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HHS Secretary says states must ask for additional Medicaid funding help

8/20/2010

WASHINGTON Enactment last week of a supplemental federal spending bill gave cash-strapped states a chance to share in $26.1 billion emergency funding for enhanced Medicaid spending, not to mention $10 billion in stopgap funds for teachers in danger of being laid off. But the states still have to ask for it.

That was the message from Health & Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to all 50 state governors. In an Aug. 16 letter, Sebelius told every state chief executive that the emergency spending measure “can stave off the deep cuts to Medicaid that many had feared, and sustain jobs in hospitals, health centers and communities across the country.” However, she added, “These funds are only available for your state if you request them within 45 days of enactment, or by Sept. 24, 2010.”

The spending bill, passed quickly by both houses of Congress and signed by the president Aug. 13, extends for six months the enhanced Federal Medical Assistance Percentage. “The FMAP increase was initially authorized by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act ... and is set to expire this December,” the HHS secretary told the governors. “Under the new law, states that request these funds will receive a 3.2 percentage point increase in their FMAP from January to March 2011, and a half percentage point increase from April to June 2011. Additional FMAP increases are available for each calendar quarter during this period for states with high unemployment rates,” Sebelius added.

“I encourage you to take advantage of extended Medicaid support available to you through the Education Jobs and Medical Assistance Act,” she told the governors. “This new law, along with the Affordable Care Act, will help support jobs and build a healthcare system with lower costs, more choices and higher-quality health care for all Americans.”

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