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Minnesota Republicans ask Minnesota Republicans to spare Medicaid
Minnesota Republicans ask Minnesota Republicans to spare Medicaid

Yahoo

time25-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Minnesota Republicans ask Minnesota Republicans to spare Medicaid

Minnesota State Capitol. Photo courtesy of Minnesota Senate Media Services. Medicaid advocates hoping to stave off billions in cuts to the program for low-income and disabled Minnesotans have found an unlikely ally: Republican lawmakers. 'Drastic reductions to Medicaid funding have the potential to impact the 1.4 million people we serve and place incredible pressure on our overall state budget,' Sen. Jim Abeler, R.-Anoka, and 13 other Minnesota GOP lawmakers wrote in a letter to the Republican members of Minnesota's congressional delegation, President Donald Trump, and the acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. 'There are no other sources to make up the lost federal share beyond severely impacting the seniors and those with disabilities who we serve,' the letter continues. 'This is contrary to how we Republicans respect the aged and the vulnerable.' Republicans in the U.S. House have endorsed a budget proposal that would require cutting $880 billion in funding from programs overseen by the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which includes Medicaid. They intend to use the savings on defense and border spending, as well as tax cuts whose primary beneficiaries would be the wealthiest Americans. Medicaid, which is known in Minnesota as Medical Assistance, serves 1.4 million Minnesotans, or about one-quarter of the population, including 650,000 children and 125,000 people with disabilities. 'Given some of the large numbers coming out of Washington, we are concerned that there is no practical way to accommodate some of the proposed massive reductions and still provide the kind of care these vulnerable people require,' the state Republican lawmakers write. Steep funding cuts would require Minnesota counties to 'raise local property taxes drastically or close services,' they add. The letter also argues Minnesota has been a 'leader in providing access to care and containing costs,' and that dramatic cuts would jeopardize those efforts. 'We need the flexibility to keep doing what works,' Abeler said in a press release accompanying the letter. 'Deep, unworkable cuts are not the answer.' Abeler also criticized the Walz administration for a proposed budget containing smaller spending increases on disability services. Democrats endorsed the GOP lawmakers' letter. 'Thanks to the 14 GOP Minnesota legislators who recognize the damage the U.S. House GOP budget would cause,' said Democratic U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum of Minnesota's Fourth District. 'It's wrong to cut Medicaid — a health care lifeline for over a million Minnesota seniors, disabled, and children — to give more tax breaks to billionaires like Elon Musk.' In the past, Republican U.S. Rep. Pete Stauber has been critical of Trump administration efforts to cut Medicaid. 'I made a promise to protect these critical programs for those who need it most, and it is a promise I intend to keep,' he wrote in a March 2019 press release. GOP Rep. Tom Emmer spoke in favor Tuesday of Republicans' budget resolution: 'I caution the media against echoing Democrats' hysteria on where savings will come from.' Groups opposing the cuts, including the AARP, as well as groups more amenable to them, like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, have pointed out that it would be virtually impossible to hit the budget's deficit reduction targets without cutting Medicaid.

Minnesota lawmakers seek to limit practice of legislators giving money directly to nonprofits
Minnesota lawmakers seek to limit practice of legislators giving money directly to nonprofits

Yahoo

time12-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Minnesota lawmakers seek to limit practice of legislators giving money directly to nonprofits

Minnesota State Capitol. Photo courtesy of Minnesota Senate Media Services. Some Minnesota lawmakers want to stop the practice of legislators giving money directly to nonprofits, concerned that it leads to uneven outcomes and lax oversight while favoring politically connected nonprofits. The move comes as Republicans highlight the fraud schemes that have plagued Minnesota state government in recent years, often through sham nonprofits that have managed to collect millions as Medicaid providers. The nascent House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Policy Committee met for the first time Monday and discussed the many ways state agencies are failing to adequately oversee grants to nonprofits. State government increasingly relies on nonprofits to complete its work, from preventing violence to providing food for needy families. State agencies typically award a grant after performing background checks and analyzing numerous proposals, ultimately giving it to the applicant that best meets their criteria. But lawmakers can also go around that competitive process and directly name a nonprofit, granting funds in a budget bill through what are known as legislatively named grants. In 2023, the Democratic-Farmer-Labor-led Legislature approved over $1.1 billion in legislatively named grants to nonprofits, with some receiving more money from lawmakers than they normally get in other grants and donations in an entire year. 'We all get requests from our constituents, or we have a relationship with a certain group that we know does fabulous work. I know it's hard for members, but I think we as a body have to police ourselves so that we put all grants through a competitive process,' said Rep. Kristin Robbins, R-Maple Grove, and chair of the House fraud committee. Robbins said reducing the grants will require a 'culture shift' at the Capitol. Lawmakers are able to propose whatever bills they like, so there's little stopping them from continuing to name nonprofits in bills and granting them funds. Ideally, Robbins said the Legislature should get rid of the practice of legislatively named grants, but she recognized that that would take time — and there's no mechanism to make lawmakers do it. According to a 2023 audit, Minnesota struggles to oversee money it sends out the door. The Office of the Legislative Auditor found 'pervasive noncompliance' with grant management policies, 'signaling issues with accountability and oversight' of the $500 million the state sends out in a typical year. Both competitive and legislatively named grants are supposed to go through the same type of oversight by state agencies, but the Office of the Legislative Auditor has found that agencies have failed to provide the same oversight of legislatively named grants that they do for competitive grants. The Department of Education, which was the pass-through agency for the stolen federal child nutrition funds in the massive so-called Feeding Our Future scheme, 'consistently documented less fiscal and programmatic oversight of legislatively named grants compared to competitively awarded grants,' according to the audit. Legislative Auditor Judy Randall on Monday told members of the House fraud committee that her office has recommended that the Legislature stop employing legislatively named grants since 2007, or the year the first iPhone was released. Marie Ellis, public policy director for the Minnesota Council of Nonprofits, said the vast majority of funding from the state to nonprofits is through the competitive process. But Ellis also said it can be unnecessary for a nonprofit to go through an onerous competitive process if, for example, they are the only organization in an area of Minnesota that provides that specific service. 'Sometimes directly named grants are the most efficient way to enact the Legislature's priorities,' Ellis said. 'If there's only one organization in the state that can do a certain thing that the Legislature wants done, a competitive process would be a sham and a waste of everyone's time.' In addition, smaller, less established nonprofits — especially those serving marginalized communities — can benefit from legislatively named grants, Ellis said. Robbins said that the legislatively named grants is a bipartisan concern, and legislative leaders and committee chairs will need to take the first steps to discourage the practice. 'It would take the commitment of chairs to say 'I'm not going to allow legislatively designated grants in my budget,' so a lot of it will fall on the individual members,' Robbins said.

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