October
1, 2007
Register
on line for the MHANYS Awards Dinner and Conference on October
25th and 26th at www.mhanys.org
Update
on State’s Children Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
I
am sure that many of you have been reading about the Bush’s
administration decision to block states from expanding their state’s
child health insurance programs (SCHIP). Congress has already
passed a SCHIP reauthorization bill which the President plans
to veto.
This
has a particularly strong impact in New York where Governor Spitzer,
with the support of the legislature, increased the maximum eligibility
from Child Health Plus from 250% of Federal Poverty to 400% of
Federal Poverty. It was estimated that 400,000 additional children
in New York would be eligible to receive funding under this initiative.
Many
of these 400,000 children may need psychiatric services. Unfortunately,
without insurance, there will continue to be an unmet need for
this population. Though New York’s Child Health Plus program
is not as expansive as Timothy’s Law (we tried to get legislation
last year to include CHP as part of Timothy’s Law), the
basic mental health benefit includes sixty outpatient visits and
thirty inpatient visits. It is shameful that 400,000 children
of working families in New York State would not have access to
mental health services because of a misguided federal policy.
Governor
Spitzer has taken a strong role in fighting the administration
on this issue. Attached is a press release from Governor Spitzer
and several other Governors calling for a law suit on this issue.
STATE
OF NEW YORK
EXECUTIVE CHAMBER
ELIOT SPITZER, GOVERNOR
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 1, 2007
CONTACT:
Christine Anderson
canderson@chamber.state.ny.us
212 681.4640
518.474.8418
GOVERNOR
SPITZER ANNOUNCES MULTI-STATE LAWSUIT TO
SECURE HEALTH INSURANCE FOR CHILDREN
Bi-Partisan, Multi-State Legal Challenge to Protect Critical
Care for Children
Governor
Eliot Spitzer today announced that a group of states will be pursuing
legal challenges against the Bush Administration for violating
provisions of the federal State Children’s Health Insurance
Program (SCHIP), which provides affordable health coverage for
children in families that cannot afford to buy private health
insurance.
The
state action was triggered in August when the federal Center for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) arbitrarily imposed new rules
that block states from expanding their children’s health
insurance programs. Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, Washington,
Arizona, California and New Hampshire will participate in litigation,
either as plaintiffs or by filing supporting briefs, against the
Bush Administration for violating the provisions of the SCHIP
statute.
The
SCHIP reauthorization bill passed overwhelmingly by both houses
of Congress last week would roll back these new rules. President
Bush has promised to veto the legislation.
“With
the health of our nation’s children hanging in the balance,
President Bush is preparing to veto a bipartisan compromise that
Congress has forged to ensure that all children receive quality
health care,” said Governor Spitzer. “I join with
Governors from states across the country in urging the President
to do the right thing by signing this important legislation. If
this bill does not become law, we will proceed with our lawsuit.
Our kids deserve nothing less.”
The
lawsuit will specifically challenge the rules that conflict with
the SCHIP statute and were issued without an opportunity for public
comment as required by the federal Administrative Procedures Act.
The states are seeking a court ruling declaring those rules to
be unlawful and prohibiting the federal government from applying
the rules when reviewing individual state plans submitted under
SCHIP.
“It
sends a powerful and compelling message when the U.S. Congress,
States across the nation, and the public are so clearly committed
to ensuring that families have access to affordable health care
for their children,” added Governor Spitzer.
Governor
Chris Gregoire of Washington State said: “In Washington,
we know that taking care of our kids not only makes good economic
sense, but it is the right thing to do. The federal government
should continue to be a partner, rather than a roadblock, to our
children’s health.”
Governor
Martin O’Malley of Maryland said: “The SCHIP program
has enjoyed bipartisan support since its inception and it has
provided millions of children access to needed health services
including preventive services. These barriers imposed by the Bush
Administration mortgage both the fiscal and health future of our
nation.”
Governor
Jon Corzine of New Jersey said: “SCHIP is an unqualified
success in New Jersey and in states across the nation, and the
Bush Administration’s determination to pursue a course of
action that will harm our children’s health is incomprehensible.
This same Administration previously signed off on our decision
to cover the 10,000 New Jersey kids they are now seeking to kick
out of SCHIP, and the lawsuit we filed today demonstrates that
we will simply not let that happen. Washington should be a partner
to states that are trying to cover more children, not an opponent,
and I urge the President to reverse course and sign the bipartisan
legislation before him.”
New
Hampshire Governor John Lynch said: “Hard-working families
are caught in a no-win situation - they earn too much to qualify
for Medicaid, their employers do not offer coverage, and they
cannot afford private coverage. The Children's Health Insurance
Program has made quality health care affordable and possible for
these children. At a time when we should be working together to
expand access to affordable, quality health care, this sudden
and arbitrary rule change threatens the health insurance coverage
of children across the nation. We will fight this in Court if
necessary, but I hope the federal government will do the right
thing on its own - overturn this rule and pass funding for the
Children's Health Insurance Program.”
Assembly
Speaker Sheldon Silver said: “The action being taken today
underscores the significance of the need for affordable health
care for families across our country. The fact that states are
forced to band together in a desperate attempt to provide long
overdue health care to children is a testament to just how out
of touch the Bush administration is with the needs of working
families.”
Senate
Minority Leader Malcolm A. Smith said: “Promoting children's
health and wellness is one cause we should all be able to rally
around. Unfortunately, the Bush administration doesn't see it
this way. Instead, the president has persistently stonewalled
commonsense plans to provide health coverage for thousands of
children in New York State, and throughout the nation. I applaud
Governor Spitzer for working cooperatively with the Governors
of other states in challenging the Bush administration's decision
to veto Federal SCHIP legislation. Providing children with affordable
health insurance is simply the right thing to do.”
Assemblyman
Gottfried said: “We had overwhelming bipartisan support
when we raised our Child Health Plus eligibility. President Bush’s
actions only protect the profits of the insurance industry. I
applaud Governor Spitzer for taking this fight to court to protect
our children.”
Senator
John Sampson, the Ranking Democrat on the Senate Health Committee,
said: “With a mere stroke of the pen, the Bush administration
has sent a cynical message to families in need of affordable health
care coverage. Here in New York we have made important strides,
under Governor Spitzer's leadership, to extend universal health
coverage to all of our state's 400,000 uninsured children. However,
President Bush's veto of Congressional SCHIP legislation has derailed
those plans, leaving us no other choice than to respond decisively
in getting back on track our efforts assisting New York families.”
Department
of Health Commissioner Richard F. Daines said: “Children
need regular checkups in their early years in order to have a
healthy life. When children aren't insured, very often parents
wait until a small problem gets much worse before they pursue
medical treatment, just because they can't afford it. Children
need their vaccinations, health screenings for lead poisoning,
vision or dental problems. They need a clinician to monitor their
growth and development. SCHIP insures hundreds of thousands of
children in New York, and should be continued and expanded to
make sure every child in New York has access to health insurance,
whether from a public or private source.”