An Open Letter to the Florida Legislature: Oppose Medicaid Expansion

 


Dear Legislator:

On behalf of National Taxpayers Union’s 362,000 members nationwide and 24,000-plus members in Florida, I urge you to oppose the expansion of Medicaid under the federal health care law, which will place over a million additional Floridians into a broken program that will cripple state and federal budgets.  

As a result of the Supreme Court’s June 2012 “Obamacare” decision, states have the option to increase their participation in this failing program, and right now, taxpayers are depending on you to say “no.” Medicaid is already plagued with low reimbursement rates and payment delays, as well as rampant waste and fraud. According to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the improper payment rate in 2011 was 8.1 percent, amounting to $21.9 billion – the second-highest of any federal program reporting such data. By adding one million people to the Florida Medicaid rolls, these figures are certain to rise.

Even though President Obama has promised that the federal government will pick up the entire tab for the first three years and 90 percent of the cost in the long term, Medicaid expansion will still saddle Florida with a $3 billion budget burden over the next decade, according to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA). This assumes the federal government will not renege on its 90 percent funding commitment. As you may know, President Obama has already proposed a reduction in federal match rates starting in 2017. If major tax hikes are to be avoided at the state level in the near future, Medicaid should be reformed to achieve cost savings, not enlarged.

The law will also have disastrous effects at the federal level. The AHCA study also determined that if expanded in Florida, the federal government would spend an extra $26 billion in the state on Medicaid over ten years. However, that money is not “free”: current and future Florida taxpayers would still have to bear part of this burden (and that of other state expansions) on their federal tax returns. Instead of increasing the size and reach of the federal government, state officials should seize this opportunity to rein in Washington’s dangerous spending habit.

The expansion of Medicaid under the health care law would be detrimental to both Floridians and taxpayers across the country. Such a move would make Florida a co-owner of the federal government’s dramatically more intrusive role in the health care system and demonstrate true fiscal irresponsibility. Taxpayers are counting on your leadership on this issue.   

Sincerely,
Lee Schalk
State Government Affairs Manager

cc: Governor Rick Scott