Sanford likes most of budget
The Post and Courier
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Gov. Mark Sanford finds a lot to applaud in the state budget going before the House in a few weeks, but a plan to spend $106 million in Medicaid reserves bothers him.
Grace Beahm The Post and Courier
Gov. Mark Sanford called borrowing $106 million from Medicaid reserves "a bad idea."
"Medicaid is an incredibly important program to literally hundreds of thousands of people across South Carolina," Sanford said Tuesday at Roper Hospital in Charleston. He noted that the hospital served about 40,000 Medicaid patients alone. "We think the idea of borrowing $106 million from the reserve accounts for Medicaid to be a bad idea, and we would ask that there be some changes," he said. Sanford praised the approximately $7 billion proposed budget for the way it funds education, including the state's pre-payment tuition program, and saves money in travel. He made his concern about Medicaid public "in the spirit of constructive criticism," and in hopes that lawmakers would change the spending plan before it reaches his desk. The Medicaid reserve is particularly important to maintain, he said, because the state is making changes to the $5.5 billion indigent health care program that serves about 860,000 state residents. Sanford said he would prefer to see another $106 million trimmed from the budget or borrowed from the S.C. Budget and Control Board reserves instead of Medicaid's. State Rep. Annette Young, R-Summerville, serves on the Ways and Means Committee that passed the budget late last week, and she said Tuesday that the committee's work was more difficult this year because the economy hasn't increased state revenues much. "We're not growing government," she said. "The budget is less. It shows that all agencies except for education took a cut this year." Sanford also expressed concern about the proposed spending for the state's prison system. He noted that the national average is to spend $62.22 per inmate per day, while South Carolina spends about $45.02. The proposed budget would spend $43.94, which Sanford said could jeopardize the safety of inmates and prison workers.
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Posted by lillycollette on February 27, 2008 at 3:17 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Ways and Means plans on -- “borrowing” -- $106 million from Medicaid reserves.
Exactly what are those funds being “borrowed” to cover?
Precisely how are those “borrowed” funds to be replaced?
Posted by skyguy51 on February 27, 2008 at 4:39 a.m. (Suggest removal)
20% of the population of this state is on Medicaid!
Posted by crankyyankee on February 27, 2008 at 7:59 a.m. (Suggest removal)
At least he wants to save money. None of the outstanding representatives you folks keep voting into office have a clue what saving means!
Posted by ChrisPia on February 27, 2008 at 9:48 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Palmetto Man: I am just curious(not against it).How does abolishment of probation and Parole save money? Wouldn't that cost more to House them?
Posted by RTC on February 27, 2008 at 10:24 a.m. (Suggest removal)
There are too many people on Medicaid that don't deserve it.
Our system encourages young unmarried women to have children, since this is one of the ways that they can qualify for Medicaid, WIC, and food stamps.
Try being a young female that works for a company with no health benefits. I know of many young women that have gone to the health department in need of medical care, and they were turned down because their salaries were a little too high, and they didn't have kids.
Oh, they will treat you, but you will have to pay for it.
It disgusts me that some people are trying hard to make ends meet,and the same services that are denied to them are coming out of their paychecks.
Posted by KidYendor on February 27, 2008 at 10:34 a.m. (Suggest removal)
It is horrible to know that we have 860,000 South Carolina indigents that will be using your tax money to live on until the next budget. Next time you get a SCDOR tax letter that you owe more just think of all the Medicaid single moms and teens having and feeding their babies on you. And then we'll approach 900,000 indigents for Medicaid next year.