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Preventing Medicaid expansion passes key House vote

Published: 2013-02-13 16:00:00
Updated: 2013-02-13 18:42:23

The state House gave tentative approval Wednesday to legislation blocking the expansion of Medicaid and the development of an online health insurance exchange under the federal Affordable Care Act.

The House voted 75-39 for Senate Bill 4, and a final vote is expected Thursday. After earlier expressing reservations about the bill, Gov. Pat McCrory said Tuesday that the state Medicaid system is too troubled to expand, so he plans to sign the bill into law.

The Medicaid expansion would cover about 500,000 low-income adults in North Carolina, providing them the insurance coverage required when the Affordable Care Act is fully implemented next year. The federal government would pick up the full cost of the expansion for the first three years and the bulk of the costs for several years after that.

"When you get this free money, there's a hook," said Rep. Justin Burr, R-Stanly, predicting federal regulations would eventually cost North Carolina.

"This is one of the problems I have with 'Obamacare' or the Affordable Care Act," said Rep. Nelson Dollar, R-Wake. "There's just a lot of promises that down the road there are no answers for."

Rep. Jeff Collins, R-Franklin, compared the government's offer to pay for expanding Medicaid to "playing with Monopoly money," saying continued spending and borrowing will only aggravate the nation's debt crisis.

"It's coming from your children and grandchildren, if you have any, and it's coming from mine. That's where this money is coming from," Collins said.

Democrats chided Republicans, who last week approved a bill to slash jobless benefits as part of an overhaul of the state unemployment system, for again knocking a safety net out from underneath the poor.

"No one put you in office to say you don’t like something,“ said Marcus Brandon, D-Guilford, who accused Republicans of using demagoguery against the Affordable Care Act. “That’s not governing."

Rep. Deborah Ross, D-Wake, said "fear and loathing" was driving the bill.

"It's fear of something you can't control, and I understand that. But even more than that, it's loathing of the fact that we have the Affordable Care Act in the first place, and that is the saddest thing," Ross said.

Advocates said expanding Medicaid would bring a projected $15 billion into the state’s economy, creating an estimated 25,000 jobs in health care and related sectors by 2016.

"You haven’t created a job in the two years that you’ve been here," an irate Rep. Mickey Michaux, D-Durham, told the GOP majority. "You’ve got 23,000 jobs on the line right here."

Republicans easily defeated three attempts to amend the bill, including a proposal to accept the federal Medicaid expansion funding for the next three years.

"You can't unring that bell," Burr said, noting it would be difficult to withdraw coverage for people once they were on the Medicaid rolls.

Under the bill, North Carolina also would not participate in creating a health exchange, which allows people who don't have employer-sponsored health coverage shop around for their own insurance. Without state support, state residents would have to use a planned federal health exchange.

"This is their idea," Burr said of the federal government. "They should manage it instead of putting it on the state."

The only changes made to the original Senate bill ensure that the state can continue to draw down federal funding for the NC FAST system, a computer system that will channel people to Medicaid and other benefit programs. That amendment means the Senate must agree with the change before the bill is sent to McCrory.

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The Gov is correct in that we have to fix a wasteful system first before adding thousands to it. The auditor was said to have found hundreds of millions of waste and incorrect bookeeping.

What would you expect from a state legislature that would modify the state constitution specifically to discriminate against some group of people? Just like Mississippi...

Again- I agree totally that the NC Medicaid system needs some serious oversight and corrective actions. I do, however, believe this can be accomplished while expanding the program. For anyone who is totally against NC expanding the program (and accepting the federal dollars) - guess what?????? - our share goes to other states - AND WE WILL PAY FOR IT ANYWAY! This state is looking like a "fiscal fool."

Good move is all I can say! Get the job done.

Seems fair. Let's have 500,000 elderly poor suffer because highly paid politicians and political appointees can't do simple accounting and management. While we are at it many of those 500,000 will die because they can't get the care they need. I am sure that the poor sick and dying that NC politicans stuck to their principles even though it would not have cost them a dime.

What are the poor, unemployed going to do for health care? Low income or unemployed peopel cannot afford to pay for health insurance. If the federal government is paying for three years NC should not refuse the money. Maybe in three years people can get back to work and pay for coverage.

25,000 jobs lost. Way to go, Republicans. When you ran on "Jobs Jobs Jobs" in 2010, who knew you meant LESS jobs?

FairPlay - forgive me, but would you please cite a source for that "auditor was said to have found hundreds of millions of waste and incorrect bookeeping", so we can all feel good about believing it -

"The Medicaid expansion would cover about 500,000 low-income adults in North Carolina, providing them the insurance coverage required when the Affordable Care Act is fully implemented next year."

Well that is 500,000 less votes for the NC GOP next time around (some of them will be dead as a result of this so that will also be a factor).

It cannot get much more cynical. Here is a chance to get health care coverage for half a million uninsured North Carolinians, with very little money to pay, and the governor claims he is not ready for it. The money wrongly allocated in the Medicaid system is a low single digit number in percent. For sure that can be corrected until the Medicaid expansion would actually be implemented. Does McCroy realize how expensive health care administered through a hospital ER is?

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