KCKCC to serve as host of Women’s Equality Day event

by Kelly Rogge, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College will be the host of Women’s Equality Day later this month.

The event is from noon to 1:30 p.m. Aug. 26 in Upper Jewell. It is free and open to the public.

Women’s Equality Day commemorates the granting of women the right to vote in the United States. First proposed in 1878, women known as suffragettes worked for more than 40 years to gain equal voting rights. Some would try to pass suffrage acts in individual states. Others organized parades, vigils or even hunger strikes. New York was the first state to adopt women’s suffrage in 1917.

After that, President Woodrow Wilson changed his position and started supporting a woman’s right to vote. Other politicians soon followed his lead. On Aug. 26, 1920, the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution was certified as law, and since 1972, every president has issued a proclamation for Women’s Equality Day.

“Women worked for 72 years to win the right to vote,” said Jennifer Gieschen, coordinator of Women and Gender Advocacy at KCKCC. “They lectured, lobbied, marched, protested, landed in jail, refused to eat and even died for the cause. On the 96th Anniversary of Women getting the vote, we will recognize the hard work it took to get there.”

During KCKCC’s Women’s Equality Day event, attendees will have the chance to learn about the history about women’s right to vote as well as the most current legislation. Among the speakers is Superintendent Cynthia Lane of the Kansas City, Kan., Public Schools. She recently defended school funding before Gov. Sam Brownback. In addition, a Courageous Voice Award will be given to Jensen Walcott, a student at Basehor-Linwood High School and speaker at the Democratic National Convention. She is being recognized for her courage in asking for equal pay.

The co-host of the KCKCC Women’s Equality Day event is Women and Gender Advocacy Services of the Counseling and Advocacy Center, the American Association of University Women and the Intercultural Center.

For more information, call 913-288-7193.

Kelly Rogge is the public information supervisor at Kansas City Kansas Community College.

Legislators seek answers from contractor on Medicaid application backlog

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

Legislators grilled a state contractor Thursday about problems with the Medicaid application process and the backlog that has thousands of Kansans waiting for coverage.

Rep. Dan Hawkins, chairman of the Robert G. (Bob) Bethell Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight, arranged for the committee to tour the KanCare Clearinghouse where Medicaid applications are processed.

Hawkins told leaders of Maximus, the contractor that staffs the Clearinghouse, that he receives calls daily from applicants stuck in the backlog. One family called him on behalf of a loved one who had been waiting since October.

“They’re now dead,” said Hawkins, a Wichita Republican. “They already died, and they’re still not through the system.”

The contractor’s explanations for the backlog were not new: the rocky rollout last summer of a new computer system to process the applications coupled with an ill-timed administrative change that funneled all applications through the Clearinghouse.

But legislators heard more detailed information about how those two challenges caused the backlog to balloon.

In Kansas, Medicaid is a managed care program called KanCare that is administered by three private insurance companies. But those companies don’t handle the application process.

Maximus does that. An international company that does only government contracting, Maximus has 327 employees at the KanCare Clearinghouse at Forbes Field in south Topeka.

They receive KanCare applications there and begin processing them before passing them on to state employees for final approval. Maximus also staffs a customer service call center for KanCare applicants.

Maximus has done that since 1998 for certain types of Medicaid applications: those seeking insurance for low-income pregnant women, children and parents who fall under the jurisdiction of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

Administrative change

Other applications for elderly and disabled Kansans and those seeking long-term care in nursing homes were processed by the Kansas Department for Children and Families until the administrative change Jan. 1.

On that day, the KanCare Clearinghouse took on 3,800 partially processed applications from DCF. Some of those applications had been pending for months.

Since January, employees at the Clearinghouse have tried to work through those, plus an average of about 4,500 new applications each month that previously would have gone to DCF.

Maximus initially added 20 new employees to handle the increased workload.

“Should we have hired more people sooner?” asked Ilene Baylinson, general manager of U.S. health services for Maximus. “Probably.”

The company eventually brought on another 50.

The applications for Kansans who are elderly, disabled or in need of long-term care are far more complex than the family medical applications. Baylinson said it can take months of training to get new hires up to speed.

Meanwhile, existing employees still were getting accustomed to the new software, the Kansas Eligibility Enforcement System, and the workarounds it requires.

By March the backlog of applications waiting for processing had passed 18,000, including about 7,700 that had been out for more than the 45-day federal limit.

DCF sent about 30 workers to the Clearinghouse to take up the elderly, disabled and long-term care applications that month, after federal officials sent a letter to KDHE expressing concern about the backlog. The number of DCF employees helping has since increased to 50.

Federal government’s role

The federal government also received some of the blame Thursday. The open enrollment period for insurance through the Affordable Care Act exacerbated the backlog when the online marketplace directed thousands of Kansans who hadn’t known they were eligible for Medicaid into the application process.

Maximus officials also told legislators that federal rules are the reason the elderly and disabled Medicaid applications are so complex and require hundreds of pages of documents outlining financial assets. Applicants and their family members sometimes struggle to find the right documents, which delays the process.

But committee members questioned whether Maximus employees were sufficiently trained to help.

Hawkins said one family that called him had been asked three times to provide the same document — a document the family had provided each time.

“Why is that happening?” Hawkins asked.

“It should not be happening,” Baylinson said. “Our job is to make sure that doesn’t happen. If those cases are happening, we should know about it. And if there’s an error on our part, we should fix it.”

Rep. Barbara Ballard, a Democrat from Lawrence, told Baylinson she’d received similar calls.

“I’ll just tell you: It is happening,” Ballard said.

Sen. Laura Kelly, a Democrat from Topeka, asked if legislators could contact Maximus directly about constituent concerns. But KDHE official John Monroe said he would field them.

KDHE also acts as the go-between for Maximus and Accenture, a separate state contractor that developed the KEES software.

During Thursday’s tour, a Maximus employee told legislators that the software is an upgrade compared to the previous system, but it still has issues that require workarounds.

Baylinson said KDHE has been great at relaying concerns from Maximus to Accenture. But she said the programmers who developed the technology could have benefited from earlier contact with the people who would have to use it.

“In a perfect world, we would have sat down with Accenture ahead of time,” Baylinson said.

Representatives of Kansas nursing homes and community mental health centers said they remain concerned about the backlog and the length of time it’s taking to get Kansans covered by Medicaid.

But state officials say they should have the backlog resolved by October, and Baylinson said the Clearinghouse experience will continue to improve.

“This is fixable,” Baylinson said. “This is fixable, and we will fix it. You have our commitment.”

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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Lakeside Speedway to hold Kids Night today

Lakeside Speedway, 5615 Wolcott Drive, Kansas City, Kan., plans a Kids Night at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 5.

Ten bikes and three scooters will be given away tonight. There also will be games for kids. School supplies will be given to the first 100 children with a paid admission.

Gates will open at 5 p.m.

General admission tickets are $12 for adults, $6 for kids 7-12 years old, and free for children 6 and under. Tickets are $10 for military personnel, students and persons who are over 62, with identification.

For more information, see http://lakesidespeedway.net/.