Current:Home > Contact-usNorth Carolina’s governor visits rural areas to promote Medicaid expansion delayed by budget wait-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
North Carolina’s governor visits rural areas to promote Medicaid expansion delayed by budget wait
View Date:2025-01-11 08:28:16
YADKINVILLE, N.C. (AP) — With a Medicaid expansion kickoff likely delayed further in North Carolina as General Assembly budget negotiations drag on, Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper wrapped up a week of rural travel Thursday to attempt to build pressure upon Republicans to hustle on an agreement.
Cooper met with elected officials and physicians in Martin, Richmond and Yadkin counties to highlight local health care challenges, which include shuttered hospitals, rampant drug abuse and high-quality jobs.
All of these and other needs could be addressed with several billion dollars in recurring federal funds statewide annually and a one-time $1.8 billion bonus once expansion can be implemented, according to Cooper.
The governor signed a law in March that would provide Medicaid to potentially 600,000 low-income adults who make too much to qualify for traditional Medicaid. But that law said it can’t happen until a state budget law is enacted. House and Senate leaders are still negotiating a two-year spending plan seven weeks after the current fiscal year began.
“It’s past time for Republican leaders to do their jobs, pass a budget and start Medicaid expansion now to give our rural areas resources to prevent hospital closures and combat the opioid crisis,” Cooper said in a news release summarizing his visit to Yadkin County on Thursday.
With lawmakers in Raleigh this week to vote on non-budget legislation, House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate leader Phil Berger said the two chambers are getting closer to a budget agreement, but that it won’t be finalized and voted on until early or mid-September.
Kody Kinsley, the secretary of Cooper’s Department of Health and Human Services, announced last month that expansion would start Oct. 1 as long as his agency received formal authority by elected officials to move forward by Sept. 1. Otherwise, he said, it would have to wait until Dec. 1 or perhaps early 2024.
As the budget stalemate extended, Cooper has urged legislators unsuccessfully to decouple expansion authorization from the budget’s passage and approve it separately. After completing votes Wednesday, lawmakers may not hold more floor votes until early September.
Berger and Moore said they remain committed to getting expansion implemented. Berger mentioned this week that some budget negotiations center on how to spend the one-time bonus money the state would get from Washington for carrying out expansion.
While Moore said Thursday he was hopeful expansion could still start Oct. 1, Berger reiterated that missing the Sept. 1 deadline would appear to delay it.
Cooper’s travels took him Tuesday to Williamston, where he toured the grounds of Martin General Hospital, which closed two weeks ago, and later in the week to Yadkinville, where he saw the former Yadkin Valley Community Hospital, which closed in 2015.
Martin General closed its doors after its operators said it had generated financial losses of $30 million since 2016, including $13 million in 2022. Cooper was greeted in Williamston by hospital employees and other supporters who asked him for help keeping the hospital open. The closest emergency room is now 20 miles (32 kilometers) away.
North Carolina’s expansion law would result in higher reimbursement rates for these and other hospitals to keep them open and give an economic boost to the region, according to Cooper’s office.
Kinsley has said he expects 300,000 people who already receive family planning coverage through Medicaid will be automatically enrolled for full health care coverage once expansion begins.
And Cooper said it should also return coverage to about 9,000 people who each month are being taken off the rolls of traditional Medicaid now that eligibility reviews are required again by the federal government following the end of the COVID-19 pandemic.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Federal judge blocks Louisiana law that requires classrooms to display Ten Commandments
- Miss Kansas Alexis Smith Calls Out Her Alleged Abuser Onstage in Viral Video
- Rare black bear spotted in southern Illinois
- In Washington state, Inslee’s final months aimed at staving off repeal of landmark climate law
- What Just Happened to the Idea of Progress?
- 2 killed when small plane crashes after takeoff from Long Island airport
- Search called off for small airplane that went missing in fog and rain over southeast Alaska
- Tobey Maguire's Ex Jennifer Meyer Shares How Gwyneth Paltrow Helped With Her Breakup
- Quincy Jones' cause of death revealed: Reports
- 'Bachelorette' star's ex is telling all on TikTok: What happens when your ex is everywhere
Ranking
- Question of a lifetime: Families prepare to confront 9/11 masterminds
- A man suspected of shooting a Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper is arrested in Kentucky
- Tobey Maguire's Ex Jennifer Meyer Shares How Gwyneth Paltrow Helped With Her Breakup
- Lainey Wilson accidentally splits pants during tour
- Volunteer firefighter accused of setting brush fire on Long Island
- Safety regulators are investigating another low flight by a Southwest jet, this time in Florida
- Gigi Hadid Gives Her Honest Review of Blake Lively’s Movie It Ends With Us
- Kandi Burruss’ Must-Haves for Busy People Include These Hand Soap Sheets You Won’t Leave Home Without
Recommendation
-
Florida man’s US charges upgraded to killing his estranged wife in Spain
-
For Appalachian Artists, the Landscape Is Much More Than the Sum of Its Natural Resources
-
Where Ben Affleck Was While Jennifer Lopez Celebrated Her Birthday in the Hamptons
-
A look at Kamala Harris' work on foreign policy as vice president
-
The View's Sara Haines Walks Off After Whoopi Goldberg's NSFW Confession
-
Ivan Cornejo weathers heartbreak on new album 'Mirada': 'Everything is going to be fine'
-
MLB trade deadline: Should these bubble teams buy or sell?
-
'The Sopranos' star Drea de Matteo says teen son helps her edit OnlyFans content