Voices of Alaska: The Medicaid mousetrap

  • By Lance Roberts
  • Sunday, May 3, 2015 5:46pm
  • Opinion

The legislature has just been called back by the Governor for a special session, with two of the topics being Medicaid Expansion and the Budget. The legislature is being bombarded by requests for more money and to expand the Medicaid system. The State is currently looking at an approximately four billion dollar deficit, a number that is understandably hard to get your head around. In essence, we’ll be completely out of money before 2020, excepting the Permanent Fund. Yes, it’s that bad, but yet there are many voices out there crying for the legislature to spend what little we have now and not make the hard decisions. A good example of a bad program that needs drastic reform is Medicaid.

Currently in Alaska we spend $1.6 billion per year on Medicaid. It has grown 149 percent in the last 10 years, and will eventually overwhelm the entire budget including education. Expansion will add around 40,000 people to those rolls and by 2022 is estimated to be costing the state around $36 million, with a total cost up to then of around $109 million. Medicaid is admitted even by its proponents, like the Governor, to be a broken system; in fact, its level of brokenness is like a helicopter crashing in some new action movie where the blade goes off spinning and destroying all in its path. No exaggeration, it is on course to destroy the Alaskan State budget, wiping out the PFD and bringing in unnecessary taxation.

From a philosophical viewpoint, expansion’s design dis-incentivizes the young adults under thirty that would be the main recipients of it from pushing themselves to find better jobs or build businesses that would allow them a higher level of health care. Actually, it’s not just philosophical, based on last year’s election results. In 2014, Alaskans voted to not just raise minimum wage, but to unsustainably raise it every single year. Currently those on minimum wage will be eligible for Medicaid, but in 2017 those working full-time for minimum wage will exceed the eligible income for Medicaid. The choice then will be keep Medicaid or keep a full-time job. This is a huge problem that exists for these types of entitlement programs, that anyone who tries to better themselves financially loses the benefits, thereby offsetting the benefits of working. Why in the world would we want to expand a system to young single adults that encourages them not to work or improve their situation?

Another aspect that has been overlooked by many is that Medicaid pays more than Medicare, for senior citizens, and Tricare, for military families and veterans, so those few doctors who are left that see patients on that program will make more by serving Medicaid patients than those on Medicare or Tricare. This will only make it harder for senior citizens, veterans and our military families to be able to get the health care they need.

There are way more broken aspects of Medicaid, fraud and abuse, than can be addressed in this short article, but it’s consistently shown that reform is mandatory to be able to even keep the Medicaid system we have in place, let alone add more people to that system. The State needs to work out the large amount of billing problems it has, and implement some cost controls. Be wary, some are proposing reforms, which are really just taxes, like up to a 6 percent tax on providers, even if they don’t have Medicaid patients.

There are also problems with how Medicaid pays out much less than the costs of doing business; for example, the Fairbanks North Star Borough only gets approximately half of what it costs us to do an ambulance run. These underpayments add up considerably and contribute substantially to the high cost of medical care.

Remember when they talk about all the free Federal money that we’ll get: There’s Free Cheese in a Mouse Trap. Please let the legislature know that we need to reform Medicaid before we even think of expanding it. You can email them all at GOV.Alllegislators@alaska.gov.

Lance Roberts is an engineer, born and raised in Fairbanks. He is a member of the Fairbanks North Star Borough Assembly. The views expressed here are his own and do not represent the assembly or borough administration.

More in Opinion

Dawson Slaughter is president of the Anchor Point Chamber of Commerce and a candidate for State House District 6. (Courtesy photo)
Opinion: Children, education, obligation

Our children and the future children of Alaskans must always be the priority and first in our education concerns

The Exxon Baton Rouge, smaller ship, attempts to off-load crude from the Exxon Valdez that ran aground in Prince William Sound, Valdez, Alaska, spilling over 270,000 barrels of crude oil, shown March 26, 1989. (AP Photo/Rob Stapleton)
Point of View: Exxon Valdez oil spill brought out local heroes

When the Exxon Valdez ran aground in Prince William Sound 35 years ago, local people sprang to respond long before Exxon provided any help

Larry Persily. (Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: No Alaska governor has ever so boldly held schools and students as political hostages

‘Star Trek’ reference looks past real argument for school funding

Rep. Justin Ruffridge, a Soldotna Republican who co-chairs the House Education Committee, speaks in favor overriding a veto of Senate Bill 140 during floor debate of a joint session of the Alaska State Legislature on Monday, March 18, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Rep. Justin Ruffridge: Supporting education

Capitol Corner: Legislators report back from Juneau

Rep. Ben Carpenter, a Nikiski Republican, speaks in opposition to overriding a veto of Senate Bill 140 during floor debate of a joint session of the Alaska State Legislature on Monday, March 18, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Rep. Ben Carpenter: Education is too important to keep getting wrong

Capitol Corner: Legislators report back from Juneau

Larry Persily. (Juneau Empire file photo)
Point of View: Some state lawmakers need to embrace reality, not PFD political theater

State revenues minus public services do not leave enough in the checkbook to pay an oversized dividend

Rep. Ben Carpenter, R-Nikiski, speaks about teacher bonuses during consideration a bill increasing state funds for public education in the Alaska House of Representatives on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, in Juneau, Alaska. (Ashlyn O’Hara/Peninsula Clarion)
Rep. Ben Carpenter: Holding up a mirror to state government

Capitol Corner: Legislators report back from Juneau

Sen. Jesse Bjorkman, R-Nikiski, speaks in opposition to an executive order that would abolish the Board of Certified Direct-Entry Midwives during a joint legislative session on Tuesday, March 12, 2024, in Juneau, Alaska. (Ashlyn O’Hara/Peninsula Clarion)
Sen. Jesse Bjorkman: Ensuring food security for Alaska

Capitol Corner: Legislators report back from Juneau

Most Read