"Transformative" Medicaid Funding Clears RI House Finance Committee
/By Gina Macris
The House Finance Committee has recommended Rhode Island fully fund nearly $160 million in Medicaid rate hikes for a broad range of community social and human services – nearly tripling spending proposed by Governor Dan McKee.
The measure, believed to be the largest single-year Medicaid hike in Rhode Island, still needs formal approval by the full House and Senate as part of the next state budget.
But the fact that it cleared the powerful House Finance Committee May 31 signals that General Assembly leadership is prepared to turn aside McKee’s proposal to phase in the rate hikes over three years and slow down the pace of future rate reviews. McKee’s plan was not well received by the Senate Finance Committee in a hearing May 2.
The recommended reimbursement hikes, some totaling more than 50 percent, would apply to privately-run organizations that provide a wide swath of services, from early intervention for babies with disabilities, to treatment for substance use disorder for adults, to supports for the aging. Other services include treatment for autism and behavioral problems, juvenile justice, vocational, and rehabilitation services.
The rate hikes were recommended by the state’s Office of the Health Insurance Commissioner (OHIC), following legislation passed in 2022 that required the office to conduct a review of federal-state Medicaid reimbursement rates every other year.
The goal is to enable service providers in Rhode Island to pay their workers wages competitive to those in neighboring Massachusetts and other New England states.
McKee had put a total of $56 million in federal-state Medicaid funding into his budget proposal. But the House Finance Committee added $103.2 million, for a total of $159.2 million. The committee raised the state’s share from $22.1 million to $62.4 million.
The proposed Medicaid spending could serve as a sign of good faith in talks expected between the state and the Justice Department to resolve alleged civil rights violations of more than 500 children and adolescents, which the federal government said were “warehoused” at the state’s only pediatric psychiatric hospital between 2017 and 2022 for lack of community options.
The state Department of Children, Youth and Families has indicated a willingness to cooperate with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, which announced May 13 the results of a joint two-year investigation with Office of Civil Rights in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
U.S. Attorney Zachary Cunha said the state had violated the Integration Mandate of the federal Americans With Disabilities Act by failing to provide services to children with behavioral health needs in the most integrated setting appropriate.
The House Finance Committee’s move to fully fund the OIHC recommended Medicaid payments won quick praise from a major organization representing service agencies.
The Community Provider Network of Rhode Island, which represents three dozen service providers for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, said through a spokesperson that the committee’s proposal represents the largest single-year investment in Medicaid services in Rhode Island.
“This investment will have a transformative impact on people with disabilities, seniors, children, families and more,” the spokesman said, in urging the House and Senate to pass the measure as proposed.
Added Grace Duffy, CPNRI Policy Coordinator, “Fully funding rate reform is a significant step in making sure people with disabilities receive the support they need.”
She continued,”This investment is a pledge to build a state where everyone, regardless of ability, has the opportunity to thrive.”
The name of the Department of Children, Youth and Families was misstated in the original version of this article and has been corrected.