Title: BUDGETING 101
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22006 Georgia Budget and Health Legislative Update
3Agenda
- Introduction
- Legislation- What passedWhat did not?
- Budget Outlook- Financing our health
- Open Discussion
- Upcoming HealthTecdl Events
4Linda Smith Lowe
Consumer Health Advocate Georgia Legal Services
Families First
5Session Objectives
- Increased understanding of
- Key health legislation affecting Georgians in
2006 - Increased understanding of
- The potential impact of health legislation on
nonprofit health organizations and their clients
6Health Issues for Georgia
Deficient quality control
Low health status compared to U.S. U.S. ranks
20th in the world
8th in number of uninsured
Crumbling rural health infrastructure
Costs too high rising
Employers dropping coverage
Many under- insured
Fragmented payment system limits control
Racial, ethnic, gender health disparities
Limited options for long-term care
7Prevention
- Medicaid dental services for pregnant women
(Budget) Treatment of dental infection to prevent
low birth weight pre-term delivery - Babies Born Healthy (Budget) 500,000 more for
prenatal care for immigrants not qualified for
Medicaid (state now runs out of money in 6
months) - Newborn screening (HB 1066 Budget) Expansion of
genetic/metabolic screening to 40 tests
8Prevention
- Higher payments for Health Check screening
(Budget) Affects children 0-8 left to managed
care companies - Tobacco prevention funds (Budget)
- Ga. Smokefree Air Act (SB 90) Most public places
smoke free. Passed in 2005. - New suicide prevention program (HB 1092 Budget)
9Health Care Delivery
- Nurse prescriptive authority (SB 480) Allows
advanced practice registered nurses to write
prescriptions for drugs, medical devices,
treatments, certain tests, under protocol with
physician. - Medication aide (SB 480) Allows RN/LPN tasks to
be delegated to certified aides for community
living arrangements (eg., non-injection drugs,
including gastric tube, insulin, skin treatment,
glucose test). - Medicaid waiver notice (SB 572) Administration
must notify legislature before requesting major
federal Medicaid waiver. Notice is joint
resolution of House Senate.
10Health Care Access
- Health Shares Volunteers in Medicine (HB 166, HB
1224) Health care providers enroll with
Department of Community Health to offer free
care. Liability for negligence only under state
tort claims act. - Unused drugs (HB 1178) Agencies to establish
program to redistribute unused drugs to medically
indigent people (7/1/2007) - Pharmacist refusal (HB 1178) Pharmacist may
refuse to dispense drug that terminates
pregnancy, but must refer to another pharmacy or
return Rx. May not refuse to dispense birth
control.
11Health Care Access
- Dept. of Community Health to design Medicaid
buy-in for people with disabilities
12Health Care Access Barriers
- State Medicaid policy eliminating
self-declaration of income (Budget) - New state federal Medicaid citizenship
verification requirements - New state policy/procedure clampdown on emergency
Medicaid
13Health Care Access Undocumented Immigrants
- Ga. SB 529/Act 45 9 on public benefits
effective 7/1/2007 - Requires verification of immigrant status for
state or local public benefits (licenses,
publicly funded services, etc.) - Allows affidavit with 1,000 fine and/or 1-5
years for willful falsehood Verification through
SAVE system - Exempts children under 18, prenatal care,
emergency services, disaster relief,
immunizations, treatment of communicable disease
symptoms, higher education, and services exempted
by federal law - Does not require verification unless person must
be lawfully present to receive service
14Health Care Access Undocumented Immigrants
(continued)
- 3 Federal Tests for Service Exemption
- Delivered in-kind (not cash) at community level,
- Do not condition provision of assistance or
amount of assistance on income or resources, and - Are necessary for protection of safety or life as
specified by U.S. Attorney General
15Health Care Access Undocumented Immigrants
(continued)
SB 529 Bottom Line
- Doesnt mandate verification for health human
services if is not required by law that a person
be lawfully present to receive them - Some state and local public benefits have
required lawful presence since at least 1996 - Many other health and human services are exempt
because they meet the 3 tests or have been
otherwise exempted - A service using a sliding scale fee system could
be considered conditioned on income and
therefore not exempt unless policies also require
that persons be served regardless
P.L. 104-193, Personal Responsibility Work
Opportunity Act of 1996
16Health Care Quality
- Stem cell research (SB 596) Would create
umbilical cord bank encourage research - (passed both houses, different forms, but no
final approval) - Hospital acquired infection study (SR 853) (not
passed, got through Senate)
17Health Care Quality
- Lymphdema treatment (HR 1055) Urges treatment by
nationally certified therapists. - Prevention of Starvation/Dehydration of Persons
with Disabilities (SR 1067) Study Committee
18Health Insurance
- High risk pool (HB 1359) Would create a system
providing access to insurance for uninsurable
persons, but funding methodology a major issue
(not passed) - PeachCare for All Kids (HB 1464) Would expand
Medicaid PeachCare to cover children up to 400
of federal poverty level with federal match
offer sliding scale buy-in above that - (not passed)
19Long-Term Care (Budget)
- 1,500 new Developmental Disability Waiver slots
- 152 new Independent Care Waiver Slots
- 1,000 new Community Care Services Program Waiver
slots - NH personal needs allowance increase from 30 to
50/month
20Long-Term Care (Estate Recovery)
- Ga. SB 572
- Effective ?
- Reserves 100,000 CPI exclusions (years
support, last illness costs, 5,000 funeral) - Person must have had written notice at
application signed acknowledgement - No recoupment of costs before effective date
- Current Ga. Rule
- Effective 5/1/2006
- Applies to estates over 25,000
- Applies to person over
- 55 in LTC not disenrolled from Medicaid by
4/15/2006 - Recoups costs back to 8/2001
Watch for developments!
21Continuing Health Issues for Georgia!
Deficient quality control
Low health status compared to U.S. U.S. ranks
20th in the world
8th in number of uninsured
Crumbling rural health infrastructure
Costs too high rising
Employers dropping coverage
Many under- insured
Fragmented payment system limits control
Racial, ethnic, gender health disparities
Limited options for long-term care
22Linda Smith Lowe
Consumer Health Advocate Georgia Legal Services
Families First Family Policy
Bulletin smithlowe_at_earthlink.net
23- Alan Essig, Executive Director
24Session Objectives
- Increased understanding of
- The 2006 Georgia budget and its implications for
nonprofit health organizations - Increased understanding of
- Available resources for further information on
health legislation and related financing
25Snapshot of State Spending
- FY 1991 FY 2007
- (7.6 B) (17.6B)
- Education 51.4 53.8
- Medicaid and PeachCare 9.0 12.5
- Health and Social Services 12.3 8.7
- Criminal Justice 9.6 9.9
- Transportation 6.6 3.8
- Debt Service 4.6 4.9
- Homeowners Tax Relief 2.5
- All Other State Agencies 6.5 4.0
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27State Revenues
- Georgia Ranked 37th or 38th in state revenues as
share of income every year between FY 1990 and FY
2001. - Georgia dropped to 43rd in state revenues as
share of income in FY 2004. - Georgia ranks 42nd in state taxes per capita.
28Problems to Solve in Georgia
- 18.8 of children live in poverty (national
average 17.7). - In 2004 Georgians median income had largest
decline in country - African-Americans have unemployment,
underemployment, and poverty rates more than
double that of white workers.
29Problems to Solve in Georgia
- Kids Count Well Being of Children - 39th
- Teen Birth Rate - 43rd
- Overall Health - 43th
- High School Graduation 49th
- Children Without Health Insurance 41st
30FY 2006 Revenue Outlook
- Revenue grew 7 in FY 2004 and 8 in
- FY 2005.
- Governor projects revenue growth of 5.6 in FY
2006. - Revenue Growth 9.0 through April.
- Potential surplus at end of FY 2006 of
- 540 million.
31FY 2007 Budget Outlook
- Will we really have a surplus?
- Revenue Shortfall Reserve (RSR) at 223 million.
- 172 million for FY 2007 supplemental budget for
Education - After next session, RSR should have a minimum of
approximately 689 million.
32FY 2007 Budget Outlook
- Revenue estimate based on 5.2 growth.
- Other than Education Adjustment minimal surplus
to spend in supplemental budget. - If revenues continue to grow at current strong
pace Governor could increase revenue estimate.
33FY 2008 Budget Outlook
- Healthcare
- Continued budget pressures on state budget as a
whole. - Increased funding for Medicaid. Increases due to
national healthcare inflation, enrollment growth,
and one time funding in FY 2007 budget. - Public health, disabilities and mental health
funding needs.
34FY 2008 Budget Outlook
- 7 Revenue increase equals 1.2 Billion
- Education (formula growth) 275 Million
- Salary Increase (3) 210 Million
- Restore QBE Austerity Cut 170 Million
- Medicaid 450 Million
- 1.1 Billion
35Budget Outlook Beyond FY 2008
- Political pressure for tax cuts
- Property tax caps
- Eliminate ad valorem tax on cars
- Eliminate or further cut corporate income tax
- Eliminate income tax on seniors
- Cut income tax by 20 percent
- TABOR Limits on growth of state and local
budgets - House and Senate Study committees as well as
campaign platforms
36Budget Outlook Beyond FY 2008
- Continued Federal Budget Cuts
- Population Growth and Demographic Changes
- Education
- Healthcare
- Transportation
- Actual and Potential Lawsuits
- School Funding
- Child Welfare
- Olmstead (long-term care for disabled and
elderly) - Medicaid Modernization
37Long-Term Solutions
- Commission for a New Georgia
- Budget and Management Reform
- Tax Reform and Modernization
- Solidify tax base
- Raise sufficient revenues
- Withstand downturns
- Targeted tax cuts
- 21st Century Economic Development Policies
38Long Term Solutions
- Reason for a state budget is to allow state
government to assist in improving quality of life
(healthcare, education, public safety,
environment, etc.). - The state budget and the fairness, equity and
adequacy of taxes are linked
39- Alan Essig, Executive Director
- www.gbpi.org
40Important Links and References
- Georgia Budget and Policy Institute
(www.gbpi.org) - Voices for Georgias Children
(www.georgiavoices.org) - Women's Policy Education Fund
(www.womenspolicygroup.org) - Georgia Health Policy Center
(www.gsu.edu/wwwghp/) - Georgia Legal Services (www.glsp.org)
- Atlanta Womens Foundation (www.atlantawomen.or
g)
41Whats Next at Healthtecdl?
- Health Literacy
- Board Recruitment, Development, and Evaluation
- Grantwriting for Success
- Marketing 101 for Nonprofits
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46FY 2007 Budget Outlook
- Current RSR 223 million
- FY 2006 projected surplus 632 million
- Projected RSR (7/1/2006) 855 million
- Education Adjustment 160 million
- Adjusted RSR 695 million
- Minimum RSR (13 days) 650 million
- Funds available 45 million
47Health Care Access Undocumented Immigrants
(continued)
U.S. A.G. Services Necessary to Protect Safety
or Life
- Crisis counseling intervention services for
child protection, adult protective services,
violence abuse prevention, victims of DV or
other crimes treatment of mental illness or
substance abuse - Short-term shelter or housing assistance for
homeless, DV victims or runaway, abused or
abandoned children - Services or assistance for individuals during
periods of heat, cold, adverse weather - Soup kitchens, food banks, senior nutrition,
meals on wheels, etc. - Medical public health services (including
treatment prevention of disease injury),
mental health, disability or substance abuse
assistance to protect life or safety - Activities to protect life or safety of workers,
children, - youth, community residents
- Any others necessary to protect life or safety
Still must meet the other 2 tests!
66 FR 3613 (1/16/2001) See also 63 FR 41658
(8/4/1998)
48Health Care Access Undocumented Immigrants
(continued)
- Services exempted by federal law
- Emergency medical services defined under Medicaid
law not related to a transplant, - Non-cash disaster relief,
- Immunizations treatment of communicable disease
symptoms, and - State local benefits meeting 3 tests and
specified by U.S. Attorney General
P.L. 104-193, Personal Responsibility Work
Opportunity Act of 1996