Medical debt totaling $30 million to be paid off in Connecticut
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[December 17, 2024]
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Connecticut has become the latest state to
begin notifying its eligible citizens that some or all of their medical
debt will soon be paid off, officials announced Monday.
Nearly 23,000 residents with debt totaling $30 million will
automatically be informed by mail beginning Dec. 23, state officials
said. Connecticut has been working with the national nonprofit charity
Undue Medical Debt toward a plan to eventually wipe out $1 billion in
debt for an estimated 250,000 qualified state residents.
“Medical debt is something you don't necessarily have any control over,”
said Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont, a Democrat. “Medical debt is when you
get hit hard by some sudden medical emergency and all of a sudden you
find out the anesthesiologist is not in-network or a high deductible.”
Undue Medical Debt began in 2014 and has to date erased roughly $15
billion by buying and forgiving the debt of people who meet certain
income levels. More recently, it began working with states and municipal
governments to help them erase their constituents' arrears, CEO and
President Allison Sesso said.
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New Jersey conducted two rounds of
debt cancelations this year with Undue Medical Debt totaling $220
million, while Illinois announced last month that nearly $72 million
in debt has so far been eliminated.
Undue Medical Debt also has partnerships with Arizona and Rhode
Island, as well as cities and counties. The participating state and
local governments leverage public funds, often from their American
Rescue Plan Act allocations, to pay off the debt, often for pennies
on the dollar. In Connecticut, officials set aside $6.5 million in
ARPA funds, and $100,000 was used to pay off this first $30 million.
Los Angeles County, which hopes to erase the medical debt for
150,000 residents, was expected to make a similar announcement
Monday about its initiative.
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