Close vote expected on KanCare expansion bill

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

Kansas lawmakers are getting ready to do something they have never done before: vote on a Medicaid expansion bill.

For the past three years, conservative Republicans who controlled the Legislature refused to allow a vote on the issue.

Things are different this session due to the ouster of several conservative incumbents by moderate Republican and Democratic challengers.

The House Health and Human Services Committee had three days of hearings on an expansion bill last week and Rep. Dan Hawkins, the Wichita Republican who chairs the panel, has tentatively scheduled the vote for Friday.

An expansion opponent, Hawkins says he expects it to be close.

“Either it wins by one vote or it loses by one vote,” he said.

Expansion supporters have been mounting a last-minute lobbying blitz this week, focusing on a handful of members thought to be on the fence. That includes committee members like Rep. Doug Blex, a first-term Republican from Independence, the southeast Kansas community that lost its hospital in 2015 due to financial problems caused in part by the state’s rejection of Medicaid expansion.

“Either it wins by one vote or it loses by one vote.”

The decision to block expansion has cost health care providers and the Kansas economy approximately $1.7 billion in additional federal funding over the last three years, according to the Kansas Hospital Association.

Blex says he doesn’t want to see more Kansas hospitals close, but he’s concerned about warnings from opponents that expansion could be more expensive than supporters are predicting.

“In most (expansion) states it seems like there have been more applicants than what they anticipated,” he says. “The heart is kind of there (in support), but it’s a pocketbook issue.”

Projections compiled by the governor’s budget office estimate that expansion would increase state costs for the privatized Medicaid program known as KanCare by $33 million in the budget year that begins July 1 and by more than $75 million the following year.

David Jordan, executive director of the Alliance for a Healthy Kansas, says that savings and economic activity generated by expansion would more than cover the state’s share of the cost.

“Expanding KanCare can improve health and create jobs. It is working in 31 other states, let’s bring our money back,” he said Thursday in one of a series of tweets aimed at getting supporters to continue their lobbying efforts.

The bill under consideration would expand KanCare eligibility to more than 300,000 low-income Kansans, those earning up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, which for an individual is about $16,000 a year.

Opponents, including Gov. Sam Brownback, say it would be foolish for lawmakers to pass an expansion bill given plans by President Donald Trump and the Republican Congress to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Supporters argue that repeal is far from certain. For evidence, they point to the fact that several Republican governors are lobbying to keep the expansion plans they have implemented.

Jim McLean is managing director of KCUR’s Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/close-vote-expected-kancare-expansion-bill.

Elevated fire danger Friday, with high of 73, weather service says

National Weather Service graphic

There is an elevated fire danger on Friday, according to the National Weather Service.

With persistent dry surface fuels and relative humidity values below 30 percent across most areas, there are fire weather concerns, the weather service said.

Wind gusts will generally stay at or below 20 mph, minimizing the extent of fire weather damage, though outdoor burning remains strongly discouraged, according to the weather service.

Conditions will improve Saturday as relative humidity values begin to increase, coupled with light surface winds, the weather service said.

Today’s high will be near 73 with a south southwest wind of 7 to 14 mph, gusting to as high as 20 mph, according to the weather service.

Tonight, the low will be around 47 with a southwest wind of 5 to 9 mph, the weather service said.

Saturday, it will be sunny with a high near 67, according to the weather service, and a southwest wind of 5 mph becoming light and variable in the afternoon.

Saturday night, the low will be around 48 with a south wind of 3 to 5 mph, the weather service said.

Sunday, expect partly sunny skies, a high near 70 and a south wind of 5 to 10 mph, according to the weather service.

Sunday night, there is a 40 percent chance of showers after midnight, with a low of 56, the weather service said.

Monday, Presidents Day, there is a 70 percent chance of rain, mainly before noon, and a high near 69, according to the weather service.

Monday night, there is a 40 percent chance of showers before midnight, with a low of 50, the weather service said.

Tuesday, the forecast is mostly sunny with a high near 70, according to the weather service.

Tuesday night, the low will be around 47, the weather service said.

Mayoral election campaign kicks off

Incumbent Mayor Mark Holland, left, and challenger David Alvey, right, kicked off their fundraising campaigns tonight in Kansas City, Kan. Holland’s campaign event was at Tapatio’s restaurant at 180 S. 18th St., and Alvey’s event was at a private home in the Westheight neighborhood. For the mayoral campaign, the filing deadline is June 1, the primary is in August and the general election is in November. (Photos by William Crum)