State Agrees To Pay Private Companies 7.5-Percent More To Manage Medicaid

Statewide Iowa — State officials have agreed on a seven-and-a-half percent boost in the government’s payments to the private companies managing Iowa’s Medicaid system.

More than 680-thousand poor, disabled and elderly Iowans are enrolled in Medicaid. Governor Kim Reynolds’ administration has been in lengthy negotiations with the two companies managing care for those Iowa Medicaid patients. The new contracts call for more than $100-million in additional state spending.

Fred Hubbell, the Democratic Party’s nominee for governor, says Iowa taxpayers are paying hundreds of millions more than promised when the state switched to private management of Medicaid. Hubbell says on day one as governor, he’ll “reverse the Medicaid nightmare” that has forced providers to close because of payment delays and patients to be denied “much needed care.”

A key Republican lawmaker on a committee that oversees the Medicaid program says he’s pleased the new contracts include the accountability measures legislators endorsed this spring, but Representative Joel Fry’s statement did not address the increased spending in the Medicaid program.

Democrats in the legislature say the extra money for the private companies managing Medicaid patients’ care is a “gut punch” to Iowa taxpayers and the extra spending puts the state budget “in a dangerous place.” On April 1st, 2016, the state switched to private management of Medicaid patient care and payments claims. Then-Governor Terry Branstad said it would save the state millions. Governor Reynolds has acknowledged there have been problems with the transition, but she supports continuing with private management of Medicaid.

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