Medicaid cuts threaten California’s in-home caregivers

This article was produced by Capital Main It is published here with permission For Maria Paredez the slashing of Medicaid funding is no political football or specific abstract argument emanating from Republicans in Congress about the size of ruling body It hits her where she lives a small house in a small town in Tulare County where she struggles to get from one month to the next Paredez is not a victim though she s an employee She has for the past three years cared for her grandmother who s now through a scheme specific to California called In Home Supportive Services The IHSS pays people to take care of Medi-Cal eligible Californians who are elderly blind or disabled allowing those folks to hire their support workers of whom are relatives They can thus remain in their homes or with family rather than being funneled into costly care centers or nursing facilities for which the state would have to pay The work is laborious and the compensation is minimal Paredez who explained she is in her s makes an hour a wage set by Tulare County bureaucrats Despite she declared being with her grandmother day and night after the elderly woman suffered a stroke and began requiring constant care Paredez is paid for only hours per month a little less than before taxes She took a part-time second job to make ends meet Our family wants to care for Grandma and I was the best person to do it Paredez stated But it s been hard to make it all work It s not easy It could get harder If the GOP follows through on its resolution to cut Medicaid spending by billion over the next decade California s budget for Medi-Cal the state s version of Medicaid could take a heavy hit For In Home Supportive Services which uses federal dollars to fund more than of its undertaking the impact might be a reduction in services and in hours for people like Paredez And should Paredez who has the auto-immune malady lupus become ill herself it would be a double whammy I also use Medi-Cal for my own robustness demands she noted If they cut Medi-Cal services I don t know what I ll do Home robustness workers use Medi-Cal too Paredez is not alone According to research by the UC Berkeley Labor Center more than half of all state home physical condition care workers rely on Medi-Cal for their own strength coverage That is perhaps not surprising considering what they earn Using the MIT Living Wage Calculator as a guide the Labor Center located that none of California s counties pay home wellbeing care workers enough to afford basic living expenses The hourly wage ranges from the state minimum of in Siskiyou County to in San Francisco County and it s negotiated on a county-by-county basis A bill by Assemblymember Matt Haney D-San Francisco as of now making its way through the California Legislature would enable IHSS workers to bargain on a statewide basis and seek uniform wages and wellbeing care benefits based upon the state itself becoming the employer of record The bill is co-sponsored by two unions that represent IHSS workers United Domestic Workers and the Function Employees International Union Disclosure UDW and SEIU are both financial supporters of Capital Main The Berkeley Labor Center estimates that depending on the timing and mechanisms for slashing the activity California could lose between billion and billion per year in federal Medi-Cal funds Laurel Lucia the center s Fitness Care Campaign director commented the next several weeks should bring specific clarity about how Republicans plan to carry out the massive cuts Lucia declared the center estimates job losses of between and in the state If federal Medicaid spending is cut Lucia commented it would affect vitality care providers and robustness care jobs Less funding means less facility fewer providers getting paid and or those providers rates for organization being slashed The loss is multiplied for businesses that patronage Medi-Cal which serves roughly million Californians about a third of the state s population An overall shrinking of Medi-Cal for example would hit food and laundry services and other contractors that work with hospitals and care facilities Soundness care workers Lucia announced also could find themselves with less to spend at local restaurants and retail stores California can t absorb the cuts There s still plenty unknown about what Congress will do It is also not clear how Gov Gavin Newsom and his staff will try to account for foreseen Medicaid cuts in their revision of the proposed - state budget Lucia explained the state can t just absorb the range of federal cuts that the Labor Center is predicting Even the lower end of its billion to billion projection is nearly what the state budgets over a full year for the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation billion The numbers are huge Their effect though is local In Yreka in Siskiyou County -year-old Alice Demers is caring for her partner who has a rare skin condition that requires constant care and who she commented has been in declining physical condition for years Demers is paid an hour under IHSS but the scheme has authorized only hours a month for her partner s care She drives about minutes to care for another client a couple of days a week but Demers stated she and her partner were still forced to move into Section low-income housing several months ago In past times of budget stress the state has cut hours for IHSS workers across the board Such cuts now would mean less income for Demers but she has another concern A Medi-Cal subject herself she s been putting off needed surgery to repair a nerve issue that causes shattering pain in her face She relies on the operation for the medications that help with the pain so that she can put in her hours as a caregiver All of my partner s physical condition care comes from Medi-Cal and mine and in a way our income does too she stated We could really get screwed over here Capital Main is an award-winning nonprofit publication that reports from California on the the greater part pressing economic environmental and social issues of our time including economic inequality environment change medical care threats to democracy hate and extremism and immigration Copyright Capital Main