Governors’ Budget Plans Touch State Employee Health Benefits, Medicaid
News outlets report on the health policy impact of budget blueprints advanced by the governors of California, Georgia and Maryland.
The Sacramento Bee:
Brown, Employee Unions Set To Tangle Over Health Insurance
After years of making concessions to Gov. Jerry Brown, California labor leaders had hoped that the fourth-and-final-term Democrat finally would be in a giving mood. But after the governor’s budget proposal two weeks ago, several unions are bracing for tough talks in the coming months about Brown’s determination to cut the state’s costs of insuring employees and retirees. A range of options are on the table, from cheaper insurance plans and smaller subsidies to extending how long new hires must work to qualify for retiree health benefits. (Ortiz, 1/25)
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
School Bus Drivers Lobby To Keep State Health Insurance
Gov. Nathan Deal’s proposed budget would eliminate health coverage for about 11,500 “non-certified” school employees who work an average of 30 hours or less a week. Blindsided leaders of many of these groups are mobilizing against the plan, lobbying lawmakers not to support it. (Stirgus, 1/25)
The Associated Perss:
Maryland Lawmakers To Be Briefed On Budget
State analysts are scheduled to go over the governor’s plan with lawmakers on committees that will be working on the budget this legislative session. Hogan, a Republican, submitted a balanced budget plan last week that addresses a shortfall of roughly $750 million. The budget includes cuts, such as reductions in rates paid to Medicaid healthcare providers and cost-of-living adjustments for state employees. (1/26)
The Washington Post:
Md. Gov. Hogan’s First Budget Reins In Rise In Education Spending, Imposes Agency Cuts
Hogan also wants to cancel a 2 percent pay raise for state employees, reduce state agency spending by 2 percent and roll back the rate Maryland pays doctors who participate in Medicaid, the state health insurance program for the poor. (Wagner and Hernandez, 1/23)