AUGUSTA
– Rep. Michael McClellan (R-Raymond) was the House Republican member of the
Maine Health Exchange Advisory Committee, which met for the final time Monday
at the Statehouse and was established by the legislature this year to study the
implementation of ObamaCare in Maine. McClellan is pleased that the committee
did not take sides in the debate over whether to expand Maine’s medical welfare
system under ObamaCare’s promise of partial funding.
“The
one thing we all agreed on was that the more people who have coverage, the
better,” said McClellan. “Medicaid expansion under ObamaCare, however, would be
the biggest fiscal mistake in Maine’s history. As we see with the latest data
on the statewide health insurance reform law republicans passed here in Maine
in 2011, there are good, market-based alternatives to welfare. Overall, I’m
glad that the committee was able to meet over the course of the past several
weeks and hear from experts on the dramatic implications of ObamaCare. The more
information we have, the better off we’ll be.”
Background:
Maine DHHS estimates that Medicaid expansion would cost state taxpayers $150
million by Financial Year 2020-21.
Medicaid has doubled as a share of the state budget over the past 15 years.
Maine’s Medicaid program is the third largest in the country by enrollment.
Maine’s Medicaid-induced shortfall in the last biennial budget was over $200
million.
Past expansions of Medicaid have been blamed for the $500 million state debt to
hospitals that Republicans recently paid off.
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