Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

News

Contract Review Committee Delays $1.3 Million Legal Services Contract

By Brandon Moseley
Alabama Political Reporter

Thursday, October 6, the Contract Review Committee met and agreed to delay a $1.3 million legal services contract after State Auditor Jim Zeigler (R) presented objections to the controversial unbid contract to provide legal services for Alabama Medicaid to implement their RCO plan.

Zeigler filed a request to delay the contract for implementation of regional care organizations (RCOs) to deliver Medicaid healthcare.

Auditor Zeigler said that Bentley’s RCO plan, “Is fatally flawed and needs to be scrapped.”

Zeigler said that the delay for up to 45 days is just the first step in opposing or reforming the Medicaid plan.

Zeigler said “This huge legal cost needs substantial review by all in authority. A contract of this size does not need to be approved and should be scrutinized and scrapped.”

The Bentley Administration wants the troubled Alabama Medicaid Agency to pay the law firm of Capell & Howard the $1.3 million for legal advice in implementing the plan to turn over administration of Medicaid to regional care organizations (RCOs) run by the hospitals and other service providers rather than the current fee for service government administered model that presently manages the increasingly expensive state agency. Proponents argue that managed care will improve healthcare outcomes and will save the state money in the long run.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

As Alabama did not expand Medicaid to include poor, non-disabled, non-senior adults and the RCO program was not extended to nursing homes, most of the beneficiaries affected are children. Thus, the largest Medicaid provider is Children’s Hospital of Alabama.

Their CEO Michael Warren recently blasted the RCO plan.

Warren’s report said “RCOs will actually cost the state’s general fund a substantial amount more than keeping the current program funded. The numbers are frightening.”

Warren said claimed, “The RCOs design is contrary to the model contemplated by the Governor’s Task Force on Medicaid Reform.” He continued with a point-by-point negative assessment of the RCO plan.

The text of the report from Michael Warren and Children’s of Alabama can be found here.

Zeigler cited the Warren report which he called, “persuasive” and said that the RCO plan has been delayed by Medicaid until July of 2017.

Auditor Zeigler said, “It appears that the plan for regional care organizations as now formatted will cost the state millions instead of saving the state millions. This plan needs to be halted now, before millions are spent in the implementation stage. Approval of this contract would be throwing good money in front of bad.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Zeigler added, “Sadly, it is typical of the Bentley administration that they have taken a strategy intended to save taxpayer money and have “Bentleyized” it into a losing proposition of millions. The report from Mike Warren of Children’s of Alabama is persuasive.”

Of the proposed $1.3 million legal services contract, $650,000 would be state dollars and $650,000 would be federal.

The Alabama Medicaid Agency will be able to present their case for approving the legal contract to the Contract Review Committee next month.

 

Brandon Moseley is a former reporter at the Alabama Political Reporter.

More from APR

Health

CHIP enrollment has increased in recent years and ADPH aims to boost funding from the General Fund by 61 percent in 2026.

Featured Opinion

For a long time now in Alabama, we have let ignorance be our guide. The bill has been steep.

Opinion

It’s time for Alabama policymakers to come together and forge a solution to the state’s mental health crisis.

Legislature

Judicial override previously allowed judges to usurp a jury and sentence someone to death.