North Carolina lawmakers gave final approval Tuesday to $319 million in Medicaid funding to keep the program operating after months of uncertainty. The bill now goes to Democratic Gov. Josh Stein, whose office said Tuesday evening that he was reviewing it.
The measure passed nearly unanimously in both chambers. Three Democratic lawmakers in each chamber voted against it, citing concerns that a provision could end Medicaid coverage for 27,000 pregnant women and children based on immigration status.
Senate Republicans said they were unsure whether the language would remove coverage for those 27,000 people and said they were awaiting guidance from federal partners before deciding whether changes were needed.
Other provisions require the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services to collect information on patients’ immigration status and report suspected undocumented immigrants to Homeland Security. Advocacy groups also raised concerns about higher inpatient copays and work-requirement vetting periods, both set at the maximum allowed under federal law.
Sen. Benton Sawrey, R-Johnston, said Republicans were consulting attorneys, congressional bill drafters, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to determine whether revisions were needed. “We truthfully did not think it was an issue,” he said.
Opponents included Sens. Michael Garrett, Jonah Garson, and DeAndrea Salvador, all Democrats, and Reps. Pricey Harrison and Marcia Morey, both Democrats, and Rep. Ed Goodwin, R-Chowan.
Sen. Jim Burgin, R-Harnett, said lawmakers did not intend to affect immigrant patients’ coverage and would keep working on the bill after passage.