Talks over boosting
Illinois Medicaid payments fail
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[June 27, 2017]
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A U.S. judge should
order Illinois to pay Medicaid providers about $1 billion a month to
ensure medical care continues for the three million recipients of the
health program after talks with the state reached an impasse, according
to a court filing on Monday.
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The move would cause a huge problem for the cash-strapped state,
which has accumulated a $15 billion bill backlog due to a budget
stalemate between its Republican governor and Democrats who control
the legislature. It could force Illinois to stop making full
payments on other state-mandated or court-ordered spending such as
pensions and payroll.
The filing in U.S. District Court by attorneys representing Medicaid
recipients asked Judge Joan Lefkow to order the state to pay $500
million a month for four months to start reducing a $3.1 billion
pile of unpaid bills owed to managed care organizations that turn
pay doctors and others.
As long as Illinois remains without an enacted budget, the proposed
order calls for the state to spend an additional $586 million a
month to cover Medicaid-related bills incurred after June 30, 2017.
The proposed order noted that federal reimbursements for Medicaid
would reduce Illinois' outlay to $543 million a month.
The two sides are scheduled to appear on Wednesday before Lefkow,
who previously ruled Illinois' minimal payments to managed care
organizations did not comply with federal consent decrees that
resulted from two cases filed against the state in 1992. The judge
had ordered negotiations aimed at getting Illinois to "substantial"
compliance with the decrees, noting the state has managed to make
its monthly bond and pension payments on time and in full.
Monthly payments related to the Medicaid and other consent decrees
have totaled only about $160 million.
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In the wake of Lefkow's order, Illinois general obligation bond
prices plummeted and yields soared in U.S. municipal market trading,
although the bonds subsequently clawed back some losses. The state
comptroller last week pledged to not delay or diminish debt service
payments.
There was no immediate reaction to the court filing from the
Illinois Attorney General's office.
Rauner ordered lawmakers back into a special session, which began
June 21 and is scheduled to end on Friday, to pass a budget before
fiscal 2018 begins on Saturday.
Entering a third-straight fiscal year without a spending plan could
sink Illinois' credit ratings to "junk," a first for any U.S. state.
(Reporting By Karen Pierog)
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