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House
Finance Committee Hears MBR; OHCA Proposes Rate Relief
Last Friday,
Governor John Kasich’s Mid-Biennium Review (MBR) legislation was introduced in
the House of Representatives as House Bill 487. The Governor suffered an
immediate setback as the House Finance and Appropriations Committee stripped
his signature proposal, a reduction of the personal income tax tied to an
increase in taxes on oil and gas producers, out of the bill. This week, after
the full Finance Committee received testimony from Office of Budget and
Management Director Tim Keen and other state officials, various House committees
and subcommittees held hearings on different aspects of the massive MBR. The
human services portion, including Medicaid, was heard by the Finance
Committee’s Human Services Subcommittee, chaired by Representative Jeff McClain
(R-Upper Sandusky). On Wednesday, Office of Health Transformation Director Greg
Moody, State Medicaid Director John McCarthy, and Ohio Department of Health
(ODH) Director Ted Wymyslo testified, and Thursday’s slate included Department
of Developmental Disabilities Director John Martin. One item of interest was
ODH’s request to eliminate the Public Health Council. The council is a
rulemaking body within the department that recently blocked and delayed several
changes to the nursing home licensure rules that had been negotiated between ODH
and provider representatives and that reflected agreements reached in the state
budget bill. Another provision in the MBR would change the law on the SNF bed
tax to avoid the need to issue bed tax refunds, as occurred earlier this fiscal
year. Also on Wednesday, OHCA Executive Director Pete Van Runkle asked the
panel to provide $40 million in rate relief to Ohio’s skilled nursing
facilities, using money already appropriated but unspent. Among other
things, he pointed out that the administration’s proposal to increase rates for
“critical access facilities” only assists seven SNFs, but all
Medicaid-participating facilities suffered from the rate cuts enacted last
year. Subcommittee members, particularly Representative Barbara Sears
(R-Sylvania), asked a number of questions about the OHCA proposal. The only
other public witness on Wednesday was Danielle Smith, Executive Director of the
social workers’ association, who objected to the language in the MBR
implementing the earlier agreement to conform state requirements for employment
of social workers in SNFs to the federal regulations on the topic. Ms. Smith’s
comments received considerable attention from the subcommittee. Additional
hearings on the MBR are scheduled for next week.
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