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  85R11384 BPG-D
 
  By: Perry S.C.R. No. 24
 
 
 
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
         WHEREAS, Millions of medically vulnerable Texans need health
  care but have neither insurance nor personal funds to cover the
  cost; and
         WHEREAS, Texas Medicaid was created to help the medically
  vulnerable, but the huge cost of the federal health care
  bureaucracy reduces the ability of the program to provide in a
  timely manner the services and goods mandated by the federal
  government; and
         WHEREAS, Funding deficiencies also cause Texas Medicaid to
  fail the provider community, including individuals and
  institutions, by offering less than adequate recompense for the
  services and goods they supply; Medicaid reimbursement rates are
  below the cost of doing business for most providers, and as a
  result, more than 30 percent of Texas physicians cannot afford to
  take care of Medicaid enrollees; and
         WHEREAS, In recent years, the federally mandated expansion of
  Medicaid benefits has caused reimbursement rates to plummet
  further, even as the number of Medicaid-covered patients has risen;
  consequently, wait times for appointments have lengthened
  dramatically; a study conducted by Illinois Medicaid found that
  delays in care for Medicaid patients had resulted in unnecessary
  deaths; and
         WHEREAS, Medicaid is the largest single cost item in the
  Texas state budget, accounting for 30 percent of all spending; it
  consumes financial resources that are sorely needed to support
  other programs, including foster care, education, job training,
  border security, and infrastructure; and
         WHEREAS, The original Medicaid legislation of 1965 clearly
  specified that Medicaid programs would be jointly funded by state
  and federal governments and administered by the states; this
  framework is in keeping with the intent of the founding fathers in
  that it allows states to use their superior knowledge of the needs
  of their residents and how best to expend the resources necessary to
  regulate, administer, and control their own programs; states are
  better positioned than the federal government to innovate and
  compete, and they can take advantage of the laboratory of ideas to
  provide superior alternatives to existing delivery systems;
  nevertheless, today, Washington, D.C., bureaucrats at the Centers
  for Medicare and Medicaid Services have decision-making power over
  factors that drive costs in Texas, among them eligibility
  standards, verification processes, compliance oversight, and
  benefit packages; although Texas has received federal approval of a
  Medicaid 1115 Waiver, which grants some additional flexibility,
  this does not address the root cause of problems created by the
  lack of state control; and
         WHEREAS, When it expanded Medicaid eligibility, the federal
  government promised greater access to health care, but medically
  vulnerable residents of Texas have experienced cruel
  disillusionment; without real control over the administration of
  its own Medicaid program, Texas cannot address the problems that
  arise in the delivery of required services with limited funds, and
  the state cannot properly balance its priorities and discharge its
  responsibilities to its citizens; now, therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 85th Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby respectfully urge the United States Congress to uphold the
  original intent of the 1965 Medicaid law to maintain a jointly
  funded, state-administered program by continuing joint funding of
  Texas Medicaid under the current Federal Medical Assistance
  Percentages program while transferring the administration,
  control, and compliance oversight of all aspects and components of
  the Texas Medicaid program from the Centers for Medicare and
  Medicaid Services in Washington to the Texas Legislature; and, be
  it further
         RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official
  copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to
  the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House of
  Representatives of the United States Congress, and to all the
  members of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request that
  this resolution be entered in the Congressional Record as a
  memorial to the Congress of the United States of America.