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Immigration questions to drop, 1700 from Mo. and 700 Kansans from ACA rolls

 

Map showing the number of people, by state, losing coverage they obtained through the health insurance marketplace because they lack immigration/citizenship data.-KHI News
Map showing the number of people, by state, losing coverage they obtained through the health insurance marketplace because they lack immigration/citizenship data.-KHI News

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Discrepancies in immigration status data will cause about 700 Kansans who enrolled in health insurance plans through the online federal marketplace to lose their coverage at the end of the month.

Officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said earlier this month they were attempting to contact some 1,800 Kansans whose immigration status was in question because of data differences in their online applications.
he deadline to resolve those differences was Sept. 5. CMS data compiled on Sept. 14 showed that Kansas still had 700 enrollees with outstanding data discrepancies whose coverage will end Sept. 30.

“We’re glad they got ahold of 1,100 of the 1,800, but it’s unfortunate 700 are still going to have their coverage pulled,” said Katrina McGivern, a spokeswoman for the Kansas Association for the Medically Underserved.

About 57,000 Kansans used the online health insurance marketplace, healthcare.gov, to purchase health insurance last year. Coverage under the Affordable Care Act is only allowed for those who have properly documented they are in the country legally.

KAMU received the bulk of the federal grant money provided to train navigators to help Kansans use the federal health insurance marketplace. But McGivern said officials there were unable to do much proactively to help those whose coverage was in question because navigators are barred by law from keeping contact information for those they help enroll.

“There have been some people who come in and get assistance, but the effort to get this information back (to CMS) has been outside of us for the most part,” McGivern said. “It kind of goes back to the whole ‘we can’t keep their information.’ So we don’t know who to reach out to.”

About 1,700 Missourians also will receive notices saying their coverage will end Sept. 30 because of immigration status questions. That state had about 150,000 people use the federal site to enroll in a plan last year.

The data mismatches were a national problem, with CMS reporting almost 1 million such discrepancies nationwide as of May.

CMS outreach efforts helped pare that number month by month, and in August CMS sent notices to about 310,000 people who were still mismatched to let them know the deadline to provide documentation was fast approaching.

“We’ve made progress in resolving these cases,” said an email sent this week by CMS media relations. “We received hundreds of thousands of documents in response to the September 5 deadline, resulting in a decrease from 966,000 as of the end of May to 115,000 as of September 14.”

Those 115,000 — which include the 700 in Kansas and the 1,700 in Missouri — may have an opportunity for a special open enrollment period if they resolve their immigration status data now, according to the CMS email.

Otherwise, they will be unable to sign up for coverage until November, when the general open enrollment period for 2015 begins.

McGivern said her organization hopes that those who have their coverage canceled will work with navigators during open enrollment to get covered again.

Kansans did not need to use a navigator to sign up for insurance through the online marketplace, and it’s unclear how many of those with data discrepancies used a navigator last year. McGivern said problems with the marketplace website may have contributed to the data mismatches.

“When the website wasn’t working, there were issues that occurred with requesting different pieces of documentation more than once,” McGivern said. “There were various problems that occurred, so hopefully some of that gets worked out for the next time if that’s where the issues lie with all of this.”

CMS said it’s also in the midst of sending notices to about 279,000 households nationwide that had income discrepancies in their online marketplace applications.

Income level is key to the applications because enrollees are eligible for tax credits depending on how much money they make.

CMS administrator Marilyn Tavenner urged those who receive notice of income discrepancies to respond with proper documentation by Sept. 30 so her agency can protect the integrity of the tax credit program.

“We are committed to keeping coverage affordable for the millions of Americans who depend on it, and to doing so in an efficient, transparent way that protects taxpayers,” Tavenner said. “It’s critically important that consumers who still owe income-related documents to the Marketplace send them in by September 30 so we can continue to hold down their costs.”

Those who miss the Sept. 30 deadline may see their monthly premium costs change.

17-year-old Kansas teen convicted of murder

CourtKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City, Kansas teenager has been convicted of first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of another teen.

A Wyandotte County jury found the 17-year-old Deaarion Potts guilty on Thursday of murder, car burglary and the criminal discharge of a firearm. He was 15 years old at the time of the shooting but was tried as an adult.

Authorities say Potts fatally shot 17-year-old Ramon Bradley in October 2012. They say both teens were in vehicles and Bradley was killed by shots fired from a car that Potts was driving.

He is scheduled to be sentenced next month.

 

School commission to consider more efficiency proposals

Oneal
Oneal

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new commission looking for efficiencies within Kansas’ public school system has school consolidation and teacher pay proposals on the agenda as its two-day meeting continues.

The K-12 Student Performance and Efficiency Commission was scheduled to hear a report Friday on why districts carry over unspent money for use in future years. Commissioner member Mike O’Neal says he wants to know why districts’ unspent balances are climbing.

Commissioners also are considering a host of cost-saving proposals. One calls for offering incentives for district to merge or cooperate. Another proposal would change the traditional teacher salary schedule, which ties pay to education and years of experience, to a salary range that takes into account experience and area of expertise.

College president issues video game challenge

Scott Dalrymple
Scott Dalrymple

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — The new president of Missouri’s Columbia will test his video game skills against the winner of a student competition with a year’s worth of free textbooks on the line.

Scott Dalrymple is hosting an online Madden NFL video game tournament next month as part of his inauguration at the private college. The Buffalo Bills fan can be seen in a YouTube video wearing eye black and mildly talking trash to his prospective PlayStation 4 opponents.

 Dalrymple will play the winner of the Oct. 17 tournament. The tournament is open to students at the main Columbia campus and the school’s other branches across the country and overseas.

Missouri attorney new ambassador to Ireland

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The U.S. Senate has confirmed the appointment of St. Louis attorney Kevin O’Malley as U.S. ambassador to Ireland.

President Barack Obama nominated O’Malley to the post in June. The Senate approved the appointment Thursday on a unanimous voice vote.

 O’Malley is a veteran litigator with the Greensfelder law firm in St. Louis, focusing on medical negligence, federal white collar criminal defense and product liability defense.

He has also served as an assistant U.S. attorney in St. Louis, and as a special attorney for organized crime and racketeering for the U.S. Justice Department.

O’Malley received his bachelor’s degree in 1970 and his law degree in 1973, both from Saint Louis University.

Former Kan. hospital CEO named to Davis advisory council

Maynard Oliverius
Maynard Oliverius

KHI News Service

 — Maynard Oliverius, former president and chief executive officer of Stormont-Vail HealthCare in Topeka, has been named as the health care representative on a business advisory council for House Minority Leader Paul Davis, the Democratic candidate for Kansas governor.

Davis announced the appointment of Oliverius and others to his advisory council Thursday in Lenexa. He also announced plans for economic summits that would be scheduled during the first six months of his administration, if he defeats Gov. Sam Brownback in November’s general election.

“I’m pleased to introduce the economic sector champions who will work with my administration to bring business leaders and other stakeholders together to grow our economy, sector by sector,” Davis said.

In addition to health care, Davis named economic sector leaders for oil and gas, energy, military, aviation, agriculture, small business, transportation and technology.

Oliverius and the other advisory council members would bring together stakeholders from each economic sector to summits, where they would address the challenges and opportunities for growth in each industry.

Oliverius was Stormont-Vail’s chief executive from 1996 to 2012. Prior to that he was executive vice president and a member of the hospital’s management since 1969.

New lawsuit filed in dispute in Kansas Senate race

Roberts and Orman
Roberts and Orman

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A registered Democratic voter has filed a new petition with the Kansas Supreme Court asking it to force the party to name a new nominee for the U.S. Senate.

David Orel of Kansas City, Kansas, filed the petition Thursday after the court ruled that Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach had to honor Democrat Chad Taylor’s wishes to remove his name from the Nov. 4 ballot.

Removal of Taylor’s name could help independent candidate Greg Orman’s chances of defeating three-term Republican Sen. Pat Roberts.

Kobach said earlier Thursday that the Democratic Party is legally obligated to pick a new nominee and set a Sept. 26 deadline.

Orel’s filing came two days after his attorney sent the party a letter saying Orel wants to vote for a Democratic candidate.

Nixon: Mo. Lottery operations identifies areas for improvement

MoLotteryJefferson City-Gov. Jay Nixon said today that a review of the Missouri Lottery’s operations has identified several areas for improvement and announced the appointment of four new members to the State Lottery Commission. In July, citing a decrease in the percent of lottery revenues going to education while lottery ticket sales continued to grow, the Governor ordered the Office of Administration to conduct a review of the Missouri Lottery’s operations.

“Two decades ago, Missouri voters spoke loud and clear that the proceeds from the Missouri Lottery should benefit our public schools and it’s clear that the lottery has some work to do if it’s going to keep delivering on that promise,” Gov. Nixon said. “This review has identified several areas where the lottery needs to do better, and I look forward to seeing the lottery implement these solid recommendations to improve its operations and maximize its benefit to public education.”

With a focus on the previous 10 years, the Office of Administration Budget & Planning division reviewed data specific to the Missouri Lottery, data from all 44 state lotteries, and research regarding lottery operation and performance. The review includes recommendations intended to increase the amount of funding available for transfer to public education. Recommendations include:

Aligning incentives for contractors with the goal of increased funds for education.
Integration of contracting procedures to align with the Office of Administration’s established regulations for vendor contracts.
Carefully scrutinizing administrative expenses to determine how consolidated services could be utilized to reduce those costs.
Conducting an analysis to more comprehensively review the importance of prize payout percentages relative to other factors in maximizing funds for education.
Implementing a more systematic review of projected versus actual return-on-investment on advertising and promotional expenses and suspending activities without a positive return.
The Governor also named four new members to the State Lottery Commission.

Dr. Terry R. Adams (D), of Lake St. Louis, is a retired school district superintendent who served as the superintendent of the Rockwood School District (2013-2014) in Eureka, the Wentzville R-IV School District (2006-2013), Rolla Public School District #31 (2002-2006), Central R-III School District in Park Hills (1997-2002), and the Arcadia Valley R-II School District in Ironton (1987-1997). He was named Missouri superintendent of the year in 2012. The Governor has appointed him for a term ending Sept. 7, 2015.

Dr. Phyllis A. Chase (D), of Kansas City, is director of the Charter School Center at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and has held positions in public education since 1971. She was superintendent of Columbia Public Schools from 2003 to 2008, chief of staff of Springfield Public Schools from 2000 to 2003, and acting superintendent of the Kansas City, Missouri School District from 1998 to 2000. The Governor has appointed her for a term ending Sept. 7, 2016.

Paul Kincaid (I), of Springfield, will retire in October after 28 years with Missouri State University, most recently as chief of staff and assistant to the president for university relations. He has been active in the Council for Advancement and Support of Education and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. Kincaid is a graduate of Phillips University. The Governor has appointed him for a term ending Sept. 7, 2017.

John Twitty (R), of Springfield, spent almost three decades in management of municipal utilities in Rolla and Springfield, including service as general manager and chief executive officer of City Utilities of Springfield from 2002 to 2011. He serves on the Board of Trustees of Drury University, and on the boards of directors for Jordan Valley Community Health Center, Mercy Health Springfield Communities and Empire Bank. He obtained his undergraduate degree from the University of Missouri and his post-graduate degree from the University of Missouri-Rolla. The Governor has appointed Twitty for a term ending Sept. 7, 2017.

The appointments will be subject to confirmation by the Missouri Senate.

“The Office of Administration’s comprehensive review provides several specific recommendations aimed at minimizing costs and maximizing benefits for public education, and this review should give clear guidance to the Commission,” Gov. Nixon said. “The four Missourians I am appointing to the Commission today have extensive experience in business and education, and are uniquely qualified to provide strong leadership to ensure the state lottery provides the greatest possible benefit to our public schools.”

In 1992, Missouri voters approved a constitutional amendment directing Missouri Lottery net proceeds solely for public education. In Fiscal Year 2014, the percent of lottery revenues going to education dropped to 23 percent, its lowest point in at least a decade, while lottery ticket sales continued to increase.

School efficiency taskforce studies ‘at risk’ funding

Schools fundingTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new commission looking for efficiencies within Kansas’ public school system is raising questions about how the state provides extra money to help districts educate their poorest students.

The K-12 Student Performance and Efficiency Commission began a two-day meeting Thursday with a discussion of so-called “at-risk funding.” Legislative post auditor Scott Frank said school districts receive about $1,750 in extra funding for each student who is poor enough to qualify for free lunches. Statewide, that amounts to $347 million.

An earlier audit found that as many as 23,000 students receiving the free meals weren’t eligible. Frank says another 6,900 students may be eligible but don’t apply.

Commission members asked whether using census poverty data or student achievement results would be a better way to distribute the money.

Grissom named to Holder’s advisory panel

Grissom and Holder
Grissom and Holder

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — U.S. Attorney for Kansas Barry Grissom has been appointed to a national committee that advises the U.S. attorney general on policy and management issues.

Attorney General Eric Holder announced Grissom’s appointment to a two-year term on Thursday.

The Attorney General’s Advisory Committee is made up of 20 federal prosecutors from around the country, representing federal judicial districts and U.S. attorney’s offices of various sizes.

The U.S. attorney in Kansas has three offices and a staff of about 100, including 50 assistant prosecutors.

 

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