Montana
Related: About this forumMontana Senate revives Medicaid expansion bill, sends it to finance committee
The Montana Legislature is expected to continue the state's Medicaid expansion program, but a bill to do so faced a detour in its path to approval Friday.
House Bill 658 lifts the June expiration date on the program that extends Medicaid coverage to 96,000 low-income Montanans and adds work requirements. It cleared the House on a 61-37 vote last month, but on Friday was tabled in a Senate committee in an effort led by one of its co-sponsors before being put back on track by the full Senate.
The bill is carried by Rep. Ed Buttrey, a Republican from Great Falls who brought the legislation that originally expanded Medicaid in Montana in 2015. Expansion covers those earning up to 138% of the federal poverty level. That's $17,236 for an individual and $29,435 for a family of three.
House Bill 658 is the remaining vehicle to continue expansion. Democrats strongly opposed the work requirements originally proposed in the bill, but supported it after their own party's bill was defeated and Buttrey's legislation was heavy amended. The changes drastically reduced the number of people expected to lose coverage under the work provision, from 59,000 to an estimated 4,000.
Read more: https://billingsgazette.com/news/state-and-regional/govt-and-politics/montana-senate-revives-medicaid-expansion-bill-sends-it-to-finance/article_72dda3cc-95e6-5b65-96c1-1e4b78da5b01.html
Ohiogal
(35,068 posts)on Medicaid who can't find work .... or even the ones who are working in a low-paying dead-end job but still qualify for Medicaid ....
How about offering free job training or community college instead of making people work at dead end jobs to meet work requirements?
Republicans like to throw around that phrase "free people from dependency" -- well, what more frees one up from dependency than a good paying job with benefits?
I don't get what "work requirements" accomplishes other than creating another layer of beauracracy for poor people to navigate.
2naSalit
(93,202 posts)the past couple years, closed a bunch of public service offices, have to go two counties over to find a jobservice office or any other state services. HRDC has a satellite office in the next county over... at least some of us will still have the coverage. I was on Medicaid while I worked at GS5 level government jobs. Pay isn't high in this state unless you have a higher level job or own your own business.