since legislative budget writers set them earlier this session.  Read IdahoReporter.com’s stories on those budgets here, here, and here.  The budgets now head to the [...]

  4. [...] One item of business that Idaho lawmakers still need to take up is a proposal that would limit Medicaid costs paid by the state and federal government.  The Idaho House approved a plan that would reduce reimbursements to health care providers that treat people on Medicaid and try to reduce prescription drug costs.  The proposal could save the state more than $3.4 million in tax dollars.  It is part of lawmakers’ request that the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare (DHW) find at least $42 million in Medicaid savings. [...]

  5. [...] providing the rest. State lawmakers approved reducing the Medicaid budget earlier this year, and gave DHW the authority to find some of the savings.  Idaho will spend $298 million on Medicaid in the next fiscal year, which starts on July [...]