The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Joplin Metro

March 10, 2010

Health centers facing cuts in state funding

By Derek Spellman

dspellman@joplinglobe.com

Elizabeth Zimmerman said she had to quit her job at Scholastic Inc. in Neosho to take care of her son, who at 5 weeks old suffered from spinal meningitis and a stroke.

She has been without health insurance ever since.

Zimmerman this week was at the Access Family Care clinic in Joplin for treatment of a cold that had been going through the family. Her son is now 15 months old.

“Otherwise, I wouldn’t be able to afford a doctor,” she said of Access, a service that she characterized as “awesome” for those who lack insurance.

Separate from the swirling national debate about health care reform, state lawmakers in Missouri next week are expected to start reviewing a bill that would cut state funding for federally qualified health centers like Access Family Care.

Lawmakers need to make budget cuts amid a still struggling economy, but health officials say that weakness is likely to fuel an increase in demand for services that could be cut — in this case, for services like Access.

Appropriations bill

Access Family Care is the only federally qualified health center in the Joplin area, and it uses a sliding fee schedule based on household income for uninsured and Medicaid patients.

Access Family Care operates clinics in Joplin, Anderson and Cassville. Those three clinics last year saw a total of 40,000 patients. Total patient visits increased 26 percent in 2009 compared with 2008, factoring in all three clinics.

“I would definitely think the economy,” said Don McBride, chief executive officer of Access Family Care, when asked about factors behind the surge.

A bill approved Feb. 16 by the Missouri House Appropriations Committee for Health, Mental Health and Social Services would eliminate the entire $9.25 million in state grants that are typically distributed among Missouri’s 23 federally qualified health centers, including Access. The health centers would still receive their Medicaid payments.

Current budget

For the current fiscal year, Access Family Care received more than $561,000 in state grant money, according to the organization. Its total operating budget is more than $4.85 million.

McBride said he understands that the state faces a budget crunch, but he questions why the committee opted for a complete cut in the grant money, especially at a time when people are still losing their jobs and, with those, their health insurance.

Dr. Charles Bentlage, medical director for Access Family Care, said the cuts would be coming at a time when Access is seeing “an ever increasing demand for services that we provide.”

Offices of state lawmakers were closed this week with the Legislature on spring break.

Messages left on the answering service for the state office of Rep. David Sater, R-Cassville, the appropriations committee chairman, were not returned. Multiple efforts to reach Sater at his home in Cassville were unsuccessful Wednesday.

Messages left on the answering machine at the Capitol and at the home of the appropriations committee vice chairman, Rep. Raymond Weter, R-Nixa, were not returned Wednesday. Efforts to reach Rep. Robert Wayne Cooper, R-Camdenton, a physician and another committee member, also were unsuccessful.

Gov. Jay Nixon met privately last week with House and Senate members to warn them that state tax revenues are falling short of expectations and that his original budget plan no longer was feasible. On Saturday, Nixon said about $500 million will need to be trimmed from his Missouri budget proposal for next fiscal year.

Rep. Rebecca McClanahan, D-Kirksville, said the Feb. 16 appropriations committee vote fell along party lines. She told the Globe in a phone interview Wednesday that she voted against the bill, which also includes cuts in subsidies for domestic violence shelters and for crisis pregnancy centers, because she thought those cuts were “disproportionate” and hit services that already have suffered budget cuts in the past.

“Many of those programs are direct services” to people, she said.

Asked where else the state could cut when facing a shortfall in revenue, she suggested that the state take a closer look at its tax credits and “carefully sort” those credits that work from those that do not.

McClanahan said a House committee substitute for the appropriations bill proposes to restore some of funding for the federally qualified health centers, although those funds would be restricted to dental care only.

The bill is now in the hands of the House Budget Committee, which is scheduled to start hearings on the bill Monday. Among the members of that committee is Rep. Tom Flanigan, R-Carthage.

Flanigan said in a phone interview Wednesday that the budget committee is “just now starting the process,” and that the appropriations committee’s recommendations are still under review.

“It’s far, far, far from a done deal,” he said.





Background



Access Family Care was established in 1996 as the Ozark Tri-County Health Care Consortium. The nonprofit organization is committed to providing comprehensive and preventive health care for low-income residents of McDonald, Barry, Jasper and Newton counties.

Text Only
Joplin Metro
  • Ruby-Sapp-obit.jpg Longtime Democrat dies at 81

    Sapp, 81, died Thursday. Funeral services were Monday at the First Presbyterian Church of Joplin. A longtime Jasper County Democratic committeewoman and volunteer, Sapp for years was secretary to the county’s central committee.

    August 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • 082310-B17_2.jpg Flying Fortress lands in Joplin

    Warning: Taking flight in a restored B-17 bomber of World War II fame can cause a strong visceral reaction.

    August 24, 2010 1 Photo

  • Red Cross seeks money for fire victims

    The American Red Cross in Joplin needs money to help the victims of Monday’s fire at the Oxford Park Apartments get back on their feet.

    August 23, 2010

  • 082310 Fire B.jpg ‘Fire all over’: Four suffer minor injuries in apartment blaze

    Her phone started ringing, followed by a noise of uncertain origin outside her apartment. That’s how the sleep of 28-year-old Sylvia Moran was dispelled in the nick of time Monday morning. Moran got up, looked out a window and saw smoke.

    August 23, 2010 10 Photos

  • Drunken driver involved in injury accident in 2009

    A Joplin man, who pleaded guilty to felony assault in connection with an alcohol-related accident one year ago, was assessed a suspended sentence Monday in Jasper County Circuit Court.

    August 9, 2010

  • Webb City school board to set levy

    Property taxes in the Webb City School District are expected to stay the same, with the Board of Education to consider keeping the district’s levy at the current rate of $3.43 per $100 assessed valuation.

    August 9, 2010

  • Sex offender sentenced for failure to register

    A former Texan was assessed two three-year prison terms Monday for failing to register in Jasper County as a sex offender and for receiving stolen property.
    Clay E. Herring, 53, pleaded guilty Feb. 22 to the charges in Jasper County Circuit Court.

    May 10, 2010

  • Drunken driver assessed suspended sentence in crash

    A Webb City man was assessed a suspended sentence Monday on an assault conviction for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated in an accident two years ago that caused serious injuries to another man.
    Justin M. Allen, 32, pleaded guilty March 22 in Jasper County Circuit Court to second-degree assault in connection with a two-vehicle accident May 13, 2008, on Highway 43 north of Joplin.

    May 10, 2010

  • Lobbyist: Bill on tax-stacking appears stalled

    A fix for Joplin’s tax-stacking exposure has not materialized in this session of state legislative action, as city leaders had hoped.
    And, with only four days left before the session ends, not much chance is seen for the rescue of a bill that would protect Joplin, and other cities, from potential lawsuits such as one filed last year over the city’s multiple sales taxes.

    May 10, 2010

  • Salary schedule to come before Board of Education

    A proposal that would institute a pay freeze next year and slightly reduce starting pay for new teachers is to be taken up tonight by the Joplin School Board.
    Superintendent C.J. Huff said the salary schedule that will come before the board will include changes that would reduce the annual starting pay for new teachers with no experience next year from $33,372 to $33,122.

    May 10, 2010

Business Marquee
House Ads
Associated Press Video
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
Pet Calendar Contest
Helium debate
Helium
In The Sunday Globe
Facebook
Poll

Reacting to President Barack Obama’s insistence that tax cuts be cut off for the wealthiest Americans, Republicans, and some Democrats, argue that the fragile state of the economy makes this a poor time to raise taxes on anyone. Do you agree?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Stocks
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Special Interest
Featured Comment