Washington, DC – First District
Congresswoman Carol Shea-Porter and Second District Congressman Paul
Hodes sent a letter today to the House leadership urging them to take
action to address recent restrictions that could threaten the health
care coverage of several thousand children in New Hampshire.
In the letter, Shea-Porter and Hodes called on Congress to act swiftly
to reverse new regulations that the Bush Administration has imposed
upon the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). The letter
has 91 bipartisan co-signers.
“Congress needs to act quickly to prevent this blow to New Hampshire
families,” Congressman Hodes said. “If this problem is not fixed, over
2,000 children in the Granite State will lose their health care
coverage.”
“The President and his administration weren’t satisfied with just
blocking millions of uninsured kids from enrolling for health insurance
coverage,” said Congresswoman Shea-Porter. “Now they are actively
seeking to remove coverage from qualified middle class children of
working parents, and I think it is disgraceful.”
In August, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a
directive requiring states to reach 95% participation rates for SCHIP
among the lowest-income segments of their populations – families
earning below 250% of the Federal Poverty Line – in order to continue
providing coverage children at slightly higher income levels.
No state has been able to achieve this level of participation. In New
Hampshire, the new regulations would effectively force the state to
drop over 2,000 children from the Healthy Kids Program.
Tricia Brooks, Administrator of the New Hampshire Healthy Kids program,
applauded the efforts of Shea-Porter and Hodes: “Congresswoman
Shea-Porter and Congressman Hodes have been strong advocates for SCHIP
and Healthy Kids. We are grateful for their leadership on this
critically important issue.”
Brooks continued: “The predictability of a full SCHIP reauthorization
is essential for states to move forward in covering children. In the
interim, time is running out for states that must come into compliance
with CMS. Congress must take action to ensure that New Hampshire and
other states can continue to operate their highly successful programs
under rules that were put into place a decade ago and extended through
March 2009. Without a moratorium on this decision, New Hampshire and
other states will be forced to cut back their programs and move
backwards in covering kids.”
###
United States House of Representatives
Office of Congresswoman Carol Shea-Porter
1508 Longworth House Office Building • Washington, DC 20515
Media Contact: Clark Pettig
(202) 225-5456 phone • (202) 225-5822 fax •
http://shea-porter.house.gov/