On Jan. 18, the ninth day of the 2024 legislative session, essential to was placed first in line on the Senate鈥檚 calendar for debate.
On the same day, a bill expanding an was also put on the calendar, second in line.
Last week, the education bill narrowly on its way to Gov. Mike Parson for his signature.
The bill that would balance the budget, by renewing roughly $4 billion worth of medical provider taxes that fund Medicaid, hasn鈥檛 received as much as a minute of debate.
At a news conference last week, Sen. Doug Beck, an Affton Democrat, said the delays are frustrating.
鈥淚t鈥檚 completely ridiculous that we鈥檙e perfecting the Senate bill on gold and silver on a Thursday when we could have all week long been talking about the鈥 taxes,鈥 he said.
While the Medicaid taxes, known as the federal reimbursement allowance, have gotten scant attention inside the Senate, there鈥檚 been plenty of talk outside the chambers.
Senate members of the Missouri Freedom Caucus, six of the 24 Republicans in the chamber, have promised to filibuster renewal of the taxes until two other legislative items are finished. Both are Senate-passed bills awaiting votes in the House.
The first is a bill from the Medicaid program. The second is a to alter how a majority is determined for voter-initiated constitutional amendments.
But even if those bills pass, the Freedom Caucus has also said it will demand the federal reimbursement allowance legislation include an expiration date before they will consider letting it come up for a vote. And at that point, other amendments 鈥 such as Medicaid work requirements 鈥 may also become mandatory for the Freedom Caucus to and their filibuster.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to continue to fight for a sunset, and maybe there鈥檚 some other provisions that fit on this bill,鈥 said Sen. Bill Eigel, a Weldon Spring Republican running for governor.
The budget, which must be completed by May 10, can鈥檛 be finished in committee until the provider taxes are secured for the future, said Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Lincoln Hough, a Springfield Republican running for lieutenant governor.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 really deal in ultimatums,鈥 Hough said. 鈥淚 deal with the constitutional necessity of passing a budget in the state, not trying to leverage someone to get something else done.鈥
Hough scheduled a hearing for Tuesday to discuss changes to the spending $50.7 billion. Senate floor debate on the budget is expected the following week.
鈥淲e鈥檙e running up against the end, and FRA and the budget, and all of these things, are in front of us that I think will take center stage in the coming days,鈥 Senate President Pro Tem Caleb Rowden said last week.
Democrats, who hold the minority in both legislative chambers, said they鈥檙e tired of waiting for Republicans to bury their factional warfare.
House Minority Leader Crystal Quade opened her Thursday press conference with criticism of the House GOP for not moving independently of the Senate. Quade filed the to extend the taxes, but it has not been referred to a committee.
鈥淚f we do not get this passed,鈥 Quade said, 鈥渆verything else we鈥檙e doing when it comes to the budget or funding mechanisms, is just smoke and mirrors.鈥
What is the Federal Reimbursement Allowance
Since 1992, Missouri has taxed hospitals 鈥 and later nursing homes, ambulance providers and pharmacies 鈥 to support the Medicaid program. The money becomes part of the state鈥檚 share of the federally sponsored program.
This year, Missouri of the cost of most Medicaid services. An exception is the group covered by a 2020 ballot initiative that used a provision of the Affordable Care Act to cover adults aged 18 to 64. The federal government pays 90% of the cost for that group.
The budget proposed by Parson in January pegs the general revenue cost for the entire Medicaid program at 21.7% of the projected $17.8 billion total. The remainder of the state鈥檚 share, $1.7 billion in Parson鈥檚 budget, comes from reimbursement allowances and other funds.
There is no general revenue in the $3 billion budget line covering the cost of the adult expansion group. Instead, much of the state鈥檚 share comes from money banked as a bonus federal share of the regular Medicaid program as an incentive to expand coverage.
The provider taxes are slated to supply $50 million toward the cost of Medicaid expansion in the coming year鈥檚 budget, drawing $450 million in federal funds. There鈥檚 another $950 million from the provider taxes used across 16 lines of the Medicaid budget, drawing at least $1.8 billion in federal funds.
The taxes have been renewed 16 times during regular legislative sessions. That regular process was disrupted in 2021, when first an effort to ban payments for some contraceptive medications, and later the question of banning Planned Parenthood as a Medicaid provider, forced lawmakers to have to return for a special session to extend the taxes.
The taxes expire Sept. 30 without passage of a renewal bill.
If reimbursement allowance funds aren鈥檛 available, the Medicaid budget will have to be rewritten and cuts made to make up the shortfall, Hough said.
He鈥檚 ready to debate the bill at any time, he told reporters.
鈥淚鈥檓 waiting on the floor leader just say, 鈥楬ey, let鈥檚 go to the FRA and let鈥檚 get this thing done,鈥欌 Hough said. 鈥淚 think she鈥檚 got competing interests with our small band of merry men out there on the floor all the time that you know, constantly slow things down and want to say we haven鈥檛 gotten anything done.鈥
Consequences of failure
Missouri has accumulated a surplus that stood at $6.4 billion at the end of March.
Eigel said he鈥檚 not concerned that the state can fund its obligations without the provider taxes.
鈥淲e have more than enough money with or without the FRA to meet the obligations of the state,鈥 Eigel said.
Sen. Rick Brattin, speaking at a news conference Thursday, said the goals the Freedom Caucus is working towards are more attainable if members are willing to push against the constitutional deadline for passing the budget.
鈥淲e can get a lot of things done and I think that鈥檚 what we have to leverage to ensure we鈥檙e able to protect the Constitution, to make sure that abortion isn鈥檛 in our Constitution and to fight against that,鈥 Brattin said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to do everything by every means possible.鈥
Senate Democrats are ready to help pass the provider taxes without the Freedom Caucus demands and to get the budget through on time, Minority Leader John Rizzo of Independence said.
He thinks the deadlines will be met, he said.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e gonna probably see a lot of other bills fall by the wayside because they鈥檙e unable to move on FRA and on a budget pretty quickly,鈥 Rizzo said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 time to panic quite yet.鈥
This story was originally published in The Missouri Independent, part of the States Newsroom.