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3 shot and 1 stabbed at Phoenix airport in apparent family dispute on Christmas night, officials say; CT Student Loan Reimbursement Program begins Jan. 1; Southwest farmer unfazed by weather due to conservation practices; Government subsidies make meat cost less, but with hidden expenses.

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The authors of Project 2025 say they'll carry out a hard-right agenda, voting rights advocates raise alarm over Trump's pick to lead the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, and conservatives aim to cut federal funding for public broadcasting.

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From the unprecedented election season to the latest environmental news, the Yonder Report looks back at stories that topped our weekly 2024 newscasts.

Report: House Plan Could Undermine Ohio's Medicaid Expansion

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Monday, April 27, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new state budget proposal would undermine Ohio's expansion of Medicaid, according to a new report by the research institute and advocacy group Policy Matters Ohio.

The House version of the two-year budget directs the state to pursue a waiver of Medicaid rules to implement a new program design.

Wendy Patton, Policy Matters Ohio’s senior project director, says the changes could jeopardize health coverage for hundreds of thousands of adults and children.

"Charging premiums, suspending payments for a year if people fail to make those payments, setting up accounts run on points and not dollars that are very administratively complex,” she states. “These could act as hurdles, and dampen the successes that Ohio has seen."

Some Republican lawmakers had initially backed a budget amendment that would stop Ohio from spending state tax dollars on Medicaid expansion. Instead, they have introduced what they're calling reforms, saying they'd help control spending and provide better health outcomes.

The $71.5 billion budget passed on a 63-36 vote and will now be considered by the Senate.

An estimated 500,000 Ohioans signed up to receive Medicaid under the expansion. Patton says hospitals and health care providers around the state have since reported improved patient care, through fewer emergency room visits, increased primary care visits and reduced medical costs.

"As they've started serving people that had Medicaid or other insurance under the Affordable Care Act, their bottom lines were getting stronger,” she points out. “This is very important, because hospitals and health care are major employers in our state."

Patton states lawmakers should not change the federal government's Medicaid requirements, which she says are designed to keep people healthy.

"These rules help assure that people actually get care, which is the fundamental goal of the Medicaid program and the coverage that we afford to families,” she stresses. “We've got a good program going, and we think Ohio should stay the course."





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