Archive for October 12th, 2009 (older external links may be broken)
For long-term unemployed, payments near end, By Patrick McGeehan, October 11, 2009, New York Times: “Tens of thousands of New Yorkers have had the unfortunate distinction of collecting unemployment benefits longer than anyone in the state’s history. But last week, state officials began warning the long-term unemployed that Congress has not approved another extension of unemployment insurance payments. That lapse will leave about 37,000 residents of the state, like Robert C. Brannigan, without benefits this week, and will force others to contemplate applying for food stamps or other forms of welfare that they had never considered. Mr. Brannigan, a 26-year-old construction worker from Mastic, received his final weekly payment of $430 last week, but he still is No. 20 on a waiting list for jobs assigned by his union in Manhattan. When he checked the State Labor Department’s Facebook page for news about a pending extension, he found a video explaining how to apply for food stamps and other assistance from the state…”
Tough choices for feds giving out broadband money, By Joelle Tessler (AP), October 11, 2009, Washington Post: “The federal government will soon start handing out the first $4 billion from a pot of stimulus funds intended to spread high-speed Internet connections to more rural communities, poor neighborhoods and other pockets of the country clamoring for better access. The challenge is that the government has received $28 billion in requests. So the reviewers at the Commerce and Agriculture Departments who will award the broadband money must make hard choices. The 2,200 applications each envision something different - more fiber-optic lines, for example, or computer labs or municipal wireless networks. But they all promise that their proposals will create jobs and bring new economic opportunities…”
More of state’s poor may soon get public defender, By Bruce Vielmetti, October 11, 2009, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: “Seven years after a Journal Sentinel investigation revealed how outdated eligibility criteria prevent hundreds of poor residents charged with crimes from getting a public lawyer, those same 1987 standards remain in effect. The criteria essentially say that anyone earning $7.25 an hour, with a $2,000 car and $300 cash isn’t poor enough for a public defender. The paper’s 2002 series “Unequal Justice” examined hundreds of cases in which defendants were denied a public defender and found dozens who were forced to defend themselves, including the nearly illiterate, a mentally impaired senior and a first-time defendant who thought the prosecutor was his lawyer. Everyone in the criminal justice system agreed in 2002 that the practice violates the U.S. Constitution and often leads to injustice. But year after year, legislative attempts to change the standards have failed…”
- Proposed Medicaid expansion could heap big costs on cash-poor California, By Mike Zapler, October 12, 2009, San Jose Mercury News: “An expansion of Medicaid contemplated by health care reformers in Congress may be good news for the uninsured, but it could be a bitter pill for cash-strapped California that would cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars it doesn’t have. President Barack Obama and Democrats in Congress want to use Medicaid as one of the main vehicles for extending health insurance to many of the 46 million Americans who lack coverage. But because Medicaid costs are split between the federal and state governments, California officials fear that this change would saddle California with a costly mandate at a time when the state can’t afford its existing Medicaid program, called Medi-Cal…”
- Lynch wary of Medicaid reform cost, By Daniel Barrick, October 12, 2009, Concord Monitor: “Gov. John Lynch is one of several governors raising concerns about the health care reform proposals being debated in Congress. Specifically, Lynch is worried that a plan to expand Medicaid, the government-run insurance program for the poor and elderly, will saddle state budgets with hefty costs. Pam Walsh, Lynch’s deputy chief of staff, said the governor supports the larger goal of expanding health care coverage, but he doesn’t think states should be stuck with the bill…”
- Medicaid keeps stretching, By Catherine Candisky, October 11, 2009, Columbus Dispatch: “The recession and continuing job losses are pushing Medicaid enrollment and spending to record levels, raising concerns about how Ohio will continue to meet the soaring demand. Every month, 10,000 to 15,000 Ohioans join the Medicaid rolls, most after losing their job and the employer-provided health insurance that came with it. Over the past 12 months, Ohio’s rolls increased by 154,000, the largest caseload growth in nearly seven years…”
- Expected $1B shortfall looms for Fla. Medicaid, By Lloyd Dunkelberger, October 10, 2009, Ocala Star-Banner: “Florida is heading for a cliff when it comes to Medicaid spending. The federal government has boosted its support for Medicaid, the joint federal-state health care program for the poor and disabled, in Florida during the economic recession. But the extra funding is scheduled to dry up in December 2010, leaving Florida perhaps more than $1 billion short and facing the prospect of having to cut back critical medical services for some of the state’s poorest and sickest residents. Florida isn’t alone. A new report says the states, facing the loss of federal stimulus funding, may experience cuts ‘perhaps on a scale not ever seen in Medicaid…’”

