BATON ROUGE — Louisiana's Department of
Health will begin sending nursing home eviction notices Thursday to more
than 30,000 residents who could lose Medicaid under the budget passed
by the state House of Representatives.
"The
Louisiana Department of Health is beginning the process of notifying
all impacted enrollees that some people may lose their Medicaid
eligibility," Department of Health spokesman Bob Johannessen said. "The
goal of the department is to give notice to all affected people as soon
as possible in order that they begin developing their appropriate
plans."
Gov. John Bel Edwards' staff has planned a press
conference Wednesday for more details, a day before the notices are set
to be mailed to 37,000 Medicaid recipients in nursing homes or other
long-term care facilities.
"(The Department of
Health) told us they're sending out the letters May 10," said Mark
Berger, executive director of the Louisiana Nursing Home Association,
during testimony at the Senate Finance Committee meeting Monday.
The
issue was front and center in Senate Finance, which was hearing public
testimony on the budget sent to it by the House for most of the eight
hours the panel met.
"This sounds like mass chaos," said Sen. Regina Barrow, D-Baton Rouge, who called the letter notification "very troublesome."
"What
type of people are we in Louisiana if we put people out who built
Louisiana?" Sen. Greg Tarver, D-Shreveport, said of the potential
evictions. "This is horrible."
Next year's budget begins July 1, which is when the evictions could technically begin.
The
budget passed by the House and sent to the Senate contains deep cuts to
healthcare because of a shortfall of between $550 million and $648
million, depending on who's doing the calculations.
Next
year's shortfall was created because about $1.4 billion in temporary
taxes expire June 30. The bulk of the expiring taxes, about $880
million, comes from a one-cent sales tax.
Last week
one of the state's safety net hospitals, Lafayette General, sent
notices to 800 employees that the medical center will close and they
will lose their jobs under the budget being debated now. The other
safety net hospitals are expected to follow suit.
Edwards
wants lawmakers to mitigate the cuts with new permanent taxes in a
Special Session, but the Legislature declined to raise any new taxes in a
February Special Session.
"This is our cry for help," said Laurie Boswell, chief
executive of Holy Angels in Shreveport, which supports long-term
residential care for people with developmental and intellectual
disabilities. "There is no place for them to go."
"This make us look heartless," said Senate Finance Chair Eric LaFleur, D-Ville Platte.
Berger said the scheduled notification "will cause unimaginable grief and stress" to nursing home residents and their families.
He
said if the $230 million in Medicaid cuts remain intact, "the vast
majority of nursing homes will close." The would also eliminate more
than 25,000 jobs in the industry, Berger said.
Sen.
Bodi White, R-Baton Rouge, said he believes sending the notification to
nursing home residents and others in long-term residential care is
premature.
"I don't see how in good conscience they can do that to these older folks," White said.
Sen.
Sharon Hewitt, R-Slidell, said the Department of Health should be
focused on identifying fraud and saving money there "rather than kicking
grandma out of the nursing home."
The governor
wants to end the ongoing Regular Session early and convene another
Special Session to try again. Taxes can't be considered in this year's
Regular Session.
"This budget may have to come out as it is hoping we get more revenue," said Sen. Bret Allain, R-Franklin.
Edwards,
House Speaker Taylor Barras, R-New Iberia, and Senate President John
Alario, R-Westwego, have agreed on the concept of ending early and
convening a Special Session in mid-May, but they haven't made a concrete
commitment.
That has frustrated the governor.
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Nursing home eviction notices to be sent Thursday
The key word here is "could" - they could lose benefits. And the nursing homes are evicting on "could"?
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