Officials say federal budget moves could affect Medicaid rules; limited impact expected at Lakeland

3449834 · May 21, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

County staff updated trustees on federal budget negotiations and possible changes to Medicaid rules — including more frequent eligibility redeterminations for some recipients and shorter retroactive coverage — but said most proposed changes were unlikely to significantly affect Lakeland operations.

At the May 21 Lakeland Healthcare Center Board of Trustees meeting, county staff provided an update on pending state and federal budget proposals and how those proposals might affect long-term care operations.

Staff cited several items under discussion in Washington, including a proposal to change Medicaid eligibility redeterminations for certain populations from annually to every six months and a proposal to shorten Medicaid’s retroactive coverage window from three months to one month. Staff said the redetermination proposal likely applies to the Medicaid expansion population and is not expected to broadly affect Lakeland residents.

Staff also reported that a previously discussed federal staffing mandate for nursing homes appears unlikely to move forward, which county staff said reduces the risk of a sudden, workforce-driven closure. Another item noted: states may be prohibited from raising provider taxes, a change staff said would protect providers who currently pay a Medicaid bed tax to the state.

Officials cautioned that some administrative offices that administer grants (including temporary-assistance-for-needy-families and the Social Services Block Grant) have staff changes, but that, as of the update, proposals had not included cuts to those specific grants.

Discussion: Trustees asked clarifying questions about which grants and populations would be affected; staff said the county will continue to monitor federal negotiations and report impacts to HHS and the Lakeland board.