Article
Courtesy of The Miami Herald
By Mary
Ellen Klas
Published
May 10, 2015
It’s a start.
After dissolving the annual legislative session last week over a budget
and healthcare impasse, House and Senate leaders agreed on Wednesday on
one thing: the dates of the special session to finish their work.
In a joint press release, House Speaker Steve Crisafulli, R-Merritt
Island, and Senate President Andy Gardiner, R-Orlando, announced that
they will convene a “tentatively scheduled” special session June 1 and
conclude it June 20.
Lawmakers must return to the state capital to finish the budget by June
30 and, integral to that decision, is addressing the question of how
much money from the federal government the state can expect to get to
provide hospitals compensation for charity care under the Low Income
Pool program, or LIP.
Disagreement over how to handle that money, which the federal government
is phasing out, led to the stalemate. The Senate leaders want to expand
Medicaid and draw down federal Affordable Care Act money to compensate
for the loss of LIP money in the future. The House leadership refuses to
expand Medicaid and prefers to rely on the LIP money for another year.
Still unresolved is the scope of the session and whether it will include
any other issues outside of the budget. “A proclamation will be issued
in the near future,” the joint statement said.
The agreement on the session dates also avoids having Gov. Rick Scott
call the session, and dictate the terms. Gardiner originally proposed
the session schedule last week, and Wednesday Crisafulli called the
House’s decision to agree with them an accomplishment.
“While significant discussions lay before us, [Wednesday] marks a very
good day for Florida as we have reached agreement on dates for a budget
special session,” Crisafulli said in a statement. “We look forward to
working with our partners in the Senate as we make continued progress in
the weeks ahead.”
Meanwhile, Scott came up empty-handed Wednesday when he met with Health
and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell to remind her of the state’s
budgetary deadline and get her to approve the state’s proposal for a
waiver to receive the LIP funding.
“We want the HHS Secretary to approve our LIP waiver,” Scott said in a
statement after the meeting. “That is what we asked her to do today. I
hope we made some progress, but we will only have real resolution on
this when we get their official approval. We need that approval
immediately so we can start a special session and pass a budget.”
Burwell’s office responded that she asked the governor to consider
expanding Medicaid but noted that the state’s proposal for a waiver was
inadequate. The statement also hinted that the state’s Medicaid
reimbursement rates are too low, and indicated the state may be
expecting more LIP money than its going to get.
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