Return To Full Article
You can republish this story for free. Click the "Copy HTML" button below. Questions? Get more details.

Montanas Medicaid Expansion Conundrum

HELENA, Mont. Despite concerns about what Congress and the Trump administration might have planned for Medicaid, Montanas Republican-led legislature and GOP governor appear ready to keep the states Medicaid expansion program in place beyond its scheduled end date this summer.

State lawmakers dont have the luxury of waiting until the federal picture sharpens. They must decide before the session ends in early May whether to lift a June 30 sunset date for the expansion program, which covers about 76,000 adults.

However, the likelihood that significant changes lie ahead for the joint federal-state Medicaid program has spurred discussion of whether legislators should or can prepare for what may be coming. Thats the challenge for lawmakers this session, said Republican state Rep. Jane Gillette during a recent meeting of the budget subcommittee she chairs that works on the Medicaid budget.

What are the different options we have for bracing ourselves for that? Gillette said.

The U.S. House is working on a budget bill to reflect President Donald Trumps priorities, including allocating up to $4.5 trillion to extend tax cuts that would otherwise expire.

A plan passed by the House Budget Committee on Feb. 13 calls for $880 billion in cuts over the next 10 years for the committee that oversees, among other things, Medicaid spending. Ideas reportedly under discussion include federal work requirements for some Medicaid enrollees and a decrease in the share of costs the federal government pays for people covered by the expansion program.

Some of the proposals would shift significant costs to the states, noted Robin Rudowitz, a vice president and the director of the Program on Medicaid and the Uninsured at KFF, a health information nonprofit that includes 窪蹋勛圖厙 News. If that happens, states will need to raise revenue or cut spending elsewhere to continue the same level of Medicaid coverage, she said.

There are no easy answers or options for states in these scenarios, she said.

Some states are debating how to prepare for possible federal changes. The South Dakota Legislature is that would ask voters whether to continue Medicaid expansion if the federal share drops. A outright has been introduced but not heard, while of several limitations on Feb. 19. Montana and eight other states that could end their expansion programs if the federal contribution rate drops.

The GOP-controlled Montana House of Representatives easily passed a bill to make the Medicaid expansion program permanent on Feb. 10 by a 63-37 vote. Then on Feb. 20, House Bill 245 passed the first of two votes required for Senate approval. Gov. Greg Gianforte has not publicly said whether he would sign the bill, but he previously said he believes the expansion program should continue if strong work requirements are in place.

In late January, the budget subcommittee that Gillette chairs was reviewing Medicaid expansions financial implications when talk quickly turned to the possible federal changes, particularly a drop in the federal matching rate.

Republican state Sen. Carl Glimm noted that observers have called a lower federal matching rate pretty low-hanging fruit. The change would require congressional action, though, and members noted that could take time.

The federal government pays 90% of the health care costs of expansion enrollees. That group is made up of adults ages 19 to 64 without disabilities and who have annual incomes at or below 138% of the federal poverty level, or $21,597 for an individual.

Until the federal Affordable Care Act allowed states to extend Medicaid to this group, the program was generally limited to low-income children, pregnant women, and adults who are blind, disabled, or at least 65. The federal match for those groups in Montana will be about 62% in the next state fiscal year, which begins in July.

The state spent nearly $1 billion on Medicaid expansion in 2024, with its share of the costs totaling just under $100 million. Budget committee staff said a 10% reduction in the federal share would add roughly $100 million in state costs. If the states share goes from 10% to the regular state match of 38%, the state would pay about $280 million more a year for expansion.

Subcommittee member Russ Tempel, a Republican senator, noted that the federal share changed in the past due to unexpected events, such as covid-19.

Somethings going to happen thats unpredictable, he said. Its happened before, and its going to happen again, so were kind of a little bit shooting in the dark.

But Republican Sen. Jeremy Trebas focused on the likely federal changes when urging senators to support his bill to tighten the work requirements in current law and, if federal approval were denied, eventually end the program.

We should match up our state policy to coming federal policy so that were not caught off guard and expectations arent radically altered by what the federal government does, he said during a committee hearing on Senate Bill 199.

The bill died last week on the Senate floor when all Democrats voted against it, along with a block of nine Republicans who have broken with their party on other issues this session. Roughly the same coalition also killed a bill by Glimm that would have phased out the expansion.

Trebas said recently he expects HB 245 to pass but also believes that federal Medicaid changes could happen more quickly than some think possible, forcing a special Montana legislative session to adjust to those changes.

Gillette, who voted against HB 245, said in a recent interview that the legislature should provide the Gianforte administration with a range of options to allow it to course correct without further legislative involvement if Medicaid expansion continues and federal changes come down before the legislature meets again in 2027.

State Senate President Matt Regier Feb. 15 to limit the expansion population to people below 100% of the federal poverty level and to give the state health agency the ability to limit spending or improve program integrity.

Regiers bill also would make the expansion program contingent on the federal government approving a community engagement waiver, which includes work requirements, and it calls for lawmakers to vote on whether to hold a special session if the federal Medicaid matching rate drops more than three months before the next regular session.

But HB 245 sponsor Rep. Ed Buttrey, another Republican, said in a recent interview that takes care of any future decrease in federal support by requiring either the state to increase premiums for the program or the legislature to appropriate additional funds if the program is to continue.

Buttrey also said the legislature cant make decisions now based on what federal law might be in the future. He said its unlikely that federal Medicaid policy would change quickly, but that if it did, the program affects such a large percentage of the states population that a special session would be warranted.

I cant think of one thats more important than that, he said.

窪蹋勛圖厙 News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

Help 窪蹋勛圖厙 News track this article

By including these elements when you republish, you help us:
  • Understand which communities and people were reaching.
  • Measure the impact of our health journalism.
  • Continue providing free, high-quality health news to the public.
Canonical Tag

Include this in your page's <head> section to properly attribute this content.

Tracking Snippet

Add this snippet at the end of your republished article to help us track its reach.