From WRAL.com 12.13.11
State lawmakers overseeing Health and Human Services met all day Tuesday in Raleigh. But the $139 million Medicaid cash shortfall didn’t even make their agenda.
State Health and Human Services Secretary Lanier Cansler says the program, which serves more than a million people in North Carolina, will not be able to achieve more than $350 million in cuts mandated by the state budget under its current operations.
Cansler says the budget offers him only one option to accomplish the required savings: deep cuts to optional services and to the reimbursement rates the state pays Medicaid providers.
Republican leaders say those cuts won’t happen.
Even if the state were to try to make those cuts, budget co-chairman Rep. Nelson Dollar (R-Wake) said Tuesday, the federal government would not approve them. “It’s a practical impossibility,” he said. “I think that maybe some people who’ve been worried about that should not be.”
When committee Democrats asked why the shortfall wasn’t on the agenda, Dollar said it’s up to Governor Bev Perdue and Secretary Cansler to find the money to cover the problem.
“We’ve extended a hand to the governor’s office to work with her, and have gotten a lot of politics in return,” Dollar said.
Advocates say they’re less interested in the politics of the battle than its potential casualties: Medicaid enrollees worried about losing vital services.
For more on this story (including video footage), click HERE.

