July 14, 2017

Senate Health Bill Would Affect Special Education? Yes, Here's How

Article origination IPBS-RJC
Simon Hulatt/Flickr

Simon Hulatt/Flickr

Indiana districts stand to lose more than $3.6 million per year over the next two decades, under proposed cuts to Medicaid spending under new federal health care legislation.

How school services would be effected has garnered little attention in the national debate as Republican lawmakers seek to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

Indiana districts use Medicaid, the federal health care program for low-income people, to pay for certain health-related services. Districts rely on Medicaid reimbursements for special education, transportation for children with disabilities, social workers, full-time nurses, testing accommodations, physical and occupational therapists and medical equipment. Districts also use Medicaid reimbursements for administrative costs, like health fairs or connecting students without medical insurance to state services.

“This serves as a lifeline for schools across Indiana and it’s going to hit the neediest districts the hardest,” says Stephanie Slone, school-based Medicaid specialist with the Indiana Department of Education. “The money allows schools to spend on things it believes can make tremendous impact on students and communities.”

In Indiana, about 160 districts receive reimbursements for IEP services and about 135 receive reimbursements for administrative costs, Slone says. In 2016, Indiana districts received a total of $16.9 million in state and federal Medicaid reimbursements.

With changes to Medicaid, school systems could struggle to provide services mandated under the federal Individuals With Disabilities Education Act. The law is supposed to ensure that students with disabilities receive high-quality educational services, but it has historically been underfunded.

Changes to Medicaid reimbursements could exacerbate that.

“Schools still have to provide that free appropriate public education, that will always be a requirement,” Slone says. “What could occur would be a loss of staffing positions, the ability to have low-income students go to clinics, materials and supplies.”

According to an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office, if the Senate bill passes there would be cuts to Medicaid of 25 percent by 2026 and 35 percent by 2036. That means Indiana districts could lose more than $2.7 million per year by 2026 and $3.6 million per year by 2036, according to an analysis by Sen. Joe Donnelly’s office released this week.

“The Senate health care bill would mean significant cuts to Indiana’s public schools and services that Hoosier students and parents count on every day,” Donnelly said, in a statement. “Because of proposed cuts our schools could be forced to make even more difficult choices, including whether to eliminate teachers, cut services to students with disabilities, or go without a full-time school nurse.”

Across the state groups have banned together to raise concerns about the Medicaid changes, including superintendents representing numerous districts, the Indiana Association of Public School Superintendents and the Indiana Small and Rural Schools Association.

“Medicaid and these dollars provide the critical health services for kids across the country that help them be able to learn and study and be ready for school,” says Scott Turney, executive director of Indiana Small and Rural School Association.

About 47 percent of rural children are enrolled in Medicaid or Children’s Health Insurance Program, known as Children’s Medicaid, according to Turney. Programs cover prescription drugs, dental care, eye exams, glasses and other health matters.

In Indiana, school funding still lags behind pre-2009 rates, when adjusted for inflation. Rural schools, often pinched for funds, already share teachers and special education services.

Turney says funding constraints will be intensified under the proposed Medicaid changes.

“Schools are strapped for money,” Turney says. “Schools will do what they’re able to do within their abilities, but they may not meet the needs that Medicaid and the CHIP program can provide.”

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