Monday, April 21, 2008 Coverage
& Access
Bush Administration Directive To Enroll Low-Income
Children in SCHIP Before Expanding Coverage Is Unenforceable Because It
Violates Federal Law, According to GAO
The Bush administration violated federal
law last year when it issued a policy directive that restricts states'
ability to expand their SCHIP programs, according to a Government Accountability
Office legal opinion released Friday, the New York Times reports (Pear, New York
Times, 4/19). The new guidelines, issued in an August 2007 letter,
state that before expanding SCHIP eligibility to children in families with
incomes greater than 250% of the federal poverty level, states must
demonstrate that they have enrolled at least 95% of children in the state
below 200% of the poverty level who are eligible for Medicaid or SCHIP.
States seeking to expand SCHIP eligibility also must establish a
minimum of a one-year period of uninsurance for individuals in families
with incomes greater than 250% of the poverty level to prevent them from
switching from a private insurance plan to a public program (Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report,
8/21/07).
In the legal opinion, GAO states, "The Aug. 17 letter
from CMS to state health
officials is a statement of general applicability and future effect
designed to implement, interpret or prescribe law or policy with regard to
the SCHIP program. Accordingly, it is a rule under the Congressional
Review Act" (Young, The Hill, 4/18). The Congressional Review Act
establishes the formal rule-making process, which includes submission to
Congress and a public review period. According to GAO, the directive is
invalid because it did not follow this process (Armstrong, CQ
Today, 4/18).
GAO's findings are in line with a
Congressional Research Service analysis released in January. Neither GAO
nor CRS has authority to rescind the policy directive, but Sens. John
Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine), who requested the GAO
opinion, said that the agencies' conclusions should lead the
administration to do so (Johnson, CongressDaily,
4/18).
CMS spokesperson Jeff Nelligan said that despite GAO's
opinion, the directive will remain in effect (AP/Lexington Herald-Leader, 4/19).
State Lawsuits
An aide to Rockefeller said that while the
GAO report is not legally binding, states could use the report to bolster
their case in a lawsuit against the federal government that seeks to block
the new policy. The aide said, "The anticipation is that the states will
now have a much stronger hand when they go to court." Several states have
sued to prevent enforcement of the policy directive. Many states have
"argued administration standards were impossible to meet, saying the 95%
participation requirement was too high," according to CQ
Today. CMS has said at least nine of 17 states affected by the
policy directive eventually will be in compliance with its requirements
(CQ Today, 4/18).
In addition, the opinion
"strengthens the hand of at least 22 states ... that already provide such
coverage or want to do so," according to the Times (New
York Times, 4/19). House Democrats also have "hinted that
legislation addressing" the policy directive will be on the floor this
summer, according to CongressDaily
(CongressDaily, 4/18).
Comments
"The directive is a bold-faced attempt to subvert
the law and prevent states from implementing their plans to provide health
insurance coverage to millions of uninsured children nationwide,"
Rockefeller said in a statement (CQ Today, 4/18). Snowe said,
"CMS chose to circumvent the rules and go their own way," adding that
"this is clearly the wrong approach" (CongressDaily, 4/18).
Rockefeller and Snowe in a release wrote, "CMS now has a critical choice
to make: rescind the rule or continue to spend taxpayer money defending a
growing list of lawsuits it is unlikely to win" (AP/Lexington
Herald-Leader, 4/19).