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Forrest bust removal question to go to State Building Commission – Tennessee Lookout
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The State of Tennessee has intervened on a lawsuit filed by the Tennessee Justice Center attempting to block the stateâs new TennCare waiver.Â
The lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services was brought by the advocacy firm and 13 other individuals with disabilities who rely on TennCare coverage. It alleges the state insurance program already provides inadequate care and contends the waiver will grant Tennessee increased power to further deny health services to people who need them.Â
âTennessee, and its contracting managed care plans, have repeatedly failed to provide the thirteen Plaintiff Medicaid beneficiaries with access to medically necessary services,â the complaint says. âBy continuing the managed care program, introducing the aggregate cap and shared savings financing scheme, and permitting the State to impose additional limits on prescription drug coverage, the TennCare III ap
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Attorney General Herbert Slatery published an opinion Wednesday declaring that competing interpretations of the proper process for removal are both valid, including the process that has been followed over the past year by Gov. Bill Lee and the State Capitol Commission.
But there is still no immediate plan to hoist away the bronze statue of the Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader. The House and Senate speakers, who have sought to stall Lee s plans to relocate the Forrest bust, maintain there is still another step to be taken a vote before the State Building Commission. I think it’ll be this summer, Lt. Gov. Randy McNally, R-Oak Ridge, said Thursday about whether the building commission would be taking up the matter.
Comprehensive Pain Specialists, its four majority owners and a former company executive have agreed to pay more than $4.1 million to settle civil claims brought by the state and federal government that the company defrauded Medicare and TennCare $25 million through an allegedly frivolous lab testing scheme.
The U.S. Attorneyâs Office for the Middle District of Tennessee originally soughtÂ
$50 million in damages from the company and co-owners Peter Kroll, Gilberto Carrero, Richard Muench and former state senator Steve Dickerson, alongside former executives John Davis and Russell Smith. Individual claims brought against Carrero and Dickerson were all dropped and Kroll, Smith, Muench and the company have since negotiated settlements.
How Tennessee lawmakers takeover of AG s power would work
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