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WHEREAS, the global COVID-19 pandemic constitutes a massive public health and economic crisis, the deep impacts of which are intertwined, with our nation's states left to deal with both ends of the crisis on their own in many ways; and
WHEREAS, large-scale job loss puts into sharp relief the precarity of employment-based health insurance coverage, and, with the Congressional Budget Office forecasting an average unemployment rate of 15 percent in the second and third quarters of 2020, scores of Americans will lose their health insurance; and
WHEREAS, according to a recent analysis performed by the Kaiser Family Foundation, close to 17 million people could be newly eligible for Medicaid by January 2021, which is when unemployment insurance benefits are set to end for the majority of those who lost their jobs between March 1 and May 2, 2020; and
WHEREAS, concurrently, state revenues across the country have taken a drastic hit, with Pennsylvania alone facing down a precipitous 49.7 percent drop in revenues in the month of April alone; and
WHEREAS, Federal Medical Assistance Percentages (FMAP) are used when determining the rate of federal matching funds that go toward specific medical and social service programs, such as Medicaid. These funds help states to offset fiscal obligations while preserving aid programs, including those meant for people experiencing economic hardship; and
WHEREAS, although both the President and Congress enhanced FMAP by 6.2 percent earlier this year, it falls short of the 12 percent enhancement over the two-year window that was enacted as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in 2009 in response to the Great Recession, and will be insufficient for our present national circumstances, as state groups including the National Governors Association and the National Association of State Medicaid Directors call for greater increases; and
WHEREAS, HR 6800 of the 116th Congress, the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency...
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