The following is a press release by State Treasurer John Kenney. LouisianaVoice presents it here as a guest column that we feel underscores the concerns expressed in our Sept. 29 post entitled False prophets, false profits—and false reasons to privatize LSU Hospital System (or trolling for more Medicaid dollars)
The reason advanced by the Jindal Administration for privatizing Louisiana’s charity hospitals is that a private hospital like Lafayette General or Ochsner, for example, can manage a hospital more efficiently, and therefore cheaper, than the state.
That’s why I was taken aback when the chairman of the private entity taking over the Shreveport state hospital testified before the Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget that the private contractor’s costs to run the Shreveport facility will be the same as the state’s. Where, then, will the Jindal Administration’s promised annual savings of $150 million come from if not from achieving operational efficiencies?
Dig deeper into the details and it becomes apparent that the planned “savings” won’t result from lower costs but from getting more money from the federal government through an accounting change. This won’t make the charity hospitals or Louisiana’s Medicaid program, which pays for the hospitals, more efficient. It will just make them more expensive, fueled by additional federal (American taxpayer) money.
Here’s how the new financial strategy will work: Medicaid, which is government health insurance for the poor, is a federal-state program. The states run it but the feds put up most of the money. In Louisiana, for every $1 in state taxpayer money we contribute, the feds contribute $2. The more money we put up, the more money the federal government contributes.
Under the Charity Hospital privatization, the state will “lease” the charity hospitals to private hospitals, which then will be responsible for treating our low-income and uninsured citizens. The state will pay the private hospitals to do this with large amounts of federal money from our Medicaid program. The private hospitals will then return some of those federal dollars to the state as “lease payments.” The federal dollars paid to the state as “lease payments” now become new state dollars, which the state can use to draw down even more federal money.
This accounting maneuver is undeniably clever. The question is whether it is legal. It must be approved by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
Louisiana’s track record with CMS is not good. CMS has previously rejected similar financing strategies designed to leverage federal money. In the early 1990s, for example, Louisiana and other states adopted financing strategies such as “provider taxes,” “provider donations,” and “intergovernmental transfers,” designed to launder federal Medicaid funds into state funds in order to draw down more federal funds. CMS and Congress spurned them all. (The Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital Payment Program: Background and Issues, The Urban Institute, No. A-14, October 1997). http://www.urban.org/publications/307025.html
In fact, Louisiana was more aggressive than most states in trying to leverage federal dollars. Our health care budget grew from $1.6 billion in 1988 to $4.48 billion in 1993, of which 90% was federal funds. The amount of money actually contributed by the state during this period declined from $595 million to $462 million. (Washington Post, Jan. 31, 1994, page A9).
When CMS and Congress stepped in to stop what then-Congressman Bob Livingston called Louisiana’s “abuse” of Medicaid financing, and, in Livingston’s words, the “unjustified and unwarranted benefits” came to an end (The Advocate, Feb. 6, 1997, page 1A). Newly-elected Gov. Mike Foster was faced with a $1 billion deficit in the health care budget. To clean up the mess, Foster appointed Bobby Jindal as DHH Secretary, who sought special relief from Congress. As The Advocate newspaper editorialized, “Louisiana pleaded guilty as charged, threw itself on the mercy of the court and got off easy,” because “the state for years ran a scam using ‘loopholes and accounting gimmicks’ to justify fantastic increases in federal payments.” (The Advocate, April 29, 1996).
Perhaps this time is different. Perhaps CMS will view the new “lease payments” being used to obtain additional federal money more favorably han the strategies CMS has rejected in the past.
One thing’s for certain, though. We need to find out. The state should seek CMS review of its new strategy immediately—not “soon” as DHH has promised—but now. Until then, our entire state health care delivery system for more than two million of our people is at financial risk.



The mainstream press has managed to ignore this ALREADY WELL-KNOWN situation for many months now. Maybe, just maybe, if they hear it from the state’s Treasurer, some people will listen and believe it. Since nobody wants to face the reality of our state’s financial situation overall and since it’s easy to dismiss this column as just Kennedy’s way of gaining political strength, I guess the mainstream press, the legislature, and anybody else who could most effectively influence change will stick their collective heads in the sand (after removing them from their present location where sunlight doesn’t penetrate) again when/if they bother to read this.
http://theadvocate.com/home/7352953-125/state-government-expects-163-million – More BS from the con artists running our state?
“… Rep. Jim Fannin, said he has learned that surpluses decrease between the time the estimate is given to when final numbers materialize.” – buried near the bottom, the most important statement in the article.
The comparable figure for last year was $113 million see:
Click to access StateBudget_FY14.pdf
Everybody forgets that we always have a surplus from the prior year for a variety of reasons, mostly simply the size and complexity of our budget and our accounting system. Keep in mind that the $113M surplus last year was 1.4% of our state general fund budget and 0.48% of the total budget that year. It’s hard to cut it much closer than that.
This superfluous article will give the administration and the legislature some positive press as it is presented as something new and something to crow about and the general public won’t know the difference. Must be nice to have things slanted the way you want them, particularly if you have national, if not international or interstellar ambitions, or are a legislator hoping to be re-elected.
Wow. I’m guilty of not reading that quote or thinking it through. I just assumed the guv must be needing happy numbers at this point in his administration and voila! we get happy numbers.
I can see the newspaper headline already….. State Treasurer John Kennedy fired…. Shuffling of Federal Funds, decreasing State Employees and practically shutting down all of the State Hospitals are what Jindal planned since day one in office.
I haven’t gotten my paper paper, but the online ADVOCATE headlines the ridiculous story about the state surplus and John Kennedy’s release is not mentioned. The surplus story was slightly changed since it went online yesterday, but one need read no further than this to see how it makes no objective sense for the story to have been published anyhow:
“It’s just an estimate right now,” Barry Dussé, state budget director for the Jindal administration, warned legislators who serve on the Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget. Dussé said a final number will be announced in January.
That being the case, what is the point in even talking about it?
The story goes on with the committee members, except Fannin, joking around in the vein of, “Hey. we’re just a happy fraternity with no problems and this is the best of all possible times in the best of all possible worlds.”
As Buddy Roemer would (and often did) say, “Give me a break.”
Supporting reform in government by biased journalism is a dangerous path. I hope Mr. Georges recognizes that.
Im rather surprised at the amount of Jindal’s propaganda that Mr. George’s has been publishing so far. I saw Jindal at the televised announcement of the newspaper change but must admit I didn’t listen. Knowing Jindal’s love of TV and tax breaks he must have offered some to catch a little slack. Although the Advocate has gotten slightly tougher on Jindal I’m disappointed that the change didn’t herald a new, more critical, reporting of the Jindal Conspiracy.