Call & Times

Mass. legislator­s put governor’s plan to revise Medicaid spending on hold

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BOSTON (AP) — A $40.3 billion state budget unveiled Monday by House leaders puts on hold Republican Gov. Charlie Baker's plan for an assessment on employers who don't offer health insurance benefits to their workers.

The spending plan for the July 1 fiscal year approved by the House Ways and Means Committee would increase total spending by 3.8 percent over the current year, but is $180 million below Baker's earlier $40.5 billion budget proposal.

The House budget is "fiscally responsibl­e, it makes some positive investment­s, while making sure we care for the most vulnerable among us," Democratic House Speaker Robert DeLeo said.

The plan would help preserve the state's historical­ly high bond ratings, he added, by further limiting the use of temporary fixes to balance the budget and directing $100 million to the state's cash reserves, called the rainy day fund.

The House budget doesn't include Baker's proposed $2,000-per-worker charge on companies that have more than 10 employees but don't offer health insurance benefits. Democratic Rep. Brian Dempsey, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said the plan instead instructs the administra­tion to hold public hearings and get more input from the business community before imposing such a fee. "There are a number of things we would like to see the administra­tion take into considerat­ion prior to implementi­ng any assessment," Dempsey said.

The House also lowered the revenue estimate from the proposed fee from $300 million sought by Baker to $180 million.

The governor had said he proposed the employer assessment to help counter a surge in costs for MassHealth, the state's Medicaid program, which consumes more than 40 percent of all state spending. Officials have noted a sharp rise in people who have fulltime jobs yet chose to go on Medicaid either because their employers don't offer insur- ance or because the coverage offered is less generous than MassHealth.

After Baker's proposal ran into stiff opposition from business groups, he had indicated in recent weeks that he was open to compromise.

The House budget also calls for the Baker administra­tion to seek a waiver from the federal government that would prohibit workers who are offered health insurance through their employers from enrolling in MassHealth. Massachuse­tts had such a restrictio­n in place before it was superseded by the Affordable Care Act, sometimes known as Obamacare.

A spokesman for Baker said the governor is concerned the House budget did not include his proposed changes to the state's welfare program but looks for to working with lawmakers to produce a final, balanced budget.

Despite a strong Massachuse­tts economy and low unemployme­nt, the state's fiscal outlook remains cloudy. Tax collection­s were running $220 million below official projection­s through the first nine months of the current fiscal year, revenue officials said.

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