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Page 18 - ஓக்லஹோமா ஆரோக்கியம் பராமரிப்பு அதிகாரம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

House, Senate Democrats Vie For Transparency In State Budget Process

House, Senate Democrats Vie For Transparency In State Budget Process Update: The Senate passed the $8.3 billion state budget restoring COVID-19 cuts and boosting education funding in a 38-9 vote. The budget has now been sent to the governor. Oklahoma House and Senate Democrats blasted the state budget process saying all Oklahomans lose when just a few lawmakers come up with the budget behind closed doors.   “We’re sitting in the meeting, and we are being handed bills that we are about to be asked to vote on, and this is not an exaggeration, the bills are actually sometimes warm because they just came off the printers,” Senate Minority Leaders Kay Floyd, D-OKC, said. 

Hospitals question fee increase to help pay for Medicaid expansion

Patti Davis OKLAHOMA CITY — Despite an influx of hundreds of millions of federal dollars earmarked to help pay for Medicaid expansion, lawmakers are proposing increasing fees paid by hospitals with the money to be used for the same purpose. “While we’re not opposed to doing our part to increase access to care, we are disappointed that the Legislature chose not to use the hospital fee as a backstop considering that we have federal funds available for the next eight quarters,” said Patti Davis, president of Oklahoma Hospital Association. She said the state’s hospitals still are in “recovery mode” from the pandemic, and they would prefer legislators would first use the hundreds of millions in additional federal funding before increasing their assessment rate.

Oklahoma Senate approves framework, restrictions for Stitt s Medicaid plan

Oklahoma Senate approves framework, restrictions for Stitt s Medicaid plan Carmen Forman, Oklahoman © JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN Interior of the Oklahoma State Capitol. Photo taken Tuesday, July 5, 2011. The Oklahoma Senate on Wednesday overwhelmingly approved a bill to add legislative oversight and legal guardrails to Gov. Kevin Stitt s plan to outsource care for most Medicaid recipients.   The passage of an updated version of Senate Bill 131 gives opponents of third-party managed care a victory, but perhaps not the victory they wanted. The latest version of the bill did not include House-approved language that sought to undo Stitt s plan entirely by requiring the Oklahoma Health Care Authority to better manage Medicaid care in-house, as opposed to relying on four health insurance giants. 

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