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Person of interest identified in connection with deadly Brown University shooting as police gather evidence; Bondi Beach gunmen who killed 15 after targeting Jewish celebration were father and son, police say; Nebraska farmers get help from Washington for crop losses; Study: TX teens most affected by state abortion ban; Gender wage gap narrows in Greater Boston as racial gap widens.

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Debates over prosecutorial power, utility oversight, and personal autonomy are intensifying nationwide as states advance new policies on end-of-life care and teen reproductive access. Communities also confront violence after the Brown University shooting.

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Farmers face skyrocketing healthcare costs if Congress fails to act this month, residents of communities without mental health resources are getting trained themselves and a flood-devasted Texas theater group vows, 'the show must go on.'

Feds Reject Utah Waiver Request for Partial Medicaid Expansion

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Wednesday, July 31, 2019   

SALT LAKE CITY – The Trump administration has rejected Utah's waiver request for enhanced federal funding for partial expansion of the state's Medicaid program.

Advocates of full Medicaid expansion say it's an opportunity for state lawmakers to fulfill the wishes of voters, who passed a referendum last November expanding Medicaid to some 150,000 low-income Utahns. State lawmakers modified the referendum results to cover fewer people, but needed a federal waiver to implement their plan.

Stacy Stanford, a health-policy analyst with the Utah Health Policy Project, said lawmakers included a fallback plan in case their waiver was denied.

"With the fiscal adjustments that we put into this fallback plan, the full extension is more than solvent," she said. "They're paying three times more now. There's no need for that; there's no need to delay. They should move forward with pursuing the full expansion."

Under the Affordable Care Act, states can expand Medicaid with the federal government picking up most of the tab. But after Utah legislators failed to approve an expansion, a coalition of health-care advocates gathered signatures and put the expansion on last year's ballot.

However, lawmakers set aside the referendum and passed House Bill 96, a limited expansion that would have covered 90,000 people.

Despite lawmakers' protests that a full expansion would obligate the state for future costs, Stanford said the referendum contains a fiscally responsible way to pay for it.

"We passed a funding mechanism with the ballot initiative," she said. "There is a small increase in the non-food sales tax, and so there's more than enough through that sales tax to cover the projected enrollees."

Stanford said the next step for her group is a rally Thursday afternoon at the Capitol Rotunda in Salt Lake City.

"We were in the middle of the public comment period of the waiver when it was rejected," she said. "We're sitting on 6,000 public comments – and so, we're going to display these messages from Utahns that are calling for full expansion."

According to House Bill 96, legislators must now decide whether to accept the full expansion or call a special session to come up with a different plan.

Details of HB 96 are online at le.utah.gov.


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