Politics & Government

Arkansas' Hutchinson, Other GOP Governors Ask Biden To End Public Health Emergency

Hutchinson is one of 25 who made the request, the report states.

December 20, 2022

Gov. Asa Hutchinson and 24 other Republican governors sent a letter to President Joe Biden on Monday asking him to end the national public health emergency declared at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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“While the virus will be with us for some time, the emergency phase of the pandemic is behind us,” the governors wrote in asking the administration to end the public health emergency in April.

The health emergency was extended last year until Jan. 11, 2023, but the governors wrote that they believe Biden will extend it another 90 days until April.

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Their letter asks that it be the final extension.

“It is time we move on from the pandemic and get back to life as normal,” the letter states.

The U.S. Senate voted 61-37 in November to terminate the public health emergency, but the resolution is awaiting House action. Arkansas Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton voted for the measure.

The governors cite Medicaid costs as a primary reasons for ending the public health emergency.

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“The PHE is negatively affecting states, primarily by artificially growing our population covered under Medicaid (both traditional and expanded populations), regardless of whether individuals continue to be eligible under the program,” the governors wrote.

Although the federal government has increased Medicaid funding to states, higher numbers of recipients have forced states to increase their matching share of the cost, the letter says.

“This is costing states hundreds of millions of dollars,” the letter says, noting that since 2020 states have added 20 million people to the Medicaid rolls, an increase of 30%.

“We urge you to end the national emergency and the PHE in April and provide states notice of those intentions well in advance to allow us to adequately plan for the future,” the governors wrote.

Arkansas officials have already begun preparing to remove nearly 400,000 individuals from state Medicaid rolls when the emergency officially ends.


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