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Judge denies Georgia extension on new Medicaid plan

The Associated Press//July 17, 2024//

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s administration set a work requirement for enrollees in the state’s Pathways to Coverage plan that offers Medicaid. (Associated Press file)

Judge denies Georgia extension on new Medicaid plan

The Associated Press//July 17, 2024//

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ATLANTA — A federal judge ruled that the Biden administration complied with the law when it declined to grant an extension to ‘s year-old plan, which is the only one in the country that has a for recipients of the publicly funded for low-income people.

The state didn’t comply with federal rules for an extension, so the Biden administration legally rejected its request to extend the program’s expiration date from September 2025 to 2028, U.S. Judge Lisa Godbey Wood ruled Monday.

A spokeswoman for the state attorney general’s office referred comment to the governor’s office, which didn’t immediately have comment Tuesday.

Georgia Pathways requires all recipients to show that they performed at least 80 hours of work, volunteer activity, schooling or vocational rehabilitation each month. It also limits coverage to able-bodied adults earning no more than the federal poverty line, which is $15,060 for a single person and $31,200 for a family of four.

The Biden administration revoked the work requirement in 2021, but Wood later reinstated it in response to a lawsuit by the state. Georgia sued the administration again in February, arguing that the decision to revoke the work requirement and another aspect of Pathways delayed implementation of the program. That reduced the program’s originally approved five-year term to just over two years.

The twice rejected the request to extend Pathways, saying the state had failed to meet requirements for an extension request, including a public notice and comment period. Georgia argued that it was seeking to amend the program, so those requirements should not apply.

In her latest ruling, Wood said the state had indeed made an extension request. She agreed that the Biden administration’s decision to revoke parts of Pathways had delayed its implementation, but she said a “prior bad act” did not allow the state to “now skirt the rules and regulations governing .”

“If Georgia wants to extend the program beyond the September 30, 2025, deadline, it has to follow the rules for obtaining an extension,” she wrote.

Pathways is off to a rocky start. Georgia officials expected it to provide to 25,000 , or possibly tens of thousands more, by now. But stood at just over 4,300 as of last month.

Critics say the work requirement is too onerous. Supporters say Pathways needs more time.


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