Rhode Island Will Restart Process to Award Massive Medicaid Contract

In a sign of uncertainty over looming federal budget cuts, Rhode Island officials have once again postponed any decision over who will manage the state’s largest health insurance program

The price of the doctor’s visit you calculated online might not reflect what you’ll be billed.
President Trump and his allies have indicated they see Medicaid as a potential source of cuts. How much and how deep remains to be seen.
chormail/Envato
Share
The price of the doctor’s visit you calculated online might not reflect what you’ll be billed.
President Trump and his allies have indicated they see Medicaid as a potential source of cuts. How much and how deep remains to be seen.
chormail/Envato
Rhode Island Will Restart Process to Award Massive Medicaid Contract
Copy

Nearly 320,000 Rhode Islanders rely on Medicaid — one out of every three people. Medicaid is the biggest line item in the state budget.

One-third of Rhode Island’s spending every year goes to pay for the program, which is a safety net for low-income individuals and families. More than half of those costs are paid by the federal government.

The program has been bedeviled by problems.

The computer system that helps manage the program, RIBridges, is currently down due to a cybersecurity threat. That’s made it harder for individuals to access their benefits.

Participants and providers alike have long complained that obtaining coverage is not always easy because there’s too much red tape.

Meanwhile, costs have been skyrocketing.

The state relies on private healthcare companies to manage the program. Currently, three companies share the contract: Neighborhood Health Plan of Rhode Island, United Healthcare, and Tufts Health Plan.

The process of awarding a new $15.5 billion contract for the next 5 years — which began 3 years ago — has been messy to say the least. State officials have stopped and restarted the bidding process multiple times.

As of Wednesday, they’re back to square one again.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Attorney General Peter Neronha and a coalition of states forced the Trump administration to restore nearly $7 billion in frozen U.S. Department of Education funding, including $29 million for Rhode Island schools
Gov. Dan McKee revised a previous plan to eliminate bus routes and instead proposed service reductions on 46 of the system’s 58 routes
State officials joined with union leaders to condemn the abrupt decision by the Trump Administration to stop work on a project that’s roughly 80% completed

After battling lupus, pulmonary hypertension, Graves’ Disease, and leukemia while raising four children, Amy Dolan created Mothers Healing Fund to provide financial relief and holistic support for moms in Rhode Island and beyond
New round of Wavemaker tax credits has $500K carveout for college graduates who work in primary care
For the past two years, the McKee administration has funded out-of-school learning opportunities to complement students’ traditional schooling