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Trump ousts Kristi Noem from DHS; Rural CA community colleges deploy AI to keep students on track; Algae-powered concrete earns University of Miami project top prize; As Ukraine war lingers, ND sponsors press for speedy work approvals.

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Kristi Noem is fired from her position as Homeland Security Secretary, but moves to a new and unclear role. The Senate Majority Leader blames Democrats for the ongoing DHS shutdown and the House fails to advance a war powers resolution for Iran.

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Advocates for those with disabilities in Idaho and nationwide are alarmed by proposed Medicaid cuts, programs that provide virtual crisis care are making inroads in rural South Dakota and Wyoming, and the mighty bison returns to Texas.

AZ Kids Could Lose Insurance Coverage When Health Emergency Ends

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Monday, February 28, 2022   

With the end of the pandemic-driven public-health emergency looming, a new report reveals that millions of children in Arizona and elsewhere are at risk of losing insurance coverage.

About half of Arizona's children are insured through Medicaid or CHIP, the Children's Health Insurance Program. They've been able to maintain stability in their coverage thanks to the continuous-coverage requirement from the Families First Coronavirus Response Act.

But Zaida Dedolph, director of public policy with the Children's Action Alliance, said many Arizona kids could be dropped from the rolls for something as simple as a missing change of address.

"There's been a moratorium on kicking people off of the Medicaid and CHIP rolls," said Dedolph. "But once the public health emergency ends - which could be in April, it could be extended again - once that happens, families won't have that protection."

The report was released by the Georgetown Center for Children & Families. Since the start of the pandemic, almost 100,000 additional Arizona children have enrolled in Medicaid coverage.

Dedolph said it's important for state officials to have a game plan to inform families that they may need to re-register their kids for health coverage.

"We want families to know," said Dedolph, "that if you have had a change of address in the past two years, if you experienced a difference in your family so you had a new kid or something like that in the past two years, you need to keep ACCHS updated and prepare for those premiums."

Experts say there are policies states can implement now that would help minimize coverage disruption. Tricia Brooks, a research professor at the Georgetown McCourt School of Public Policy, said states should prepare to slow down the process to ensure efforts to prevent automatic disenrollment.

"States should start," said Brooks, "by maximizing the use of existing data sources to confirm ongoing eligibility for as many people as possible now to reduce the backlog of pending actions."

Federal officials have not determined when the COVID-19 public-health emergency will end, but advocates warn that it could come as early as April 15.

Disclosure: Georgetown University Center for Children & Families contributes to our fund for reporting on Children's Issues, Health Issues. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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