Weekly Opinion Editorial
SQ#802 IS BAD
FOR OKLAHOMA!
by Steve Fair
State Question #802 will be on the June 30th
primary ballot. It is an initiative
petition supported by those who want to expand Medicaid program for low income
Oklahomans whose income does not exceed 133% of the federal poverty level. If passed, it would become a part of the
state Constitution.
Oklahomans Decide
Healthcare is the group supporting SQ #802.
They contend that expansion of Medicaid will make Oklahoma families
heathier and the economy stronger. The
Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs(OCPA) opposes SQ #802, partly because
federal bureaucrats set the federal poverty level. Governor Kevin Stitt opposes SQ #802 saying, “If SQ#802 passes, our state agencies will
experience deep cuts because the ballot measure offers no mechanism to pay for
it.” Four observations:
First, health care
funding should not become part of the state Constitution. That is the primary fishhook in SQ #802. There
are those who support expansion of Medicaid who oppose having it into the state
Constitution. Having it in the
Constitution forces the legislature to fund it, no matter what. Bad idea.
Second, Oklahoma
taxpayers can’t afford Medicaid expansion.
With the downturn in the oil and gas industry, gross revenue tax revenue
is down. Unemployment is up in the
Sooner state and couple that with the pandemic, it is certain that other
sources of revenue will be down as well.
Oklahomans Decide is wrong- putting more tax burden on hurting,
struggling people doesn’t strength the economy, it cripples it.
Third, the federal
matching funds are not guaranteed to be there forever. OCPA says, "Oklahoma would be obligated to provide medical
assistance to adults at or below 138% of the federal poverty level regardless
of whether Congress continues to pay a large portion of the costs. Congress would
dictate how much money actually leaves Oklahoma’s treasury.” Congress currently appropriates the federal
matching funds for Medicaid, but they can quit at any time. With SQ #802 in the Oklahoma state
Constitution, Oklahoma taxpayers will have to pick up the slack if Congress
quit funding the expansion
Fourth, it is still
unclear how many are eligible and will sign up if Medicaid is expanded. State health officials estimate that 220,000
will be eligible and 180,000 would sign up.
In several states, the actual numbers who signed up for Medicaid
expansion was much higher than the estimates and created funding issues.
According to the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), healthcare spending in the US is
estimated to grow by 5.4% annually for the next eight to ten years. Projections indicate health care spending
will cost an estimated $6.2 trillion by 2028.
Much of that is due to the aging population in the US. Healthcare will
continue to be a topic of discussion for the foreseeable future and Medicaid
expansion may be necessary in Oklahoma, but SQ #802 is not the way to do it.
Vote no on SQ #802 for
the following reasons: (1) Healthcare funding should not be a part of the state
Constitution, (2) It is an unfunded mandate.
It doesn’t increase taxes to pay for the expansion- it just mandates it,
(3) Oklahoma taxpayers simply can’t afford it.
3 Primary Reasons to vote yes.
ReplyDeleteNumber one, an additional 200,000 Oklahomans with some sort of insurance coverage, reduces the cost shift to Oklahoma employers.
Number two, $1 billion in federal money coming to Oklahoma that now goes to other states.
Number three, helps ensure access to care in rural Oklahoma.
Not worth it.
ReplyDeleteVery telling, those supporting this never say where the additional funds will come from. We already know there will be cuts to state programs in the next budget. VOTE NO on 802
ReplyDeleteThis is the classic put the bate out and see if we are foolish enough to bite. Putting this into the Oklahoma Constitution should be enough proof to any thinking person that this should be a NO vote. The Congress can stop funding at ANY time and WE will have to fund the whole thing! We can't afford it now and the cost will only grow in the future. VOTE NO!!
ReplyDeleteThe Medicaid Expansion population is already eligible for two other programs that the state receives matching funds for.
ReplyDeleteThese two programs are the federal marketplace (100% federal funding) and Insure Oklahoma (75% federal funding).
The only difference is that these two programs require a small contribution from the participants rather than being a handout program like SQ 802 would provide.
These existing programs will not also require cuts to education and elder care in order to stay viable like Medicaid Expansion will require.
Vote No on SQ802!
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