Thursday, December 13, 2012

KanCare & Legislative Updates

A few interesting articles courtesy of KHI News Service...

Crum, Weber to lead House health, social-service committees
In the coming months, State Reps. David Crum and Brian Weber will be spending a lot of time together.

Weber, a Republican from Dodge City, today was named chair of the House Social Services Budget Committee. Crum, a Republican from Augusta, will be the committee’s vice chair.
Crum, in turn, was appointed chair of the House Health and Human Services Committee. Weber will serve as vice chair.

“I think this will make for a smooth transition,” Crum said. “Brian is a very capable person, but he’s not been on the Social Services Budget Committee before so he’ll have a lot to learn.”
Crum, first elected in 2006, has spent the past six years on both committees. He chaired the Social Services Budget Committee in 2011 and 2012.

Weber, 30, served on the Health and Human Services Committee this year, where he said he played an active role. He was first appointed to the Legislature to...read more



KanCare ombudsman hired
A Lawrence man who serves on the Kansas Council on Developmental Disabilities has been hired by the state to be the ombudsman for KanCare enrollees.

James Bart, 50, started the job today. He will office at the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services headquarters at 503 S. Kansas Ave. in Topeka.

Bart said he has a law degree from Creighton University but had not practiced law since leaving Nebraska for Kansas about 17 years ago. He is married and the father of a 19-year-old son with developmental disabilities and three younger children.

"I'll make a serious commitment to consumers of Kansas Medicaid...read more



KanCare workforce shift hampering local agencies
Workforce shortages prompted by the overhaul of the Kansas Medicaid program are hampering operations at some social service agencies in Johnson County and elsewhere in the state, according to executives at the organizations.

Human Services Director Debbie Collins said since September, her Johnson County agency had lost three of its nine case managers that assist frail elderly Medicaid clients through the Area Agency on Aging...read more

Friday, December 7, 2012

Kansas Receives Approval from CMS for 1115 Waiver

This afternoon, the Governor announced that Kansas has received the go-ahead from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to proceed with implementation of KanCare on January 1, 2013.  Kansas officials will continue to work with CMS to finalize the "special terms and conditions" of the waiver.


Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Early Intervention for Children with Developmental Issues

From the KU Med Center:

A pediatrics clinic at Fort Leavenworth is providing early intervention for children with developmental issues
November 28, 2012

By Cori Ast

The Carlton family, clockwise from left: Ilyra, 10; Lt. Col. Charlie Carlton; Natalia, 13; Josephine, 12; Sawyer, 6; Mary; Charlie, 8
This was news that couldn't wait.

Mary Carlton had just taken her 3-year-old son, Sawyer, to the Fort Leavenworth pediatrics diagnostic clinic operated by the University of Kansas Medical Center. She needed to share Sawyer's diagnosis with her husband, Lt. Col. Charlie Carlton, but he was more than 6,500 miles away, on a tour of duty in Iraq.

"I had to tell him on Skype that his son had autism," Mary said.

The diagnostic clinic at Fort Leavenworth began in 2009 to address a problem very unique to military families like the Carltons. Most families at Fort Leavenworth are on post to attend the Army Command and General Staff College, which only lasts 11 months. For a family with a child who needs evaluated, "that's a very short time," says Jennifer Burford, MS, the exceptional family member program (EFMP) manager at Fort Leavenworth.

When Charles was deployed in 2009, Mary was left to marshal their troop of five children at their Fort Leavenworth home. But 3-year-old Sawyer wasn't the child Mary was most worried about.

Josephine, the couple's second oldest, took Charles' deployment pretty hard.

"Josie had a really tough time when Charlie deployed," Mary says of their then 9-year-old daughter. "She completely fell apart and I was really struggling to help her."

Burford suggested Mary bring both kids to the pediatrics diagnostic clinic, which visits the post several times a year to provide diagnoses and treatment plans for military children.

"Josie was my big fire at the time. Sawyer was my little fire, but he was contained," Mary said.

Early intervention is important for treating children with developmental challenges, particularly children with autism, explains KU Medical Center pediatrician Chet Johnson, M.D.  "Especially in the first five years of life, there's tremendous changes going on in the brain and you can influence that development based on the experiences a child is provided. If you can offer the right kind of intervention early, you can help children better reach their potential."

But without a timely appointment, there is no early intervention.

"At the time the Carltons participated in the outreach clinic, the wait to get a consultation at KU Medical Center or Children's Mercy Hospital was six to nine months. That was way too long-by the time our families got in, it would be time for them to leave," explained Burford. "Then they would have to reinvent the wheel at their next installation and the one after that."

"I felt relief"

At the same time Mary was struggling with Josie, she was worried(read more...)

Friday, November 30, 2012

Power Up! Inspirational Award Winners

Power Up! The InterHab Annual Conference took place over a month ago and we're still thinking about and inspired by all the Annual Award Winners as well as the artists who created original artwork to give to award winners.  Below are just a couple of the award winners nominated by Rainbows United, Inc. (special thanks to Rainbows for putting their stories online!)


Thursday, November 29, 2012

Update from KanCare Teleconference

Below is an update from KHI News Service regarding the teleconference hosted by the State yesterday afternoon:


Federal officials say they hope to act soon on KanCare waiver request
No support expressed for the proposed changes during a one-hour conference call

By Mike Shields
KHI News Service
Nov. 28, 2012

TOPEKA — The federal official in charge of reviewing 1115 Medicaid waiver requests sat in on an hour-long conference call today to hear Kansans' views on Gov. Sam Brownback's proposed Medicaid makeover plan.

Only about 20 people had time to comment but none of them expressed support for KanCare, which would move virtually all the state's 380,000 Medicaid beneficiaries into managed care plans run by three insurance companies.

Most people who called in questioned the need for KanCare and expressed concern that they or family members would lose services or their case managers. Others called for a delay, saying the program's planned Jan. 1 launch date would come too soon.

Vikki Wachino, director of the children and adults health programs group at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, in rare public comments about KanCare, said CMS had asked Kansas officials to organize today's call so she and other CMS officials could hear public response to the state's preparations in anticipation of an upcoming decision from CMS on Kansas' waiver request. She didn't say when the decision would come, but hinted it could be soon.

"We asked them to do that now at this time...so we can decide where we go from here, she said during the teleconference introductions. "We've spent a lot of intensive and thoughtful time with the state on their proposal and have heard from them loud and clear their desire to move on a Jan. 1 start date and we would like to make the decision soon whether that time frame is the right time frame for Kansas and whether the alternative of not moving forward on that timeframe would create transition implications of their own. So I really invite you on this call to share your thoughts and concerns."

'Listen-only mode'
Wachino said no more after her introductory remarks during which she noted that she and other CMS officials on the call were in "listen-only mode."

Kari Bruffett, director of the division of Health Care Finance at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said earlier in the day during a separate teleconference with Medicaid providers that she expected CMS to deliver a decision...read more

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

KanCare: Teleconference, CMS, Network Reports



Thank you to KHI News Service for these important updates...


KanCare Teleconference today @ 4pmThose interested in learning more about KanCare may call (855) 229-1643. The conference is limited to the first 500 callers. Questions and comments also may be sent to KanCare@kdheks.gov. Officials from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services also are expected to take part.


Approval of 1115 Waiver from CMSWith a little over a month left, the State has not yet received approval from the Centers for Medicaid on the State's 1115 Waiver request.  


Network AdequacyIn a related development, state officials posted on the KanCare website some "network adequacy" reports describing the managed care companies' provider networks. They said they would post additional reports as they are available.

http://www.kancare.ks.gov/download/KanCare_MCO_Network_Access.pdf









Wednesday, November 21, 2012

KanCare: November Educational Tour

Below is an update regarding November KanCare Educational Tour dates hosted by Kansas Department of Health and Environment.  Please see the KanCare website below for full details including address information for each location and special assistance/accommodations requests, contact information, etc.  These meetings are intended to help Medicaid beneficiaries understand the KanCare enrollment process.

http://www.kancare.ks.gov/events.htm


KanCare Educational Tour Schedule:

Monday, November 26th: 
1pm - 3pm & 6pm - 8pm


  • Dodge City: Public Library
  • Pittsburg: Homer Cole Center
  • Topeka: Capitol Plaza Hotel

Tuesday, November 27th: 
1pm - 3pm & 6pm - 8pm
  • Garden City: Garden City Senior Center *The afternoon meeting will start at 1:30pm
  • Indepencence: ICC West, Woods Family Community Center
  • Olathe: Holiday Inn


Wednesday, November 28th:
1pm - 3pm & 6pm - 8pm

  • Hays: Robbins Center at FHSU
  • Wichita: WSU Metroplex
  • Kansas City: Hilton Garden Inn

Thursday, November 29th:
1pm - 3pm & 6pm - 8pm
  • Salina: Bicentennial Center
  • El Dorado: Civic Center
  • Emporia: Senior Center

If Medicaid enrollees cannot attend the above dates, they may register in advance to participate in a KanCare Educational webinar to be held December 14th 10am - 12pm.


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

KRS Stakeholders Meetings - Schedule

the note below comes from the Kansas Rehabilitation Services a division of the KS Dept. for Children and Families


KRS Stakeholders Meetings Announced
NOTICE OF STAKEHOLDER MEETINGS
   
Individuals and organizations interested in employment and independent living services for Kansans with disabilities are invited to participate in a series of regional Stakeholder Meetings to be hosted in November and December 2012 by Kansas Rehabilitation Services (KRS) Director Michael Donnelly.
         
KRS is a division of the Kansas Department for Children and Families. KRS is responsible for vocational rehabilitation and independent living programs for Kansans with disabilities.
     
During the meetings, KRS Director Michael Donnelly will discuss the four strategic goals of KRS.  These goals are:

  • Kansans with disabilities will achieve quality competitive, integrated employment and self-sufficiency.
  •  KRS, its providers and partners will be accountable for the achievement of employment and the effective use of resources.
  • KRS will emphasize the employment potential of students with disabilities and improve the outreach and outcomes for transition-aged students.
  •  KRS will emphasize the meaningful involvement of people with disabilities, public/private partners, employers and other stakeholders in KRS programs, services and activities.

     
Participants will be asked to share:

  • Their knowledge and experience related to the needs of Kansans with disabilities
  • Their views about the strengths of KRS programs and services
  • Suggestions on ways to improve programs and customer service
  • Opportunities for greater collaboration with other stakeholders and organizations

     
Input received will become part of the agency's comprehensive statewide needs assessment and will be used to update strategic goals and state plans.
     
Each of the meetings will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. according to the following schedule:
     
      November 20, 2012 ­ Topeka
      Pioneer Room, Maner Conference Center, 1717 SW Topeka Boulevard
     
      November 27, 2012 ­ Overland Park
      Johnson County Workforce Partnership Office, 9221 Quivira Road
     
      November 29, 2012 -- Wichita
      Sudermann Commons Room, Metropolitan Complex, 5015 E. 29th Street North
      (Please enter through Door C on the east side of the building.)
     
      December 4, 2012 ­ Chanute
      3rd Floor, Memorial Hall, 101 S. Lincoln
     
      December 11, 2012 ­ Garden City
      Bunker Room, Kansas Department for Children and Families Service Center, 1710 Palace Drive
     
      December 12, 2012 -- Hays
      Expeditions Room, Sternberg Museum of Natural History, 3000 Sternberg Drive
     
 All meetings will be held in accessible locations and real-time captioning will be provided.  To request a reasonable accommodation (such as a sign language interpreter, Braille, large print, other special media or any other accommodation), please call toll-free 1-866-213-9079 <tel:1-866-213-9079> or toll-free TDD 1-800-432-0698 <tel:1-800-432-0698>  at least 10 days before the meeting you will be attending.
         
In case of inclement weather, please call to confirm the meeting: toll-free customer service line at 1-866-213-9079 <tel:1-866-213-9079>  or toll-free TDD 1-800-432-0698 <tel:1-800-432-0698> .

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Back on Track: KanCare Updates

For those who follow the InterHab Insider we apologize for falling behind on posting relevant updates about the recent activity regarding KanCare.  Please see below for an important article published by KHI yesterday.


KanCare Update
KanCare Enrollment Packet
Below is an article posted yesterday by KHI News Service.  While there has been some confusion as to the activity surrounding the auto-enrollment process for KanCare, it appears the goal of Kansas Department of Health and Environment (who administers the KS Medicaid program) is to have all KanCare enrollment packets mailed to Medicaid recipients by the end of November.  While long-term care supports for persons with I/DD have temporarily been carved out of the KanCare program, Medicaid recipients will still be auto-enrolled into KanCare for medical care.

The article below also includes an update regarding discussions between state officials and the federal entity Centers for Medicaid Services.  The state's KanCare program relies on approval from CMS of their request for an 1115 waiver.  The update provides an outline of conditions the state's KanCare plan would have to meet.

KHI News Service - November 14, 2012



Friday, September 7, 2012

Special Commentary in KC Star: Can Kansas get better results at lower cost?

Below is a special commentary posted in the KC Star written by Johnson County columnist Steve Rose:

This could easily be a column about “Kan-Scare,” rather than KanCare because there are so many uncertainties about a sweeping reform program in Kansas that starts Jan.1, 2013, pending final federal approval, that folks could rightly be very concerned about their future medical care.

On that date, Medicaid — medical care for the poor — will cease to exist in Kansas. In its place, the 350,000 Kansans — adults, children, elderly and the disabled — now served by Medicaid will become a part of a private, managed care program called KanCare.

Medicaid in Kansas has been a $3 billion outlay in state and federal funds. But by putting everything into private hands, the Brownback administration is claiming they will reduce expenditures by almost $1 billion over the next five years.

Just how those savings will occur is the big mystery. KanCare was concocted, according to The Wichita Eagle, “behind closed doors.”

It is undeniable Kansas Medicaid costs have been increasing at an unsustainable rate of 7.4 percent per year, way over the inflation rate. So, something dramatic had to happen.

And dramatic things will happen. You don’t cut the budget that much without experiencing some major upheaval.

According to Brownback’s administration, KanCare’s chief aim is to curb growth while improving outcomes.

Are both possible?

According to the proponents of KanCare, one of the primary targets for cost savings will be reducing the numbers of poor residing in nursing homes. The new managed care companies will be taking a hard look at “necessities” of health care, and one conclusion already reached...read more


KanCare Website Launched

Kansas officials launched the new website www.kancare.ks.gov this week. The website serves as a resource for both Medicaid beneficiaries and Medicaid providers.













Friday, August 24, 2012

CMS Public Comment Period - Round 2 Begins!


The public comment period for the Kansas 1115 waiver re-submission is officially open and will last until September 21.  Approval by the federal Center for Medicaid Services (CMS) of the 1115 waiver will enable Kansas officials to fully implement KanCare.

The link to the CMS Public Comment Forum for the Kansas 1115 Waiver re-submission is:

https://cmsideas.uservoice.com/forums/173237-section-1115-demonstration-kansas-kancare#/settings


Please note that the CMS public comment forum is much like a “talk back” section for online media, which includes a social media component, i.e. you can ‘vote’ for or concur with others’ posted comments.  You can concur a maximum of ten times.  Please note that your comments are limited to 5,000 words.  It is important to be concise in sharing your concerns with CMS.

All persons with developmental disabilities; family members of persons with DD; and professionals in the DD field are encouraged to provide feedback directly to CMS via this public comment forum.  You may recall having participated in this online forum before.  The state retracted it's original waiver submission to CMS due to an oversight to consult all tribal health organizations (as is required by the State of Kansas' tribal consultation policy).

The re-submission of the Kansas 1115 waiver request process now requires a second round of public comment opportunities.  While CMS has assured advocates that comments submitted during the previous public comment period were saved, it is very important that concerned Kansans once again express their thoughts directly to CMS.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

KDADS Announces Additional Forums on KanCare



The Kansas Department of Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) will host additional informational sessions for persons receiving Medicaid services; family members of persons receiving services; and providers of Medicaid services.

From KDADS: "The purpose of these sessions are to provide updates and information about the implementation of the KanCare comprehensive managed care program effective January 1, 2013, and to respond to any questions you have."

It's important to note that long-term support services for Kansans with developmental disabilities are not scheduled to be wrapped into KanCare until 1 year after the program is initiated.  However, persons with DD and their families will still be auto-enrolled into the program from the beginning, due to the fact that medical services will be included in the KanCare managed care program.  For these reasons, recipients of service and providers of service alike are encouraged to continue attending any of these forum opportunities to learn more about the program, ask questions and express concerns!

As with the previous round of meetings, state officials are offering separate meetings for providers of service and recipients of service - all participants are asked to RSVP!

Please take a look at the attached document for details.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Update from KHI: ADRCs & Case Management

See below for an article by Dave Ranney that provides insight into progress on Aging and Disability Resource Center roles and responsibilities:


KHI News Service
August 13, 2012
Changes underway for determining in-home Medicaid services:
New assessment system expected to start in January along with KanCare


"State officials are changing the way they determine which in-home Medicaid services are provided to the frail elderly and people who are physically disabled.

The new system will rely on a single agency or organization with a presence in each of the state’s 105 counties to assess what services a person will receive. Currently, there are more than 30 organizations involved with the process. Some assess only the elderly. Others focus solely on the physically disabled.
State officials said their aim is to create a “one-stop shop,” so that services will be determined in the same place regardless of a person’s condition.

'Mishmash'
“The system we have now is a real mishmash,” said Shawn Sullivan, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services. “We’ll be going to one that takes more of a no-wrong-door, single-entry approach and implements a conflict-free provision of services.”

About 12,000 Kansans currently rely on the services provided by the system, at an annual cost to taxpayers of about $200 million.

A solicitation to potential contractors interested in managing the new system was put out in February. Bids were due April 3.

Sullivan said he hoped to have the contract awarded sometime next month so that a single, statewide Aging and Disability Resource Center (ADRC) will be up and running by Jan. 1, which also is the scheduled start of KanCare, Gov. Sam Brownback’s plan for letting managed care companies administer the state’s $2.9 billion Medicaid program. KanCare remains contingent upon federal approvals.

The resource center, according to Sullivan, would be in charge of measuring the needs of an elderly, physically disabled or brain-injured person. It also would do preliminary screening for Medicaid eligibility and help the person choose the managed care company best suited to meet the person’s needs.

Today, the assessments are handled by 11 area agencies on aging, 10 centers for independent living and about a dozen home health agencies that specialize in caring for the brain-injured.

“When you have this many systems in place, it can be confusing as to who to turn to for assistance,” Sullivan said. “With the ADRC, we’ll be going to one database, one information source and one hotline for people to call.”

Federal initiative
The change, he said, was driven by a federal initiative aimed at increasing efforts to help Medicaid beneficiaries live in community settings rather than nursing homes and a concern among state officials that not enough was being done to prevent the centers for independent living from inflating their assessments in ways that generated more work — and therefore more revenue — for their case management and home-health programs.

Currently, the centers are allowed to assess a physically disabled person’s needs, serve as the case manager and provide the services.

“When we did our KanCare public forums last year, we had a lot of (Medicaid) providers say we should look at separating the services — that it might be OK for someone to do the assessment and the case management, but it wasn’t OK to have someone doing case management and direct care,” Sullivan said. “Part of the ADRC is in response to that.”

The concern about potential conficts of interest has centered on the centers for independent living.
The area aging agencies assess the needs of the frail elderly and often serve as case managers, but unlike the centers for independent living, none of them provide in-home care. Instead, the frail elderly receive services from individuals hired by the seniors or employed by home health agencies.

“Objectivity has always been one of our core values,” said Julie Govert Walter, who runs the 18-county North Central-Flint Hills Area Agency on Aging in Manhattan. “We’re not getting paid to provide a service in somebody’s home, so there’s no incentive to say they need a whole bunch of services they may not really need.”

In Kansas, Medicaid provides home and community-based services for about 5,400 frail elders, 6,100 people with physical disabilities and 400 people with brain injuries. The new system will not apply to people with developmental disabilities who receive in-home Medicaid services. Their needs will continue to be assessed by one of the state’s 28 Community Developmental Disability Organizations.

Case management
Sullivan said that after Jan. 1, the ADRC assessments would be forwarded to the managed care companies, which then would take on the case management responsibilities.

The companies, he said, would have the option of subcontracting with other case management organizations. For example, the companies could subcontract with a center for independent living for case management or direct-care services.

Some details still are being worked out.

“We’re in the process — over the next couple weeks — of finalizing the details for the managed care plans,” Sullivan said. “That’s not been decided yet.”

But it’s clear, he said, that a subcontractor won’t be allowed"...(read more)


Another related article from KHI on ADRCs:
Kansas looks to Wisconsin for ADRC model
System there has helped reduce waiting lists for services, officials say



Monday, August 6, 2012

A look at the Kansas political landscape...

The New York Times published an article yesterday examining the changing political landscape in Kansas and showcasing the viewpoints between conservatives and republicans:

The New York Times
By John Eligon
Published August 5, 2012


"TOPEKA, Kan. — In eight years in the Kansas Legislature, State Senator Dick Kelsey said, he never voted for a tax increase and frequently supported spending cuts. As an evangelical pastor, a staunch opponent of abortion and an acknowledged leader in the fight to elect conservative lawmakers, he has been endorsed by Kansans for Life and the National Rifle Association.

Yard signs for state candidates at a Republican forum in Topeka. Conservatives say some party members are too moderate.

But after publicly criticizing elements of Gov. Sam Brownback’s tax plan this year, Mr. Kelsey found himself among a cluster of conservative Republican state senators that a more conservative coalition here is working to defeat in Tuesday’s primary elections.

Kansas politics have been tilting more to the right for at least the last two decades. And now that shift is prompting a bitter clash within the state’s Republican Party. Conservatives are feverishly working to win the Senate and drive out the last remnants of what they see as moderate Republicanism in a state with a deep-rooted history of centrist Republicans in the mold of Bob Dole, Dwight D. Eisenhower and Nancy Kassebaum.

The divisive primary campaign reflects the ambivalence gripping Republicans across the country, yet the situation here is more complicated than the typical conservative-versus-establishment disputes.

What sets the battle in Kansas apart is the distance between the factions. Conservative and moderate Republicans essentially operate as separate parties, and so far, no one — including Mr. Brownback — has stepped forward to try to bridge that gap in the popular tradition of moderation. Instead, each side claims to represent the soul of the party.

“We don’t even know what it means to be a Republican in the state of Kansas,” said Casey W. Moore, a conservative Senate candidate from the Topeka area.

Nationally, conservatives have been defining the party in their image. Last week, they scored a big victory in Texas when a Tea Party favorite defeated Gov. Rick Perry’s favored candidate in the primary for an open United States Senate seat. That outcome followed conservative victories this year over established Republicans in Senate primary races in Indiana and Nebraska.

Kansas conservatives are optimistic that they can do the same on the state level and upend long-held assumptions that the people of their state prefer moderate lawmakers.

Two years ago, conservative Republicans here captured a majority in the Kansas House of Representatives — around 70 of 125 seats — for the first time in about four decades"...(read more)



Friday, August 3, 2012

Wichita Eagle Editorial: Waiting lists loom

DRC's "End the Wait" Campaign inspired a great editorial from Rhonda Holman of the Wichita Eagle Editorial Board:


Published Friday, August 3, 2012:

"As the Brownback administration takes pride in fiscal-year-ending reserves, another number looms large and shamefully – the more than 7,000 Kansans with physical or developmental disabilities who are awaiting home- and community-based services.

With such services, individuals can live independently or in homelike residential settings. Without them, they may be forced to move into nursing homes – not only sacrificing quality of life but costing taxpayers far more.

Neither Gov. Sam Brownback nor the Legislature has demonstrated much urgency to better fund disability services and whittle down these lists, although the budget surplus would have made that possible.

The Brownback administration has argued that it inherited the waiting lists from former Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, now U.S. secretary of health and human services, and “that merely increasing funding for such services will not solve the problem,” as Shawn Sullivan, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, wrote in a May commentary.

Officials also point to reforms coming with the reinvention of Medicaid as KanCare in January 2013, and with the addition to KanCare of the management of long-term care services for the developmentally disabled a year later.

But state leaders soon may be unable to set their own timetable for addressing the lists.

That’s because the U.S. Justice Department has been conducting an investigation into whether the waiting list for individuals with physical disabilities violates the Americans With Disabilities Act and court decisions including the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1999 Olmstead case, which ruled that a disabled person has a right to live in the “least restrictive environment.”

That investigation could lead to a lawsuit, and eventually a costly remedy being forced on Kansas. Georgia has had to spend $100 million on disability services since 2009 as part of a settlement agreement with the federal government.

“Wisdom would tell you we should handle this waiting-list issue on our own terms, proactively,” Tim Wood, manager of the Topeka-based Disability Rights Center of Kansas’ “End the Wait” campaign, told The Eagle editorial board.

Wood and other advocates plan to ramp up their campaign in time for the 2013 legislative session, looking to a long-neglected legislative blueprint for guidance on how to not only reduce waiting lists but expand and strengthen the home- and community-based services system. Another meeting is planned in Sedgwick County for Aug. 14 or 16 (for more information, call 785-273-9661).

The campaign aims to reduce the waiting list for services for the developmentally disabled, which includes more than 3,200 people without services and another nearly 1,700 awaiting additional services.

The wait averages 30 months but can stretch on for years.

Looking the other way won’t make these lists disappear, nor do anything to help the people languishing on them."




Thursday, July 26, 2012

KanCare Educational Tour

The State of Kansas will host a series of informational meetings on KanCare beginning on July 30th.  Informational meetings for Medicaid providers will be held during afternoons on each of the scheduled dates, while information for Medicaid beneficiaries and their families will be held in the evenings.  Below is a brief overview of the schedule.  Please download the attached forms for details on meeting locations and registration.

Note: Providers must pre-register to attend!

Monday, July 30th
Garden City & Topeka
Medicaid Providers: 1pm - 4pm
Medicaid Beneficiaries/Families: 6pm - 8pm

Tuesday, July 31st
Wichita & Leavenworth
Medicaid Providers: 1pm - 4pm
Medicaid Beneficiaries/Families: 6pm - 8pm

Wednesday August 1st
Salina & Fort Scott
Medicaid Providers: 1pm - 4pm
Medicaid Beneficiaries/Families: 6pm - 8pm

Thursday August 2nd
Hays & Overland Park
Medicaid Providers: 1pm - 4pm
Medicaid Beneficiaries/Families: 6pm - 8pm


Medicaid Providers: Location Details & Registration 
Medicaid Beneficiaries/Families: Location Details & Information

Thursday, July 12, 2012

There's Still Time: Submit comments on KanCare

You may recall that Administrative officials held public forums in Topeka and Wichita last month on the subject of their 1115 waiver to be submitted to the Centers for Medicaid Services (CMS).  This submission to CMS will in fact be a re-submission as the Administration withdrew their original application for the waiver to meet state policies requiring consultation with tribal health organizations.

The public forums were well attended and many participated via teleconference at the Topeka forum. However if you were unable to participate - or you were there but still have additional concerns or thoughts you would like to share with the Administration on the 1115 waiver there is still time to do so.

You may submit written comments via email to KanCare@kdheks.gov


The deadline to submit is July 14th.  Seeing as that deadline falls on a Saturday, administration officials are encouraging comments to be submitted by this Friday.

Once the State re-submits the 1115 waiver to CMS there will be a second public comment period - this comment period will be hosted by CMS on their website. Stay tuned to The InterHab Insider, we'll be sure to notify you when the State re-submits and when CMS begins the public comment period.


Monday, July 9, 2012

"KanCare is looking like another DMV disaster-to-be"

Kansas City Star columnist Steve Rose weighs in with concerns about the hurried implementation of KanCare and the unwise decision to include long-term supports for Kansans with developmental disabilities:



"KanCare is looking like another DMV disaster-to-be"
July 5, 2012
Steve Rose

The Kansas Health Institute has nailed it. 


KanCare - to paraphrase - is likely to be a mess when it is implemented on Jan. 1.


On that date 380,000 poor and disabled Kansans, who now receive services through Medicaid, will be shifted to private, managed care in an attempt to save money. The new program is called KanCare.

The KHI researched what has happened in Kentucky, which recently has implemented what we are about to implement. And, so far, it has had lots of hiccups.

And Kentucky did not even include three categories that are included in the Kansas plan: long-term services for the elderly, physically disabled and, eventually, the developmentally disabled.

Personally, I am not opposed to the overall concept. Clearly, Medicaid costs are out of control, and the best hope for efficiencies is through some sort of fixed-rate managed care, although — as I have written before — the developmentally disabled should never go to managed care.

But this must be done very, very carefully. And the way it looks, Kansas will not be prepared by Jan.1 to make a smooth transition.

According to KHI news service, the state auditor from Kentucky said...(read more)



Thursday, July 5, 2012

KDADS is Official

As of July 1, 2012 the Kansas Department on Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) will be the state's official charge for administering the following services:

  • Aging services
  • Mental Health Programs
  • Addiction and Prevention Programs
  • State Hospitals and Institutions
  • Home and Community-based Waiver Programs

KDADS has formed as the result of an executive reorganization order issued by Governor Sam Brownback during the 2012 legislative session.  It is a merging of the following departments: The Kansas Department on Aging, the Disability and Behavioral Health Services Division at SRS and parts of the Health Occupations Credentialing Division at KDHE.

See below for an introductory letter, organizational chart and FAQs provided by Sean Sullivan, Secretary of KDADS:




Thursday, June 28, 2012

Supreme Court Rules to Uphold Affordable Health Care Act

This morning the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) issued its opinion on the Affordable Care Act (ACA).  Of most concern was the constitutionality of the law requiring individuals to purchase health insurance (or pay a fine).  In addition, the Court was determining whether the federal government could force states to share in the costs/administration of Medicaid to implement new reforms of the ACA.

Below is a "plain english" summary of the Supreme Court opinion as reported from the SCOTUS Blog:
http://scotusblog.wpengine.com/

In Plain English: The Affordable Care Act, including its individual mandate that virtually all Americans buy health insurance, is constitutional. There were not five votes to uphold it on the ground that Congress could use its power to regulate commerce between the states to require everyone to buy health insurance. However, five Justices agreed that the penalty that someone must pay if he refuses to buy insurance is a kind of tax that Congress can impose using its taxing power. That is all that matters. Because the mandate survives, the Court did not need to decide what other parts of the statute were constitutional, except for a provision that required states to comply with new eligibility requirements for Medicaid or risk losing their funding. On that question, the Court held that the provision is constitutional as long as states would only lose new funds if they didn't comply with the new requirements, rather than all of their funding.



Official opinion released by SCOTUS:
http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/11-393c3a2.pdf

From KHI:
http://www.khi.org/news/2012/jun/28/high-court-upholds-affordable-care-act/
A summary report on the Supreme Court ruling with detail on Kansas' response to ACA thus far and announcements of upcoming responses from Kansas officials

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

KanCare MCO's Announced

Amerigroup, United Healthcare and Sunflower State Health Plan, a subsidiary of Centene have been awarded contracts to manage services delivered to Medicaid recipients.

From KHI:
KanCare contracts signed
By Mike Shields
June 27, 2012


TOPEKA — Kansas officials today announced contract awards to three Medicaid managed care companies.

They also said the new KanCare program's projected savings over five years would be $1 billion instead of the $850 million previously forecast.

The three winning companies are Amerigroup, UnitedHealthcare and Sunflower State Health Plan, a subsidiary of Centene. The unsuccessful bidders were WellCare and Coventry.

The contract awards have been anxiously anticipated by many of the state's Medicaid service providers. The providers have been heavily courted by the competing managed care companies as they have vied to develop the provider networks they will need to serve the state's 380,000 Medicaid clients.

Federal officials must approve the contracts, rates and a Medicaid waiver before the administration of Gov. Sam Brownback can implement the Medicaid makeover plan first announced last November.
Brownback officials have said they aim to launch the KanCare program on Jan. 1, pending the needed approvals and reviews certifying that the contractors are ready.

KanCare would shift virtually all of the state's Medicaid enrollees into fixed-rate managed care plans. Currently, about 70 percent of the state's Medicaid population is served by managed care organizations.
Watch this space for additional information as this story develops.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Schedule for Public Forums on 1115 Waiver

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) has scheduled two public meetings on the topic of Kansas' Section 115 KanCare demonstration application:

June 18, 2012 at 2:00pm
Hughes Metropolitan Complex
Wichita State University
5015 E. 29th St. N
Wichita, Kansas

June 20, 2012 at 3:00pm
Memorial Hall Auditorium
120 SW 10th Ave.
Topeka, Kansas

Please plan on attending and recruit your fellow DD advocates to attend as well!

Please also note that the State is accepting public comment through the internet at:  http://www.kdheks.gov/hcf/kancare/

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

News Flash! Kansas Medicaid 1115 Waiver Submission Delayed

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment distributed a news release yesterday indicating they will re-submit a formal Section 1115 Waiver application to the Centers for Medicaid Services in July.  The 1115 waiver request must be approved by CMS in order for Governor Brownback's administration to implement KanCare.

Kansas originally submitted its request to CMS in late April.  Shortly after their submission, CMS passed new  requirements to the waiver approval process, requiring states to host public hearings on new waiver requests.

The Brownback administration has now requested that CMS not regard the April submission as their formal application, but instead await a new application to be submitted in July.  As per CMS's recently passed requirements, the state must host two public meetings to discuss the application.

The delay was caused by an oversight of consulting all tribal health organizations as is required by the State of Kansas' tribal consultation policy.  The delay and pending submission will allow the State to consult the tribal health organizations.  The State indicates they do not forsee this delaying implementation of KanCare in January 2013.

Learn more: KHI News Service

"Kansas asks to withdraw Medicaid 115 waiver request: State officials say they intend to resubmit in July"
June 5, 2012
by Mike Shields


Learn more: KDHE News Release

"Kansas to Submit Formal Section 115 Waiver Application in July, Extend KanCare Public Comment Period:
Additional comment period not expected to delay January 2013 Implementation of KanCare"
June 5, 2012

Lobbying prohibition contract language

Last week the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services announced it would be adding new language to its contracts with service providers to add further restriction against service providers using state or federal funding to influence legislation.

While providers of service to persons with developmental disabilities are no longer under SRS's purview, SRS spokesperson explained that the Brownback administration is planning to add the new language to all state-administered contracts.  If implemented, this could indeed affect service-providers in the DD community.

Currently, there are already some restrictions from spending government money on lobbying, however this new language will take those restrictions further.  Below is an article from Kansas Health Institute explaining the state's lobbying prohibition language...

Lobbying prohibition added to SRS contracts
May 29, 2012
by Dave Ranney

http://www.khi.org/news/2012/may/29/lobbying-prohibition-added-srs-contracts/\




This proposed language by the State to add to all contracts with service providers also made a splash with national nonprofit organizations.  Below is a commentary written by Rick Cohen of  Nonprofit Quarterly:

Kansas Nonprofits Told to Sit Down and Shut Up
May 30, 2012
by Rick Cohen

http://www.nonprofitquarterly.org/policysocial-context/20420-kansas-nonprofits-told-to-sit-down-and-shut-up.html

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

2012 legislative session comes to a close

Over the weekend, legislators finally approved a budget and completed the longest ever omnibus session.  Below is a very thorough article provided by Kansas Health Institute's News Service on the results of the session.

Some highlights of the article:

  • Waiting lists: $3.6 million in State General Funds (SGF) allotted to help reduce waiting lists.  This will be matched by federal funds, creating a total of $8.2 million for waiting lists.  Only a portion of this money will be directed to persons with developmental disabilities.  Projections estimate approximately 97 persons with DD will be served from the waiting lists.

  • KanCare
    • Included in the budget bill is a proviso to delay the inclusion of long-term DD services for one year.  The proviso includes language allowing programs to voluntarily participate in pilot programs.
    • Legislators did not approve a special oversight committee for KanCare
    • Lawmakers did approve funding ($1 million) requested by the Governor to update the Medicaid Management Information System for KanCare.  However they did not approve funding that the Governor sought for a statewide program to inform Medicaid beneficiaries about KanCare.  Nor did they approve funding sought by the Administration to create a new Medicaid Reform health Savings Account for KanCare.

Read More: KHI News Service
May 20, 2012

Longest ever wrap-up session ends after a budget plan is finally approved

Monday, May 21, 2012

In Memoriam: Representative Bob Bethell


Sad news came to us as we heard of the car accident that claimed the life of Representative Bob Bethell.

We all got to know Bob who came to Topeka as a reformer with a fixed perspective on DD issues. His perspective was that the system was in desperate need of reformation, and many things he suggested were strongly opposed and defeated by your advocacy.  It was a several years long struggle to work through those issues. Then over time he, and we,  came to know one another better, and his regard for your work grew each year. He became a strong supporter of your work, and a strong believer in the essential strength and integrity of the DD system. Wounds do heal in the political arena, and Bob became one of our strongest supporters.

He stood up for our work on many occasions, and that was true regardless of the prevailing politics of the day.

In his last few years in office, Bob became known as a RINO (Republican in Name Only), and wore the target without embarrassment or fear. He knew two things, first that he was a Republican in the strongest and most principled ways that he embraced his party’s traditions. And, second, he knew that being a Republican didn’t mean he had to put his principles and his independent thoughts on the shelf, and he wasn’t quiet about it, he spoke out on many issues which put him at odds with some within his own party.

We will always appreciate his work in the last few sessions, to bring light to our issues, to work with legislators on both sides of the aisle, to collaborate with us and seek our  input, and generally, we will appreciate the ways in which he and you and we grew to work in common cause on behalf of disability supports and services in Kansas.

Keep Bob’s family in your prayers.

Tom Laing,
Executive Director, InterHab

LEFT TO RIGHT: Representatives Jerry Henry, Barbara Ballard and Bob Bethell gather outside the Governor's office for the signing of
SB 210; the provider assessment bill passed in 2011.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Provide your Feedback: KS 1115 Waiver Request to CMS


The State of Kansas submission for an 1115 waiver from CMS has, as of a few minutes ago, been posted the CMS website for public comment.  This public comment period will last for 30 days.  The link to submit comments to CMS is:


Please note that the CMS public comment forum is much like a “talk back” section for online media, which includes a social media component, i.e. you can ‘vote’ for or concur with others’ posted comments.  Please note that you can concur a maximum of ten times.  Further, please note that your comments are limited to 5,000 words.  It is important to be concise in sharing your concerns with CMS. 

If you would like to read the State of Kansas’ full 1115 Waiver Submission, it can be found at the following link:


Please feel free to share any concerns you may have.  However, concerns you may wish to express include:

·         There has been a noticeable lack of inclusiveness in the development process of the Kansas 1115 Waiver proposal, as well as the overall development of the KanCare managed care proposal.  
 
There is an unsettling absence stated outcomes for the Kansas I/DD population within the Brownback Administration’s KanCare proposal that would lead to an improved quality of life for these Kansans. 
 
A one-year period of delay for the inclusion of DD long-term care services within KanCare will not be long enough for the State to adequately fix issues that will arise from the implementation of such a sweeping overhaul to the Kansas Medicaid delivery system.
 
  The State of Kansas intends to engage in pilot testing of managed care for DD long-term care services during the one-year delay for implementation of DD long-term care within KanCare.  However, the DD community has not been engaged in the development of such pilot projects.  Further, serious concerns exist regarding whether the State of Kansas can adequately develop, implement and reasonably analyze outcomes from such pilot projects within the one-year delay period.
 
 There are serious general concerns within the Kansas DD community regarding the vulnerabilities of the Kansas I/DD population to the types of sweeping system changes embodied in the Brownback Administration’s KanCare managed care proposal.  

Friday, April 27, 2012

Push Day: Post Event Pontifications


A sea of red-clad DD advocates flooded the South lawn of the Capitol on Wednesday.  It was a day so powerful and so poignant that some of the InterHab staff are still wearing their red (in the form of sun burns) as we reflect on our annual Push Day event.  InterHab staffers agree that this year’s event seemed to have all the elements of success and it got us thinking…what makes Push Day successful?

Participation
We had an outstanding turnout this year!  Bus-loads from across the entire state brought a combined total of more than 800 participants.

Enthusiasm
While it would certainly be understandable that after many months of intense efforts (letter writing, e-mail sending, forum-holding, event-hosting, etc.), advocates might feel more than frustrated, even angry.  But ralliers set their frustrations aside and let the camaraderie of the day set the tone.  They were confident, consistent, and courteous – exactly the type of advocacy needed for the day.

Action
The combined effort of simply being there was enough to send a strong message to legislators and the Governor, but your participation in the “Real People Real Mementos” activity and your efforts to visit legislators inside the Capitol created a powerful reality that simply couldn’t be ignored.

Media
A consistent spotlight on this issue throughout the year (created by you) culminated in thorough media coverage for Push Day.  Radio, television and print from a variety of regions covered our event.  For a highlight of news coverage, please visit the InterHab facebook page.

Legislator Attendance
We had a record number of legislators come out to support rally participants!  Senator Laura Kelly, Senator Dick Kelsey, and Representative Jim Ward all came to address and encourage advocates.   Several more legislators came to join the crowd and visit constituents.

YOU!
There are a number of elements that create a great experience on Push Day (in fact, the element of weather is a pretty big one).  But it’s clear that the number one contributor to our combined success is YOU!  YOU, the person who coordinates the bus rides, you who ensures everyone is wearing red, you who came as staff support for persons with disabilities, and you the person who wants to stick up for what is right for the Kansas DD system.

So thank you.  Thank you to InterHab leaders who shepherded this event and empowered people to participate.  Thank you to the volunteers who helped us run Push Day.  And thank you to every single person with disabilities, every staff person, and every family member who participated in Push Day!


Brownback Administration Submits form Application to Overhaul Medicaid

This afternoon Governor Brownback's office will host a news conference announcing their submission for a special 1115 Waiver from CMS (the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services).  Approval from CMS is required for the Administration to implement KanCare - a proposal to turnover Kansas Medicaid services to private, out-of-state, for-profit insurance companies.  Below are articles with further details...

Provided by KHI News 

Wichita Eagle
"Kansas seeks Medicaid waiver from feds"
April 27, 2012

KHI News Service
"KanCare waiver application completed: Medicaid 1115 waiver application submitted for federal review"
April 27, 2012


Thursday, April 26, 2012

Brownback Administration Supports DD Long Term Care and Waiver Postponement


IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 25, 2012
For more information:
Sherriene Jones-Sontag
785.368.7138

media@ks.gov


Brownback Administration Supports DD Long Term Care
and Waiver Postponement
Topeka – Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback and Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, M.D. announced today that their administration endorses a proposal by members of the House and Senate as well as advocates of the developmental disability community to postpone the inclusion of waiver services for individuals with developmental disabilities into KanCare until January 1, 2014 and to allow voluntary pilot programs.
Gov. Brownback said they recognize the uncertainty many still feel about the coming changes in the state’s Medicaid system. 
“Dr. Colyer and I are dedicated to improving the health and well-being of all Kansans.  We are confident the new KanCare system will work for the greater good of those who depend upon Medicaid.  We believe that allowing another year of discussion and input from the developmental disability community will make them comfortable with the program and allow us to craft solutions to the concerns they’re expressing,” Brownback said.
 Lt. Gov. Colyer said the administration feels strongly the KanCare reforms will work to improve the health and social outcomes for our most vulnerable Kansans and in the long run will help the state address the waiting lists for waiver services.
“We have heard the concerns expressed by family members of developmentally disabled individuals about the coming reforms and the pace of the change in particular. We believe this staggered implementation will allow for more conversations, more public input, and a more effective implementation for persons utilizing developmental disability waiver services,” Colyer said.
Gov. Brownback and Dr. Colyer said they look forward to working with state lawmakers and community partners to implement all other provisions of KanCare, including medical and behavioral health services for the developmentally disabled, on the original timeline slated for launch on January 1, 2013.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Great Summary: KanCare Debate on House Floor

Dion Leffler of the Wichita Eagle wrote a fantastic summary of the terse debate held on the floor of the House last week regarding the carve out of long-term care DD services from KanCare:



Reps. Ward, Landwehr trade shots over managed care for developmentally disabled
Ward

Landwehr
A proposal to except developmental disability care from the governor’s Medicaid reform effort led to a tense exchange — and an admonition from the speaker of the House — for two of Wichita’s most prominent lawmakers.

The exchange came after Rep. Jim Ward, D-Wichita, and Brenda Landwehr, R-Wichita, tangled over an attempt by Ward to amend a bill to take developmental disabilities out of Gov. Sam Brownback’s plan to cap the costs of the state’s Medicaid services programs.

Brownback is in the process of implementing a plan to shift services to managed-care plans administered by for-profit insurance companies, to be called KanCare.

Ward strongly criticized Landwehr, the chairwoman of the Health and Human Services Committee, for delaying consideration of the exception. At one point, he urged the House to “keep your big-boy pants on, today’s the day.”

But as it turned out, it wasn’t the day.

Landwehr and her allies succeeded in keeping Ward’s amendment from coming to a floor vote by getting the underlying bill sent back to committee on a 69-54 vote.

 “I would be happy to have two or three weeks of hearings on this (disabilities) issue because it’s major,” Landwehr said. “I understand these budgets, I actually know some of these kids as friends and family and neighbors that are receiving these services. I talk to the parents. To make a policy change like this on the floor is not doing a service to them.”

Ward said after the meeting that the bill was sent to the Appropriations Committee to kill it, but he plans to bring it up again when the Legislature reconvenes for its wrap-up session late next month.

Providers, parents and others in the developmental disabilities community have been lobbying for an exemption from KanCare, out of concern that the change would be too disruptive to mentally fragile individuals receiving home- and community-based services.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Surprise! DD Carve Out Amendment in the House

Earlier this morning, Representative Jim Ward proposed his "DD Carve Out" legislation as an amendment to the KanCare oversight bill (HB 2789) on the floor of the House.  An initial attempt to block discussion was made by Representative Crum who raised a point of order and asked the Chair of House Rules to rule if Rep. Ward's ammendemnt was germane (aka relevant) to the bill. The amendment was ruled as germane and the Speaker and House Leadership did not further challenge the amendment based on these procedural grounds.

Debate regarding the 'Ward Amendment' ensued leading with comments in support of carving out long-term DD care from Representative Pat Colloton.  Representatives Worley, Swanson, Trimmer, Rubin, Otto and Keigerl all spoke in support of the amendment.

Representative Rhoades, Crum and Landwehr opposed the amendment. Representative Crum eventually moved to send the whole bill (KanCare Oversight + DD Carve Out amendment) back to committee.  At this motion Representative Ward criticized the handling of his original bill to carve out long-term DD care by the chair of the House Health & Human Services Committee, Brenda Landwehr and emphatically instisted that today was the time to vote on the issue.

Alas, the motion to re-refer the bill back to committee was voted upon by the House and passed.

BUT! Do not feel defeated.  While the amendment did not get adopted we saw a great show of support for your position to carve out long-term care services for persons with DD.  This morning's activity on this issue was a pleasant surprise and thanks are owed to Rep. Jim Ward for forcing this issue to the table for discussion.

Please continue your advocacy with your legislators, be sure to thank those who showed support for you today, and stay tuned - more action and more ways to flex your advocacy muscles are on the horizon for April!




Monday, March 26, 2012

"Not Worth the Gamble!" Rally: Great Participation!


Wendell Potter addresses the crowd

Participants filled packed the house!

Participants wore their 'Not Worth the Gamble - Carve out DD!' shirts

Over 500 attendees came to the Rally


They came by car, they came by van, they even came by the bus-load to the "Not Worth the Gamble!" Rally last Tuesday. Clad in red "Not Worth the Gamble!" t-shirts, you couldn't stop the on-pouring of more than 500 attendees filling - nearly overflowing - the ballroom of the Ramada Inn Topeka. Rally attendees were revved up and ready to make their voices and concerns about KanCare heard!

The Rally kicked off with opening remarks from InterHab Executive Director,Tom Laing; InterHab's Governmental Affairs Committee chairperson, Alice Lackey; and InterHab's Board of Directors' President, Colin McKenney. Afterward, featured speaker Wendell Potter addressed the crowd, sharing his experience as a former public relations executive for a top insurance company. He also shared skepticism in Governor Brownback's KanCare plan to overhaul Medicaid. Potter indicated that insurance companies are ultimately responsible to their shareholders and the pressure to create profits. Mr. Potter encouraged the crowd to continue their advocacy and to continue urging Kansas leaders to question the components of the KanCare plan.

With that advice in mind, participants traveled to the Capitol to share their concerns regarding KanCare. Hundreds of Rally participants filled the wings of the Capitol as they urged legislators to sign and support both the House and Senate Resolutions to delay KanCare by six months and continued to share with legislators their desire to see long-term DD services removed from KanCare.

"The Not Worth the Gamble!" Rally generated a remarkable turnout and resulted in a significant message to the Administration and to Kansas legislators from across the state. And while this event is over our fight to carve out DD long-term care remains.  So we must build on the momentum that our combined efforts have built!  Continue contacting your legislators, continue contacting the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, continue educating community members, parents and advocates and draw on the inspiration that the "Not Worth the Gamble!" Rally gives us - the reminder that together, we are stronger and together, we can be heard.

Plight to Carve out Long-term DD Care continues...

Richard Crowson - The Wichita Eagle
Be sure to email your legislators and the Governor today! www.invisiblekansans.com

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Article Update: Bipartisan Group Resolution to Delay KanCare

House & Senate Resolution to Delay KanCare: Press Conference
Wednesday afternoon a bipartisan group of Senators and Representatives held a press conference to discuss resolutions in both the House and Senate to delay implementation of KanCare by 6 months.  The resolution indicates a delay of 6 months would be helpful to allow for further public input on the implementation; allow for further review by legislators and by the Kansas Insurance Department.  The resolution also indicates the delay will allow more time to obtain the federal approval of waivers necessary to implement KanCare (approval which has not yet been received).  Finally, this resolution to delay implementation endeavors to further define day-to-day operations of how the KanCare system would work (for example adequate billing of claims).

Click here to read the complete resolution

Please urge your legislators to sign onto this resolution!  House members who are interested in signing the resolution can contact Representatives Bethell or Henry.  Interested Senators can contact Senators Kelly or Kelsey.  You can contact your legislator about this issue at www.invisiblekansans.com

Please also send a thank you to the following House and Senate members for their efforts and representation at yesterday's press conference:

  • Senators:
    • Anthony Hensley, Dick Kelsey, Laura Kelly
  • Representatives:
    • Bob Bethell, Bill Feuerborn, Jerry Henry, Eber Phelps


KC Star Editorial
“Stop the rush toward risky Medicaid change”

The Wichita Eagle
Kansas legislators urge delay in Medicaid changes

Topeka Capitol Journal
Legislators propose to delay Medicaid reform

KHI
Legislators push to delay KanCare start



Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Article Update: Senate/House Resolution to Delay KanCare Coming Soon!

Wow, this week has been packed with activity and discussion on KanCare - and it's only Tuesday.  Please review the following articles from KHI News Service and an editorial by Pattie Knauff published in the Wichita Eagle.

March 6, 2012: Kaiser Health News
"Medicaid: Lawmakers Ask Kansas Gov. To Wait On 'Ambitious' Changes

March 5, 2012: Kansas Health Institute
Legislators to propose KanCare delay: Resolutions to be introduced in the House and Senate


March 5, 2012: Kansas Health Institute
Brownback Medicaid makeover an "ambitious" plan


March 5, 2012: Wichita Eagle - Letter to Editor
Why won't state listen on DD care?


March 5, 2012: Kansas Health Institute
KanCare concerns voiced at forum


March 5, 2012: Kansas Health Institute
New Medicaid waiver process stipulates public meeting and comment


March 5, 2012: The Topeka Capital-Journal
"Panelists: Take Medicaid concerns to legislators, feds"

March 5, 2012: The Newton Kansan
"Parents concerned with KanCare Plan"