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Bingaman: Bill Clears Senate that Prevents Deep Cuts in Medicaid in New Mexico Print Share

Thursday, May 22, 2008

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Jeff Bingaman today said he was pleased that a key spending bill approved by the Senate (75-22) contains a provision he’s been fighting for that would prevent more than $180 million in Medicaid cuts to New Mexico.

Last year, the Bush administration, through the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, put in place or proposed new regulations that limit how states use their own Medicaid funding to pay public hospitals and other healthcare providers. The most significant of the Administration’s proposals would devastate New Mexico’s Sole Community Provider Fund, which plays a critical role in ensuring New Mexicans in rural areas of the state have access to life-saving hospital services and funds programs for uninsured New Mexicans. It also would cause the University of New Mexico Hospital and other New Mexico institutions to lose millions of dollars for the care they provide.

Bingaman introduced a measure to prevent the most harmful regulations from being implemented, and has worked hard as a member of the Senate Finance Committee to prevent any Medicaid cuts to New Mexico. Bingaman’s provision, which was included in the supplemental spending bill that passed the Senate today, would stop the regulations from taking effect this year.

“The regulations proposed by the president would leave a substantial number of New Mexican’s without health care access, many of them in the rural part of the state where access is already a challenge. The provision included in this bill will help delay their implementation until something more reasonable can be worked out,” Bingaman said.

The provision would also prevent other cuts to the Medicaid Graduate Medical Education payments, which supports safety-net hospitals that train physicians and would block the implementation of several other regulations that would impact the following:

• The ability of schools to help enroll children in Medicaid and coordinate their health care services;

• Rehabilitation services provided to people with disabilities, especially those with mental illness and intellectual disabilities;

• Case management services for the elderly, children in foster care and people with disabilities;

• States’ abilities to expand enrollment of children in the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP);

• Specialized medical transportation services for children;

• Medicaid payments for outpatient hospital services.

The bill now must be approved by the U.S. House of Representatives before it can be sent to the president to be signed into law.

Contact Senator Bingaman's Office:

Jude McCartin
Maria Najera
703 Hart Building
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510
(202) 224-5521

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