Possible ruling soon on Illinois Medicaid
payment priority
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[June 07, 2017]
By Karen Pierog and Dave McKinney
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A U.S. judge could
determine as soon as Tuesday whether Illinois' obligation to make
payments to Medicaid providers under a federal consent decree takes
precedence over state-mandated payments for debt service, pensions and
other priorities.
Judge Joan Lefkow said she will rule on a motion by healthcare advocates
concerned that Illinois' ongoing budget impasse and its resulting
backlog of nearly $14.7 billion in unpaid bills is harming Medicaid
recipients' access to medical care.
David Chizewer, a lawyer representing the recipients, told Lefkow
earlier on Tuesday that a court determination giving precedence to
Medicaid payments could lead to a compromise with the state over the
next few days. Otherwise, the plaintiffs are asking the court to begin
contempt proceedings against the nation's fifth-largest state.
Illinois officials have warned that an increase in priority payments
could push the cash-strapped state to the point where court-mandated
spending could exceed available revenue.
Each month, priority payments of $1.85 billion are allocated to schools,
local governments, payroll, bonds and consent decrees, consuming 90
percent of Illinois' monthly revenue, according to a court document
filed by the state.
Both sides told Lefkow on Tuesday that they failed to reach a compromise
on speeding money to managed-care organizations participating in the
Medicaid program, which provides health services to 3 million poor and
disabled Illinois residents.
The plaintiffs are from cases dating back to 1992 and that resulted in
federal consent decrees requiring the state to continue to make Medicaid
payments despite its budget problems.
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Illinois is limping toward the June 30 end of a second-straight
fiscal year without a complete spending plan due to a political
stalemate between its Republican governor and Democrats who control
the legislature.
Lawmakers ended their spring session last week without a fiscal 2018
budget deal, triggering downgrades that pushed Illinois' credit
ratings from S&P and Moody's Investors Service to a step above junk.
Brent Stratton, an assistant Illinois attorney general, said the
issue is not that the state is unwilling to pay Medicaid providers,
but that it is unable to pay them promptly.
He told the judge that missing "high priority" payments on Illinois'
roughly $30 billion of general obligation bonds would result in a
default, while skipping payments to public school districts could
force some to shut down.
S&P has warned that Illinois' budget crisis could lead to bond
payments being squeezed out by other spending priorities.
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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