https://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2002-02-15/84687/
It's not surprising that a Republican governor should take a dim view of children's health insurance. It was Perry's predecessor, George W. Bush, who unsuccessfully fought expansion of the C.H.I.P. program in the 1999 Legislature, even as he was campaigning for president with a promise to "leave no child behind." But it is surprising that this approach to cost-cutting has garnered bipartisan support. Former Comptroller John Sharp, the Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor, has proposed finding some of the $5 billion needed to balance the state's next budget in the children's Medicaid program, which benefits families even worse off economically than the kids enrolled in C.H.I.P.
Specifically, Sharp said he objected to expanding the Medicaid enrollment period from six months to a year, to match the more convenient C.H.I.P. enrollment period. He says that moving it back to six months could save $1 billion or more toward the $5 billion shortfall. Precisely how is a matter of some dispute.
Sharp failed to note that any money saved would be at the health risk of the most vulnerable people in the state, while most of the cost would be shifted to local hospital district taxpayers (or, in our own case, city of Austin taxpayers) who would go on paying more, in money and resources, for the emergency care of people who would be better and more cheaply served by Medicaid.
It seems curious that so few of Sharp's fellow Democrats are able to see his view that making it more difficult for families to stay on Medicaid -- rationing by inconvenience -- would in fact be better for the health of the state's children. Houston Rep. Garnet Coleman, among the leaders in the fight for Medicaid simplification last year, greeted Sharp's reversal with dismay. "That's exactly the wrong direction to be going in," said Coleman. "There are about 500,000 Texas children eligible for Medicaid but not enrolled," he said, "and even should they become ineligible for Medicaid, they have to reach 200% of the poverty level before they're ineligible for C.H.I.P. The whole point of simplification was to treat the poorest families the same way you treat the less poor.
"I have a long-term respect for John Sharp," Coleman concluded. "But we disagree on this."
Sharp blamed the Capitol reporters for misrepresenting his position. But TABCC Executive Director Bill Hammond seems to be suffering from the same delusion. Hammond said the group's endorsement was less a criticism of Dewhurst than support for Sharp's more specific recommendations for cutting the state budget. I asked him if that included Sharp's proposal to move one-year eligibility for Medicaid back to six months. "Yes, it did have a significant effect on the endorsement. We're very concerned about the budget," Hammond said, "and Sharp presented a compelling argument with regard to reviewing Medicaid enrollment every six months instead of once a year."
Perhaps the prosperous, well-insured gentlemen of the TABCC found themselves happily faced with a question likely to bring somewhat less joy to ordinary Texans as they enter the voting booth in November: With Democrats like these, who needs Republicans?
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