Legislators of the Week – District 1

These are the legislators that we’re writing this week. Eventually we’ll get to all of them! Tell them what Medicaid is doing for you. Tell them why you’re thankful for the help. Tell them why you need it!

Name Phone Address Email
Senator
Bart Hester
479-531-4176 P.O. Box 85
Cave Springs, 72718
bart.hester@senate.ar.gov
Representative Carol Dalby 870-772-1255 10 Brookside Drive Texarkana, 71854 carol.dalby@arkansashouse.org

Sample of Voting Record on Medicaid Bills from the 2017 Legislative Sessions:

  • Senator Hester and Representative Dalby both voted FOR SB3 in the Extraordinary Session of 2017 to reduce the eligibility for Arkansas Works and to impose a work requirement.
  • Senator Hester voted FOR HB 1706, Provider Led Managed Care, while Representative Dalby voted AGAINST it.
  • Senator Hester and Representative Dalby both voted FOR HB1033, which redirected the Tobacco Settlement Fund to reduce the DDS Waiver Waiting List.
  • Check out how they voted on the other bills.

AR Works Changes – Public Comment & Public Meetings

Read the DHS Public Notice
Read the DHS Public notice

The Arkansas Works application is open for public comment.

“The State will request amendments to the Arkansas Works 1115 Demonstration waiver to: (1) limit income eligibility for individuals in the eligibility group found at Section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII) of the Social Security Act (hereinafter “the new adult group”) to less than or equal to 100 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL) as of January 1, 2018; (2) institute work requirements as a condition of Arkansas Works eligibility as of January 1, 2018; (3) eliminate the Arkansas Works employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) premium assistance program on December 31, 2017; and (4) implement its waiver of retroactive eligibility on or after July 1, 2017.” Read the full public notice by DHS.

Read the application before making a comment.   It was released on Friday and the 30-day state comment period started. Anyone can submit comments by June 18, 2017.  DHS will also have two public meetings, one in Little Rock and Jonesboro.  Here are the details of the Little Rock meeting, which is scheduled for Thursday.

The complete version of the current draft of the Demonstration application will be available for public review as of Friday, May 19, at https://www.medicaid.state.ar.us/General/comment/demowaivers.aspx. The Demonstration application may also be viewed from 8 AM – 4:30 PM Monday through Friday at:

Arkansas Department of Human Services 700 Main Street
Little Rock, AR 72201
Contacts: Becky Murphy

Public comments may be submitted until midnight on Sunday, June 18, 2017. Comments may be submitted by email to hciw@arkansas.gov or by regular mail to PO Box 1437, S-295, Little Rock, AR 72203-1437.

To view comments that others have submitted, please visit

https://www.medicaid.state.ar.us/general/comment/comment.aspx. Comments may also be viewed from 8 AM – 4:30 PM Monday through Friday at:

Arkansas Department of Human Services 700 Main Street
Little Rock, AR 72201
Contact: Becky Murphy

The State will host two public hearings during the public comment period.

Arkansas Works Waiver Amendment Public Hearing
Date: May 25, 2017
Time: 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm CDT
Location: Central Arkansas Main Library in Little Rock, Darragh Center Auditorium Address: 100 S. Rock St, Little Rock, AR 72201

You may also join by webinar on May 25, 2017 at 5:30 pm CDT. https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/474930032278317569

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Arkansas Works Waiver Amendment Public Hearing
Date: June 06, 2017
Time: 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm CDT
Location: Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Cooper Alumni Center Address: 2600 Alumni Blvd., Jonesboro, AR 72401

You may also join by webinar on June 6, 2017 at 5:30 pm CDT. https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3155727397286233858
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Therapy Associations Update on Therapy Cap

Many thanks to the therapy association reps for their hard work and for sending this statement to be shared with us (regarding the 90 minute therapy cap to take effect July 1, 2017):

“In order to provide clarity, representatives from ArkSHA, AROTA, and ArPTA met with representatives from Medicaid, DDS and AFMC and had many questions answered. Stakeholder input was provided and we feel that our voices were heard. Not interrupting children’s services was discussed and will be addressed. A formal statement outlining the 90 minute rule and PA process will be delivered within 7 business days by Melissa Stone, DDS Director. We have been asked to respect this timeline as the written procedures are being finalized by DDS and AFMC.”

Providers: PASSE Information

This information regards Act 775 (Provider Led Organized Care). If you haven’t read that, please do.

Deadlines are approaching with the formation of the PASSEs. The letter of intent deadline was extended to June 15, but many want your commitment by June 1. That being said, some of you still have questions.

First of all, will you be affected? You may or may not serve Tier 2 and/or Tier 3 patients of the BH and/or DDS populations. If you don’t, this may not affect you. However, if you want to keep your options open to serve them in the future, you probably need to at least participate in PASSEs. In the DD population, a Tier 1 patient can become a Tier 2 or 3 simply by being accepted into the Waiver program, but as you know, with the long waiting list, they could continue to receive services from their current providers. If you aren’t participating, that person will have to find another provider.

How many PASSEs are there? Why does this seem so secretive? Well, there are at least 4 forming. One PASSE has been pretty public, has released some plans, and were involved in passing the law.  They have held one public meeting. Others have formed and are trying to meet the regulations by June 15. These are common business practices, and some can’t release info until legalities are finalized. I hope to see public meetings from the others soon. It’s a pretty competitive situation right now, so a lot of information is not public. Each PASSE will try to convince you as to why you should invest with them. They are competing since there are only so many partners and investors available. There is a time limit for them, but you still have a little time to make a good investment decision. However, if you report to a board, you probably want to get them info as soon as possible.

Why should you invest? Part of the rules are that each PASSE must collect a savings/investment fund by December 2017 to be able to assume risk of managing funds for Tiers 2 and 3 of DDS and BHS. So that’s one reason each PASSE needs investors to give them money. Investors in a PASSE take on the risk together but also share in the rewards if money is saved. If each PASSE does not raise enough money and show a diverse group of partners to serve each need around the state, they will not pass certification. That’s why it’s pretty competitive to get you to invest with them and only them.

How are investment and participation different? As I understand it, participation requires nomoney from you. You can officially participate with any or all PASSEs once they’re certified to take on clients in order to be “in network” for the people they manage Medicaid funds for.

Any other important info? Each affected client will be attributed to one PASSE once he/she has received the Independent Assessment. The patient or caregiver will have 90 days to change to another PASSE. As said before, if you’re not a participant in that PASSE, you may lose the client. The Independent Assessment will determine what services are medically necessary for each patient, so you might expect some changes there. A lot of details have yet to be worked out.

Where can you get details about each PASSE? If you want to invest or hear more from each PASSE, just send me your email address, and I’ll send it to them. They will send the info they’re allowed to share.

AR Works Changes – How Legislators Voted

SB3 | Act 6 – TO AMEND ARKANSAS WORKS TO REDUCE INCOME ELIGIBILITY LIMITS AND IMPOSE WORK REQUIREMENTS; TO ALLOW THE FLEXIBILITY TO SELECT WHETHER TO BECOME AN “ASSESSMENT STATE” OR A “DETERMINATION STATE”; AND TO DECLARE AN EMERGENCY.

MSL Live on KABF 88.3

Lainey, our Founder, is going live tonight at 5pm on KABF 88.3 with 4 other panelists to talk about the state of Arkansas healthcare! We hope you’ll join her:

  • call in: 501-433-0088.
  • email questions/ comments: SpeakupAR@gmail.com
  • Listen http://www.kabf.org

Panelists are:

  • Marquita Little, Health Policy Director, AACF
  • John Sufna, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, UAMS
  • ShaRhonda Love, Executive director at Arkansas Minority Health Commission
  • Dianna Varady, Director, Arkansas Autism Resource and Outreach Center
  • Elaine Morrow, Founder of Medicaid Saves Lives

Speak Up Arkansas is a one-hour show which hopes to convey an “around the kitchen table” informal discussion that will give you needed information and perspective. The show and panelists hope you’ll call or email to ask about where or how to access services and learn more about navigating the systems.

The show usually starts with each panel member having 5 minutes to provide information about the particular focus area of their health practice, program, or policy work. This is a chance for all listeners to learn about the importance of health care and healthy practices, what services might be available, or what actions they can take to engage or learn more.

Input Needed – DHS Changes

Update 4/19/17: The meeting went well, and Lainey will get that information to you as soon as she can type it up!


Your input is needed!

In 4 days, I (Lainey) will have the chance to ask DHS, BH, & DDS directors questions regarding upcoming changes. (I’ve requested a Medicaid director to join as well.)

So that I can represent you well, I need your questions & concerns to pass on to them! Email them here!

If you didn’t get a chance to attend the last 2 public meetings DHS posted, here are the recordings and slides for your review:

Links to Behavioral Health Presentation and Materials from Monday – April 3, 2017 DHS Meeting

recording: http://bit.ly/2oJu2wU

slides: http://bit.ly/2nSyaq1

Links to Developmental Disability Presentation and Materials from Monday – April 10, 2017 DHS Meeting

recording: https://ardhs.webex.com/ardhs/lsr.php?RCID=6160efb9f39865265911e40a0298d18a

slides: https://ardhs.webex.com/ardhs/onstage/downfile.php?MTID=e06ac2af6f2ecc62fcef28597d7209e49

You might also want to review the new laws passed recently that will affect Medicaid:

Regular Session Bills to Watch (AR 91st General Assembly)

April 2017: Opportunities to Communicate!

A message from the Arkansas Provider Coalition:

Dear providers, beneficiaries, parents of beneficiaries, and other relevant stakeholders –

Beginning Monday, April 3, and continuing every Monday through April 24, DHS will resume large group meetings with stakeholders regarding the Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities client journey and transition of individuals into the Provider-Led Entity model. DHS will seek input from the key stakeholders regarding their roles and responsibilities to ensure the timely and effective launch of this initiative.

The meetings will be from 1:30 – 3:30 P.M., and will be held at St. Vincent Hospital’s Main Auditorium*.

The first meeting will focus on the population of beneficiaries with behavioral health needs and their client journey into the Provider Led Entity model. Our second meeting will focus on the developmentally disabled population and their client journey into the Provider-Led Entity model.

All are welcome to attend either in person, or via the web at: http://bit.ly/2mSKp9D You may register for all four meetings using the link above. If you are unable to attend the meetings in person or online, the sessions will be recorded and posted to the Arkansas Medicaid website (https://www.medicaid.state.ar.us/).

*The Main Auditorium is located in the Center for Education, which is directly across the street from the parking garage. There is a fountain in front of the entrance.

AHCA – Contact U.S. Senators & Representatives

Many of us feel overwhelmed by the information coming out about the American Health Care Act. Whether you support or oppose it, you need to let your federal representatives know how you feel.

If you’re not sure whether you support or oppose it, read the report from the House Budget Committee and the latest official information about the bill.

Some of you may fully support it, and it always helps to contact your legislators and tell them exactly what you like about it so those things won’t change.

We’ve seen many lawmakers oppose it, and they’re making amendments now to improve the bill. Our own Senator Cotton released a statement saying he can’t support it even with the recent amendments, while Westerman thinks it’s very patient-centered. Read about how our other Congressmen plan to vote. This bill has the capability to be devastating for Medicaid recipients. If this bill affects you, you need to contact all Arkansas US Senators and Representatives. Tell them what’s important for you.

Many National Advocacy groups and organizations are concerned about the AHCA, and they’ve asked Congress to protect Medicaid by changing what’s currently written.

The following is information provided by the Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families:

“This week the U.S. House of Representatives is scheduled to consider the American Health Care Act (AHCA), a bill that would repeal many provisions in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and impose a per capita cap on the Medicaid program. In its current form, the bill would be a major step backward for health care coverage for our children, their parents, seniors, and the disabled.”

Read more about the AACF’s concerns.

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“In exchange for cutting and capping funds, states are allowed unprecedented flexibility to set eligibility standards, benefits, families’ out-of-pocket costs, and provider payments.”

“Under the proposed AHCA, the children in the state who rely on ARKids First are at risk of losing the coverage they need and deserve.”

“The Medicaid reductions would also translate into a loss of coverage, fewer benefits, and lower provider payments… including [for] those with special health care needs like autism, Down syndrome, and other conditions that require special care.”

Make sure you contact US Congressmen, list the bill (AHCA), and briefly explain how it will affect you.

More from the AACF: http://www.aradvocates.org/aacf-statement-on-the-american-health-care-act-ahca/

Patient Rights ADDED to HB1706!

The Senate Public Health, Welfare, and Labor committee passed HB1706 with no opposition. It will go on to the Senate. The patient bill of rights was also added in this committee yesterday! I was allowed to testify on your behalf, and I hope we’ll be able to continue in the process of making this the best model it can be for the patients and caregivers. Many thanks to the Arkansas Advocates for Children and FamiliesArkansas Waiver Association- AWADisability Rights Arkansas, and Arkansas Autism Resource & Outreach Center among others for working tirelessly with us to get this accomplished.

Thank you Representative Aaron Pilkington and Arkansas Department of Human Services (specifically Melissa Stone and Brian Bowen) for adding the Patient Rights Preamble to HB1706! We communicated your concerns, but they were responsible for actually adding the language and presenting the amendment for vote.

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