Monday, July 21, 2014

Nearly 2 Million Wisconsinites Will Get To Vote On BadgerCare Referendums

This must be sending Scott Walker and Chris Abele into a tizzy:
One Third of Wisconsinites Will Have BadgerCare Referendums on the November Ballot
Eight counties advance advisory referendum on accepting the federal funds for BadgerCare, covering 1.97 million Wisconsin residents.

Statewide: One out of every three Wisconsin residents will see a referendum in November on accepting federal funds for BadgerCare, based on the actions of Dane and La Crosse counties late last week. Over 1.97 million Wisconsin residents will have a question on their ballot on whether the State of Wisconsin should accept enhanced federal funds for BadgerCare rejected by Walker and conservatives in the Legislature.

Eight counties have officially approved this referendum so far, Lincoln, La Crosse, Clark, Dane, Dunn, Outagamie, Milwaukee and Eau Claire, with more following soon. The support in red, purple and blue counties demonstrates how this issue transcends partisanship and is important to rural and urban Wisconsin.

The negative impact of rejecting these federal funds is particularly devastating at the local level. With fewer people guaranteed access to health coverage they can truly afford, uncompensated care costs will remain high in local hospitals and county-supported clinics, forcing cost-shifting to county-budgets, consumers and local businesses.

If Wisconsin accepted enhanced federal Medicaid funds for BadgerCare, 84,700 Wisconsin residents would gain access to BadgerCare. Rejecting federal money is costing more, while covering fewer lives. Wisconsin is losing up to $1 million a day in federal funds for BadgerCare. See the county by county breakdown here.

These referendum are especially important with the announcement that 38,000 Wisconsin residents forced off BadgerCare by Governor Walker were unable to sign up for private coverage. Because Wisconsin did not accept federal funds for BadgerCare, these residents have fallen into a coverage gap, unable to access affordable health coverage for all of 2014.

"In November voters in counties throughout Wisconsin will have the opportunity to send a clear message to the Governor and Legislature about the importance of guaranteeing affordable access to health care for everyone in Wisconsin," said Robert Kraig, Executive Director of Citizen Action of Wisconsin.
Combine this with the work that Move to Amend has done with getting the Citizens United decision overturned and there's a helluva lot of democracy going on!

It's a damn good thing to see.

1 comment:

  1. Pay attention Wisconsin. Governor Running for President sent Medicaid money back to Washington to advance his political career. That puts him in good standing with his rich contributors. They don't want to pay their fair share. It comes down to your health versus Scott Walker's political agenda.

    Kudos to Governor Elect Mary. Her recent ads challenge Scott Walker's fairy tale political ads . Keep'em coming Mary and lets send Tinkerbell home in November.

    ReplyDelete