OPINION: New York’s Medicaid Shuffle Will Devastate Localities

As the New York State executive budget proposal inches closer to a final product, its insufficiencies and impacts become clearer. One area of especially great concern is Gov. Kathy Hochul’s plan to intercept federal funding meant to help offset localities’ Medicaid costs. Under the governor’s plan, more than $624 million in federal money earmarked for […]

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As the New York State executive budget proposal inches closer to a final product, its insufficiencies and impacts become clearer. One area of especially great concern is Gov. Kathy Hochul’s plan to intercept federal funding meant to help offset localities’ Medicaid costs. Under the governor’s plan, more than $624 million in federal money earmarked for localities would instead be diverted into state coffers. Worse still, as much as $2.9 billion over four years would be shifted away from those same local governments.

The proposal would be alarming under normal circumstances — most local governments are ill-equipped to take on such a considerable expense with almost no warning — but considering New York’s tax burden is already among one of the worst in the nation, this measure becomes even more troubling. Localities unable to shoulder this burden — as undoubtedly many will not be able to do so — will be forced to pass along that burden to taxpayers. That simply doesn’t work considering the crisis-level outmigration the state has faced in recent months and years and the toxic business climate suffocating the state.

In a recent interview, Stephen Acquario, executive director of the New York State Association of Counties (NYSAC), expressed his concerns about the proposal. Among his chief complaints are the service and program cuts likely to come as a result of the plan, and the lack of warning localities had to prepare for such a dramatic shift. According to NYSAC, counties like Erie (city of Buffalo), Onondaga (Syracuse), and Monroe (Rochester) are looking at increases between $13 million and $27 million. Suffolk and Westchester counties (on Long Island) are even higher than that, as they are facing $28 million and $32 million in additional costs, respectively. These are staggering figures when put into context with other costs local governments already face.

The proposal taken at face value is troubling enough, but the fact remains the pervasive pattern of ignoring local governments’ needs is a much bigger problem. The state budget should be crafted with careful intent and the interests of every single New York taxpayer in mind. This proposal, along with too many others in the governor’s spending plan, continues the trend of treating the residents, businesses, and visitors here like a personal piggy bank.

 Clearly, health care is an important industry in New York, and managing its costs can be challenging at times. But the best way to do so is with careful spending, reducing waste, cutting down on inefficiencies, and mitigating as many of those burdens away from taxpayers as possible. The executive budget does just the opposite. If New York is ever going to get take meaningful steps to improve its economy, it will take a far more nuanced strategy than shifting $2.9 billion away from those who can least afford to pay that bill.        

William (Will) A. Barclay, 53, Republican, is the New York Assembly minority leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses all of Oswego County, as well as parts of Jefferson and Cayuga counties.

Will Barclay: