Tag: lawmakers

  • Lawmakers return to Raleigh with health policy wish lists

    Lawmakers return to Raleigh with health policy wish lists

    By Rose Hoban

    Amid the smiles, photographs, receptions and family members crowding the legislative building in Raleigh on Wednesday, lawmakers involved in the making of health care policy said they were readying their lists of priorities for the legislative biennium that began this week.

    The topmost issue on both sides of the aisle? The seemingly perennial issue of the past decade: whether North Carolina would ever join the majority of states and expand the Medicaid program to provide coverage for more than half a  million low income workers. 

    Senate leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) highlighted Medicaid expansion in an address after being elected as leader for the seventh time since 2011, saying it was one of the issues the legislature “must tackle.”

    “I support expanding Medicaid in North Carolina,” he told a capacity crowd in the Senate chamber.

    Berger spent a decade opposed to the measure, but he changed his stance in 2022. He shepherded his bill through the Senate last year, only to have it hit a dead end in the House of Representatives. 

    “We must recognize that it is not a silver bullet,” he continued. “North Carolinians are saddled with some of the highest health care costs in the country. We need to eliminate regulatory red tape and other bureaucratic barriers that impede access to care and unnecessarily increase medical costs.”

    Berger’s 2022 Medicaid expansion bill also included provisions that would 1) overhaul rules around hospital competition in North Carolina and 2) give advanced practice nurses more latitude to work independently of physicians.

    In a media gathering after the swearing-in ceremony, Berger reiterated his position. 

    “In order to get … the broad bipartisan support that we had for the Medicaid expansion bill that we had before, there have got to be some measures that address the supply side,” he told reporters. “If you’re going to give 500,000, 600,000 people an insurance card that says they have a right to have their medical care paid for, then we need to do something to hopefully open up more access to more primary care providers, more facilities where they can be treated.” 

    Old differences could reemerge, though, as members of the House and Tim Moore (R-Kings Mountain), the re-elected House speaker, talked about a “clean” Medicaid expansion bill that does not include mention of nurses or hospitals. 

    Rep. Donny Lambeth (R–Winston-Salem) acknowledged that some of Berger’s concerns will need to be addressed before the two chambers come to any agreement. House committee assignments have not been announced, but Lambeth has been a key player from the House in committees with members from both legislative chambers tackling health care issues.

    “I think we have to do the certificate of need reform,” he said, referring to the laws on hospital competition. “So my second bill will be a certificate of need bill that I’ve been working on with the industry. And I think we’ve got to get that one done in order to do expansion.

    “That was kind of the Senate feedback.”

    Mental health on many minds

    Republicans and Democrats noted the importance of addressing mental health needs across the state. 

    Lambeth said he recently attended a forum on mental health best practices with representatives Carla Cunningham (D-Charlotte), a nurse, and Wayne Sasser (R-Albemarle), a pharmacist. Lambeth said they were interested in implementing some things other states are doing.

    “I think we need more psychologists in schools, because I think we need to reach out to these kids and listen to these kids in a more proactive way,” Lambeth said. “We’ve talked about having more guidance counselors and psychologists in schools, and we’ve done a little bit of that. But I do think we need more.”

    Lambeth also would like the legislature to consider funding mental health crisis centers.

    “We’ve seen suicide rates grow exponentially in the last several years, and COVID did not help anything,” said Sen. Sydney Batch (D-Apex), who is a social worker and family law attorney. She’s been appointed to the Senate Health Care Committee. 

    Senate leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) said he’s planning on pushing for Medicaid expansion again this year, but continues to insist the measure be combined with “supply side” measures to loosen restrictions on advanced practice nurses and increase hospital competition. Credit: Rose Hoban

    “Children are sitting in hospitals for way too long not having appropriate placements,” Batch said. “We have a mental health crisis in the foster care system. And then also just within our schools every single day, we need to actually have mental health professionals seeing the children, identifying them and addressing their needs.”

    Batch filed a bill in the last session that would have given mental health providers treatment spaces in schools, prioritizing children who lack health insurance or a regular care provider.

    “My real concern is that… everybody’s talking mental health, but we just say the same redundant words over and over again,” said Rep. Donna White (R-Clayton), a nurse who has played a key role in shaping legislative health care policies. “We just don’t try to find out what’s causing the mental health issues in our young people.”

    Lists are long

    Rep. Hugh Blackwell (R-Valdese) said that during the swearing-in festivities he started jotting down on a scrap of paper a list of priorities that he wants to work on in the coming biennium. House committee assignments haven’t been announced, but Blackwell said he expects to again be appointed to health care committees. 

    Rep. Hugh Blackwell (R-Valdese) shows off the list of legislative priorities he jotted down during the swearing-in ceremonies at the legislative building on Wednesday. Credit: Rose Hoban

    At the top of that list were mental health issues, but he ticked off a number of other topics, including getting patient information at state-operated health care facilities onto electronic health records.

    Another one of his concerns was about staffing in health care. 

    “I think, at Broughton Hospital, for example… that we’ve got maybe over 100 beds that are not being used that could be, because we haven’t got the staffing for it,” Blackwell said. 

    Last year, leaders at the Department of Health and Human Services signaled to lawmakers that they faced significant staffing shortages across all of their divisions, including in state-operated hospitals. 

    Sen. Jim Perry (R-Kinston) also had health care workforce issues on his mind, and he mentioned the shortage of child care workers. 

    “The availability of workforce, qualified individuals to work in those facilities, [of] affordability — wages have just gone through the roof,” Perry said. “We’ve got to try to figure some things out… have a healthy workforce. Mom and Dad got to have someone taking care of the kids so they can go to work.”

    Other health care topics that topped lawmakers’ lists included:

    • Addressing mental health issues faced by foster children, a topic raised by Batch and Sen. Mike Woodard (D-Durham). Woodard said he’s concerned about how kids in foster care have difficulty accessing health care if they move from one region of the state to another — something that Batch tried to address in a bill she championed last year.
    • White said she’s ready to take another run at getting her chamber behind the SAVE Act, which would give more independence to advanced practice nurses. Last year, the bill had 75 co-sponsors in the House of Representatives, but it was never brought to the floor for a vote. “I believe that I could get that many [sponsors] this time,” White said. “I’ve not met all the freshmen and I don’t know what their views are about a lot of things, but it’s certainly a whole new group to consult with, and I’ll be doing that very shortly.”
    • Lambeth said he’d like to address some of the issues around getting other health care workers into the educational pipeline. “One is physician manpower in rural areas. Whether we do loan forgiveness or other programs, we’ve got to do something to address the shortage in some of the rural areas,” Lambeth added. “We’ve met with some community colleges. What they’re telling me is ‘We’ve got the space, we’ve got qualified applicants, we don’t have instructors, we don’t have enough money.’”
    • Abortion was mentioned by multiple lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. Woodard noted that Senate Democrats plan to file a bill codifying the constitutional protections for abortion overturned in last summer’s Supreme Court Dobbs decision. Republicans, for their part, talked about a range of possibilities for a possible bill limiting the procedure. “We’ll see what, if anything, is something that can be passed by the General Assembly and withstand a possible veto,” Berger said. 

    Wednesday was just the start of a process that will play out over the coming months and perhaps years. Many of the initiatives would take state funding, which will pit interest groups against each other — and lawmakers know how frustrating that can be. 

    “Everything requires money, and that’s why you can never do everything at once,” Perry said. “It’s not that something is or is not important, it’s just that resources are scarce.”

  • Medicaid and Abortion Top Health Agenda for Montana Lawmakers

    Medicaid and Abortion Top Health Agenda for Montana Lawmakers

    HELENA, Mont. — Montana lawmakers stated lowering fees and increasing patient entry will be their major overall health treatment objectives for the new legislative session. But they also will have to contend with creating variations to Medicaid, a management disaster at the Montana Condition Medical center, and proposals to regulate abortion.

    Republicans, who hold a veto-evidence bulk, stated they will focus on 3 places of wellbeing treatment: transparency, prices, and individual alternatives.

    Party leaders intention to preserve “taking tiny bites that are going the ball in the appropriate way on people three significant factors,” Senate Republican spokesperson Kyle Schmauch claimed.

    Democrats, who are the minority social gathering and have to have Republican help to move their charges, determined lowering health and fitness treatment fees, shielding Medicaid coverage, and preserving reproductive liberty as their priorities.

    As the 90-day Montana session enters its 2nd 7 days, right here are some of the top wellness troubles on the agenda:

    Growing Affected individual Entry

    Increasing telehealth and building it easier for capable providers from outdoors the state to observe in Montana are two approaches Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte proposes to enhance wellbeing care accessibility, claimed spokesperson Brooke Stroyke.

    Residence Speaker Matt Regier (R-Kalispell) agreed that telehealth is essential to improving upon access. Republicans program to establish on a law passed in the 2021 session that created everlasting some of the pandemic-pushed crisis regulations that loosened restrictions on telehealth.

    Schmauch mentioned legislators will think about shelling out proposals to expand Montana’s broadband arrive at to make telehealth a feasible selection for far more people, specifically rural people.

    Other proposals meant to give rural patients with restricted accessibility to treatment additional alternatives are prepared, this sort of as letting doctors to dispense prescription medications to clients, and making it possible for pharmacists to prescribe certain medicines, Schmauch mentioned.

    Medicaid

    Eleven Montana nursing residences declared closures in 2022, with officers citing staffing shortages and lower Medicaid reimbursement rates as the major motives for the industry’s ongoing struggles.

    Lawmakers will discussion boosting reimbursement rates for nursing households and numerous other forms of overall health vendors soon after a state-commissioned review observed they had been way too low to address the price of treatment.

    “Increasing supplier prices at the study’s advisable level will be certain a potent health and fitness care workforce and should be a precedence for this legislature,” reported Heather O’Loughlin, govt director of the Montana Price range and Coverage Centre, a nonprofit firm that analyzes the point out funds, taxes, and economic system.

    Gianforte’s spending plan proposal contains reimbursement level raises that slide short of what the examine recommends. A bill by Rep. Mary Caferro (D-Helena) would foundation supplier prices on the study’s results.

    Federal principles dictated that any person enrolled in Medicaid could not be dropped from the system all through the community health and fitness emergency. But the omnibus spending bill lately passed by Congress allows states to commence reviewing the eligibility of their beneficiaries in April, and thousands and thousands of men and women throughout the U.S. are at risk of shedding coverage as a consequence.

    “That will have an inherent end result of getting rid of people who skilled for Medicaid but because of this method getting so intricate, they’ll drop it,” Caferro explained.

    Caferro stated she ideas to introduce legislation that restores 12-month steady eligibility for grown ups enrolled in Montana Medicaid. The evaluate is probable to be opposed by legislative Republicans and Gianforte, who co-signed a letter to President Joe Biden in December indicating the general public wellbeing emergency experienced artificially expanded the Medicaid populace.

    Montana Point out Healthcare facility

    The Montana Condition Healthcare facility dropped its federal accreditation immediately after a spate of injuries and fatalities, earning administration of the psychiatric healthcare facility and the availability of behavioral health and fitness products and services a leading priority of the session.

    Stroyke mentioned Gianforte’s two-12 months budget plan, which is a starting off stage for legislative finances writers, includes $300 million for the condition healthcare facility and for growing accessibility to intense behavioral health and fitness treatment throughout the point out.

    Legislators are taking into consideration actions that would shift care for some individuals from the state-operate clinic to community-centered wellbeing expert services. Regier explained shifting additional public wellness companies from point out establishments to community suppliers would decrease some pressure on amenities like the Montana Condition Clinic.

    Abortion

    Lawmakers from equally functions have submitted extra than a dozen monthly bill draft requests working with abortion. A person from Regier would limit the sort of abortions that can be carried out in the point out, and, at the other conclusion of the discussion, a proposal by Sen. Ryan Lynch (D-Butte) would codify abortion obtain in state regulation. The Gianforte administration also not too long ago proposed an administrative rule that would make it far more tricky for women to have an abortion paid for by Medicaid.

    But the Republican the greater part is limited from enacting a sweeping abortion ban in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 choice to overturn Roe v. Wade. Which is mainly because a 1999 Montana Supreme Court ruling decided the point out constitution’s proper-to-privacy safety covers abortion obtain. The state is trying to get to overturn that precedent just after a decide blocked 3 anti-abortion laws passed by the 2021 legislature.

    Clinic Oversight

    Lawmakers also will think about proposals to maximize oversight of the way nonprofit hospitals report community positive aspects.

    State overall health officers have desired to established standards for the charitable contributions those people hospitals make in exchange for their tax-exempt standing. A KHN investigation discovered that Montana’s nonprofit hospitals put in about 8{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of their full once-a-year costs on charity gains in 2019, which is underneath the countrywide typical.

    Keely Larson is the KHN fellow for the UM Legislative Information Company, a partnership of the University of Montana University of Journalism, the Montana Newspaper Association, and Kaiser Wellbeing Information. Larson is a graduate university student in environmental and natural resources journalism at the College of Montana.

    KHN (Kaiser Health and fitness News) is a national newsroom that creates in-depth journalism about overall health issues. Collectively with Policy Evaluation and Polling, KHN is a person of the a few main running packages at KFF (Kaiser Loved ones Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit firm giving details on overall health concerns to the country.

    USE OUR Information

    This tale can be republished for absolutely free (aspects).

  • MS lawmakers defy gov’s medical cannabis demands (Newsletter: January 13, 2022)

    MS lawmakers defy gov’s medical cannabis demands (Newsletter: January 13, 2022)

    KY medical cannabis bill filed; MS senator brings hemp to marijuana meeting with gov; CA spends $100M on marijuana cannabis grants for cities

    Subscribe to receive Marijuana Moment’s newsletter in your inbox every weekday morning. It’s the best way to make sure you know which cannabis stories are shaping the day.

    Your support makes Marijuana Moment possible…

    Free to read (but not free to produce)! We’re proud of our newsletter and the reporting we publish at Marijuana Moment, and we’re happy to provide it for free. But it takes a lot of work and resources to make this happen. 

    • Matt W.: “I pledged because I value the news and information you provide and want to see it continue.”

    If you value Marijuana Moment, invest in our success on Patreon so we can expand our coverage and more readers can benefit: https://www.patreon.com/marijuanamoment

    / TOP THINGS TO KNOW

    Anti-drug Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA) has been helping an Iowa church that wants to incorporate the psychedelic brew ayahuasca into its ceremonies—the Iowaska Church of Healing—with legal fights against the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Internal Revenue Service.

    A Kentucky Republican representative filed a medical marijuana bill that’s been revised from past versions in an attempt to win support—or at least remove hostile opposition—from legislative leaders so that it can pass this year.

    A Mississippi senator brought hemp to a meeting with Gov. Tate Reeves (R) to help assuage the governor’s concerns about medical marijuana possession limits.

    • “I took samples to show him what an ounce actually looks like—what 3.5 grams actually looks like.”

    California regulators awarded $100 million in funding to help local governments develop the legal marijuana market by processing business licenses.

    / FEDERAL

    A federal judge dismissed a Washington State marijuana dispensary’s racial discrimination lawsuit against state and federal officials.

    Rep. Dave Joyce (R-OH) criticized Democratic leaders for not advancing cannabis reform legislation.

    Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) authored a Wall Street Journal letter to the editor about her marijuana legalization bill.

    Florida Democratic Senate candidate Allen Ellison tweeted, “Not only should we legalize cannabis across the country, we should tax the sale of it and pay for higher education.”

    Kentucky Democratic congressional candidate William Compton tweeted, “Along with the revenue we can generate by legalizing Marijuana, we should not have someone go to jail for Marijuana. In congress, I will fight to legalize Marijuana nationwide.”

    / STATES

    Rhode Island’s House speaker said a new marijuana legalization bill should be released in the next 30-45 days.

    New Jersey’s Senate president said he doesn’t think home cultivation of marijuana will be legalized “any time soon.”

    South Carolina’s Senate majority leader indicated a medical cannabis bill will be considered soon, saying, “I don’t know where the votes will be, but we all agree it’s time to have a debate and move on.” And another senator said he expects the legislation to be one of the first brought up in the new session.

    The Wisconsin House State Affairs Committee approved a kratom regulation bill.

    Mississippi lawmakers are expected to consider a medical cannabis bill this week. One senator wants pharmacists to be involved in distributing marijuana.

    The Virginia legislature’s Cannabis Oversight Commission will meet on Monday.

    Kansas House Democrats tweeted, “House Democrats want Kansans like YOU to decide if Kansas should expand Medicaid and legalize marijuana. Contact your #ksleg-legislator TODAY and tell them you want to vote on issues that affect your life and your health.”

    A Florida senator filed a marijuana legalization bill and companion tax legislation.

    An Indiana representative filed a medical cannabis bill.

    A Maryland senator tweeted, “Legalizing marijuana is not about easing access to personal indulgence, it’s about creating equality.”

    The Illinois Supreme Court is being asked by a marijuana business to let regulators name the winners of new craft grower licenses.

    New York regulators filed proposed cannabinoid hemp rules. Separately, the Department of Agriculture and Markets is seeking certified hemp sampling agents.

    The Utah Peace Officer Standards & Training Council voted to make it so cadets applying to be emergency dispatchers will not have to undergo a waiting period if they’ve used marijuana in a place where it’s legal.

    Ohio regulators received nine petitions to add new medical cannabis qualifying conditions.

    Oregon regulators are conducting a survey on interest in accessing psilocybin services and related issues.

    Vermont regulators will consider marijuana issues on Monday.

    The Washington State Cannabis Science Task Force will meet on Monday.


    Marijuana Moment is already tracking more than 900 cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.

    Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.

    / LOCAL

    The Kent, Ohio City Council is moving to place a marijuana decriminalization measure on the November ballot.

    Long Beach, California’s mayor tweeted, “In Long Beach we legalized cannabis before the state. We created a regulatory framework and taxed products and production. It’s time to legalize weed across the country.”

    Oakland, California officials will discuss loan and grant programs for cannabis equity businesses on Tuesday.

    / INTERNATIONAL

    Appointments for first-dose COVID vaccinations in Quebec, Canada spiked after the government announced the shots would be required to enter marijuana dispensaries and liquor stores.

    The Australian government is funding clinical trials on psilocybin, CBD, DMT and MDMA-assisted psychotherapy to treat debilitating mental illness.

    / SCIENCE & HEALTH

    A study found that “t​​wo years after legalization in Canada, the price of dried flower from legal sources decreased, along with a greater percentage of consumers purchasing from legal sources than after one year.”

    A study suggested that “MDMA/ecstasy and psilocybin use is associated with lower risk of depression.”

    / ADVOCACY, OPINION & ANALYSIS

    The American Medical Association said expanding medical marijuana research will be a topic of discussion at its conference next month.

    The Kentucky Democratic Party tweeted, “Democrats are heading to work every day this session committed to fighting for you. Health care, voting rights, universal pre-K, medical marijuana and much more: @GovAndyBeshear, @KYSenateDems and @KYHouseDems are prioritizing the issues Kentuckians care about.”

    / BUSINESS

    Columbia Care Inc. is commencing a solicitation of consents from noteholders.

    Ayr Wellness sent an update on its stock repurchase program.

    Swade Cannabis workers in St Louis, Missouri are seeking to organize a union.

    / CULTURE

    Filmmaker Kevin Smith posted about running into his daughter at a marijuana dispensary.

    Make sure to subscribe to get Marijuana Moment’s daily dispatch in your inbox.

    Marijuana Moment is made possible with support from readers. If you rely on our cannabis advocacy journalism to stay informed, please consider a monthly Patreon pledge.