Senator Reverend Warnock, Lawmakers Push Biden Administration and Congressional Leadership to Include Medicaid Fix in Economic Package

Senator Warnock leads 29 lawmakers in push to Biden Administration and Congressional Leaders to improve health outcomes by including the Medicaid Saves Lives Act in forthcoming economic package
Senator Warnock recently introduced the Medicaid Saves Lives Act in the Senate, Congresswoman Bourdeaux introduced a companion bill in the U.S. House
New legislation would allow nearly 500,000 uninsured Georgians, 4.4 million Americans access to affordable health care across the country
Lawmakers: “We write to respectfully request that the provision creating the federally administered Medicaid-like program from the Medicaid Saves Lives Act, S. 2315 and H.R. 4595, be included in the upcoming reconciliation package.”
Lawmakers: “We do not believe that access to health coverage should be dependent on where you live and people should not be penalized for living in states that continue to deny them Medicaid. Now is the time for action. We must fulfill the promise we made 11 years ago when we passed the ACA– that all Americans in all 50 states who need it will be able to access Medicaid coverage.”
Letter follows a series of floor speeches by Senator Warnock highlighting Georgians in the coverage gap, advocating for legislation inclusion in economic package
READ THE FULL LETTER 

Washington, D.C. – Today U.S. Senator Reverend Warnock (D-GA) led a bicameral group of lawmakers in urging the Biden Administration and Congressional leadership to include provisions in the Medicaid Saves Lives Act in the forthcoming economic recovery package. In respective letters to the Biden Administration and Congressional Leadership, lawmakers pushed leaders to include the Medicaid-like legislation in order to cover nearly 4.4 million Americans across the 12 non-expansion states where people are denied access to affordable health insurance. Senator Warnock, alongside U.S. Senators Baldwin (D-WI) and Ossoff (D-GA), and U.S. Representative Bourdeaux (GA-07) introduced the Medicaid Saves Lives Act to provide low-income Americans across the country, many whom are people of color and working individuals, with access to the same full benefits of Medicaid providing free and affordable health coverage.

The letter follows persistent calls to President Biden and Senate Leadership to include a Medicaid provision in any forthcoming recovery package to close the coverage gap in Georgia, Wisconsin and the other non-expansion states. Senator Warnock has also highlighted the impact that broader access to affordable health coverage would have for people in Georgia through a series of floor speeches sharing the stories of Georgians living within the coverage gap—further underlining the need for passage of the Medicaid Saves Lives Act.

“While the American Rescue Plan Act offered the 12 states that did not expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) robust financial incentives to finally expand their state Medicaid programs, it has become increasingly clear that many of these states will not expand due to partisan obstruction,” said the Lawmakers. “This means 2.2 million Americans in the coverage gap and a total of 4.4 million Americans with low incomes will continue to be denied health coverage as communities across the nation are still working hard to turn the corner on a once-in-a-century pandemic.”

The bicameral letter was signed by U.S. Senators: Tammy Baldwin, Dianne Feinstein Mazie Hirono, Jon Ossoff, and Elizabeth Warren and U.S. Representatives: Alma Adams, Colin Allred, Sanford Bishop, Carolyn Bourdeaux, G.K. Butterfield, Andre Carson, Kathy Castor, Joaquin Castro, Jim Cooper, Val Demings, Ted Deutch, Lois Frankel, Al Lawson, Shelia Jackson Lee, Hank Johnson, Kathy Manning, Lucy McBath, David Price, Deborah Ross, Debbie Schultz, David Scott, Terri Sewell, Darren Soto, and Nikema Williams.

READ THE FULL LETTER HERE.

Read the full letter text below:

Dear,

Today, we write to respectfully request that the provision creating the federally administered Medicaid-like program from the Medicaid Saves Lives Act, S. 2315 and H.R. 4595, be included in the upcoming reconciliation package. We are thankful that providing support to Americans in non-expansion states and closing the coverage gap is a top priority and we believe this program will provide more Americans with quality, affordable health care coverage. Additionally, this is the most effective policy to reduce racial and ethnic health disparities and would be a major step towards decreasing the high rates of uninsured Americans in non-expansion states.

While the American Rescue Plan Act offered the 12 states that did not expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) robust financial incentives to finally expand their state Medicaid programs, it has become increasingly clear that many of these states will not expand due to partisan obstruction. This means 2.2 million Americans in the coverage gap and a total of 4.4 million Americans with low incomes will continue to be denied health coverage as communities across the nation are still working hard to turn the corner on a once-in-a-century pandemic.

Additionally, across these states, the Americans who are most harmed by this inaction from state leaders are people of color: 60 percent of people in the coverage gap are Black, Hispanic, Asian, or Pacific Islander.  Many of the people in the coverage gap live in the South where state leaders continue to deny them provide basic health coverage, coverage that is available to 48 other states and DC.

The Medicaid Saves Lives Act is legislation that would create a program almost identical to Medicaid that is administered by the federal government, and would allow Americans with low incomes living in states that have not expanded Medicaid a path to health coverage. The benefits of Medicaid are clear and unequivocal – Medicaid improves health outcomes, prevents premature deaths, reduces uncompensated care costs, prevents hospital closures, improves economic mobility, and provides people security of ongoing stable coverage. States that have expanded Medicaid have proven that Medicaid literally saves lives.

Unlike other paths to close the coverage gap, a federally administered Medicaid-like program would provide more robust benefits with lower out-of-pocket cost expectations not found in other plans. Therefore we urge you to include provisions closing the coverage gap that result in the creation of a Medicaid-like program administered by the federal government. As a result of the ACA, Medicaid must cover a wide range of services such as non-emergency medical transportation, prescription drug benefits, maternity and newborn care, hospital services, and preventative care specifically designed to support the needs of low-income individuals and prevent high out of pocket costs. This federal program must provide the same coverage, to ensure that individuals can access robust, comprehensive, and affordable coverage.

We do not believe that access to health coverage should be dependent on where you live and people should not be penalized for living in states that continue to deny them Medicaid. Now is the time for action. We must fulfill the promise we made 11 years ago when we passed the ACA – that all Americans in all 50 states who need it will be able to access Medicaid coverage. We cannot continue to allow Americans with low incomes to suffer any longer just because they live in a state that has refused to expand Medicaid for political reasons at the cost of residents’ health and taxpayer dollars.

Thank you for your attention to this matter.

Sincerely,

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