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Missouri House sends Medicaid tax to Gov Parson, avoiding budget cuts

Springfield News-Leader JEFFERSON CITY The Missouri House passed a tax critical to funding the state s Medicaid program Wednesday, sending the bill to Gov. Mike Parson s desk less than a day before the start of the fiscal year and avoiding significant budget cuts.  Lawmakers voted 140-13 to renew the Federal Reimbursement Allowance, which taxes hospitals, nursing homes and other health care facilities to earn the state federal dollars. It makes up for around $4 billion of the state s $11 billion Medicaid budget, and if allowed to expire would have forced the governor to make major cuts across state services and programs. The bill will now go to Parson s desk, where he will sign the three-year renewal. Both chambers of the legislature gaveled out Wednesday afternoon, formally ending the special session.

The moral weight of taxation

The moral weight of taxation by Nathan Mech • June 30, 2021 Whether or not we view taxation as having moral downsides and bearing a moral weight has significant implications for the proper size of government and can make a world of difference in public policy decisions. […] As Congress works on a $6 trillion spending bill that would be funded by higher taxes and increasing the national debt, Americans should be asking themselves: When is taxation morally permissible? Taxation is justified only when the moral benefits of the programs these tax dollars fund outweigh the moral costs, or downsides. Taxation has “Moral weight,” by which I mean it requires good justification in order to be morally permissible. Laying off an employee is another example of an action with moral weight: Sometimes it is morally permissible or even right to lay off an employee, but only when done after a cautious and solemn analysis of the moral costs involved.

Abortion reversal law put on hold | Indiana | The Journal Gazette

Abortion reversal law put on hold Mandate that treatment be explained faces lawsuit TOM DAVIES | Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS – A federal judge on Wednesday blocked an Indiana law that would require doctors to tell women undergoing drug-induced abortions about a disputed treatment for potentially stopping the abortion process. The ruling came just before the so-called abortion reversal law adopted by Indiana s Republican-dominated Legislature was to take effect today. The temporary injunction issued by U.S. District Judge James Patrick Hanlon in Indianapolis puts the law on hold while the lawsuit challenging it makes its way through court. Hanlon ruled that the abortion-rights groups had a “reasonable likelihood” of proving that the requirement would violate free speech rights of abortion providers. He also found that the state had not proven the effectiveness of the reversal process, which involves taking a different medication rather than the second of the two drugs in

Federal judge blocks Indiana abortion reversal law - WISH-TV | Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather

Federal judge blocks Indiana abortion reversal law - WISH-TV | Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather
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