Perdue proposes deep health care cuts in Ga.

Thursday, March 11, 2010 8:52 PM
Last updated 9:04 PM
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ATLANTA - Georgia's hospitals and health-care providers were hammered today as part of a new round of cuts proposed by Gov. Sonny Perdue to deal with a gaping budget shortfall.

Gov. Sonny Perdue speaks at a news conference at the State Capitol where he presented a revised, lower revenue estimate for state government for the remainder of this fiscal year, and fiscal 2011, on Thursday, March 11, 2010 in Atlanta. Lawmakers have spent a large chunk of the current legislative session obsessing over ways to lower spending and considering a variety of new revenue sources. But not all new sources of cash are created equal.   AP Photo/The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Phil Skinner
AP Photo/The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Phil Skinner
Gov. Sonny Perdue speaks at a news conference at the State Capitol where he presented a revised, lower revenue estimate for state government for the remainder of this fiscal year, and fiscal 2011, on Thursday, March 11, 2010 in Atlanta. Lawmakers have spent a large chunk of the current legislative session obsessing over ways to lower spending and considering a variety of new revenue sources. But not all new sources of cash are created equal.

With state tax collections in freefall, Perdue is pushing to cancel the state's weeklong sales back-to-school sales tax holiday. Georgians will also face a host of new or increased fees totaling some $96 million as the state scrambles to balance its books.

Perdue told a state Capitol news conference that the state is undergoing "a government reset."

"We're taking a step back from a lot of things that were nice to do in good times," the Republican governor said.

The bad budget news has been expected since February's revenue numbers dipped for the 15th straight month. Perdue today lowered the revenue estimate for the fiscal year that begins in July by $443 million, effectively giving legislators fewer dollars to spend. The budget will drop from $18.2 billion to $17.7 billion.

The governor brought the current fiscal year's books out of the red by moving forward $342 million in federal stimulus dollars that he has intended to spend next year.

The new cuts rippled throughout state government. Many state agencies that have already endured round after round of reductions will be asked to slash another 3 percent from their spending. There are a few exceptions, such elementary and secondary schools and the department of corrections, which won't be cut as much.

But hospitals, that had been protected so far from Medicaid cuts, were hit hard in Perdue's new blueprint.

Hospital officials immediately warned that health-care facilities around the state - including Atlanta's Grady Memorial Hospital - could be forced to close if the governor's proposals are enacted.

Perdue is pushing a 10.25 percent cut in the amount the state gives to hospitals and health-care providers for serving Medicaid patients. He also proposed eliminating the state sales tax exemption for nonprofit hospitals, meaning they would have to pay sales taxes for purchases.

Earl Rogers, a lobbyist for the Georgia Hospital Association, said the cuts would harm patient care by leading to the layoffs of doctors and nurses.

"You go to a hospital where a nurse is in charge of taking care of eight patients and suddenly because of job layoffs she's in charge of 12 or more patients, then you're talking about potential life-and-death circumstances," Rogers said.

Others said the governor's plan would be devastating to the state's cash-strapped rural hospitals.

Hospital officials have been pushing for state officials to hike the state's cigarette tax by $1 a pack, which they say would raise about $342 million. But Republican leaders, some of whom have pledged to balance the budget without raising taxes, have been cool to the proposal, calling the revenue unreliable.

Perdue had initially proposed a 1.6 percent tax on hospital revenues. But hospitals and state legislative leaders panned the proposal, even though some hospitals who serve a large number of poor Medicaid patients would have benefited from a part of the plan that would have boosted Medicaid provider fees.

"Frankly, I don't think the hospital community has been fair to the citizens of Georgia," Perdue said.

Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle said Thursday that there is consensus on about 90 percent of what the governor released.

"The good news is we're working together," Cagle said.

The steep proposed cuts in health care came on the same day that state health commissioner Rhonda Medows said she was stepping down. Perdue said Medows' departure had nothing to do with the new budget proposal and that Medows, who has managed the state's massive health programs since 2005, was leaving to pursue other career opportunities.

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msgret92
3
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msgret92 03/11/10 - 10:12 pm
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"We're taking a step back

"We're taking a step back from a lot of things that were nice to do in good times," the Republican governor said.

Columbia County needs to take note and take at least two steps back. Instead of raising taxes to pay for the things the state isn't going to pay for.

disssman
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disssman 03/11/10 - 10:39 pm
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msgret92 Richmond county

msgret92 Richmond county could do the same. But that would require them to actually designate what is absolutely needed and what is actually nice to have. I have often wondered about our funding of health clinics and programs for the poor, when the state is responsible for Medicaid. Why did we get into the healthcare business at the county level?

dichotomy
427
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dichotomy 03/11/10 - 10:58 pm
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I don't agree with everything

I don't agree with everything old Sonny does or says but his phrase "government reset" is appropriate and overdue. In the long run this downturn could turn out to be one of the best things that has happened. It is actually making our "representatives", and I use that term very loosely, take a hard look at how they have been peeing away our money and what programs do we actually need. Too bad our federal government is not doing the same thing. We need a Balanced Budget Amendment for our federal government.

whyme
27
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whyme 03/11/10 - 11:06 pm
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The governor continues to

The governor continues to hold state employees responsible for budget issues. If you look at the salaries of most of the folks at our local state mental health hospital, they are really low, yet there are furloughs for many, the morale is low, and yet people keep trying to do their job to help the folks that the rest of the community won't.

FedupwithAUG
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FedupwithAUG 03/11/10 - 11:14 pm
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Funny how all this universial

Funny how all this universial health care on the federal level in the news. I guess it's just in time because your not going to be able to afford health care in Georgia anymore. Wonder if it includes MCG paying taxes?

Fiat_Lux
37
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Fiat_Lux 03/11/10 - 11:55 pm
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We're not going to like it

We're not going to like it when Augusta doesn't have a trauma center anymore, or when we don't have a Level III neonatal intensive care unit, or when the ER wait is 12 hours instead of 2-4 hours. People are going to die whey they shouldn't. Lots of them.

The issue won't be equal access, it will any access.

If Obamination doesn't start pushing for tax cuts and really boosting the heck out of business, especially small businesses, we're going to continue spiraling down, soon to be circling the drain if he and his staff and Congressional toadies don't get the boot quickly enough.

Junket831
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Junket831 03/12/10 - 12:17 am
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Why oh why are they still

Why oh why are they still moving forward with the MCG Athens campus? This project and others like it should be stopped immediately. This may have had some merit when the money was available, but in these tough times any new expansion of programs should be cut.

Riverman1
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Riverman1 03/12/10 - 12:28 am
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If you think things are bad

If you think things are bad THIS year, wait until next year when cuts are projected to be even deeper.

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