“We’ll get to a place where we should be processing in under 45 days by the end of July,” Kim Evans, director of the Family Support Division, told MOHealthNet Oversight Committee on Wednesday.
And by the end of August, it will be 30 days, she said.
(Demonstrators stand outside of the Governor’s Mansion in Jefferson City on July 1, 2021 and hold signs urging Gov. Mike Parson to fund voter-approved Medicaid expansion. Photo by Tessa Weinberg/Missouri Independent).
But when oversight committee asked how many days it takes to process an application currently, Evans said she hadn’t seen the numbers.
“So this is the beginning of June,” said Sen. Jill Schupp, a Creve Coeur Democrat and committee member, “and you’re saying in two months, we’ll be at 45 days?”
As of Wednesday morning, there were 58,000 Missourians who had Medicaid applications pending, Evans said, and the state is working with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on a “mitigation plan” of how they will get the pending applications completed.
The state has repeatedly pointed to staffing shortages as being the main reason behind the application backlog.
“We are offering overtime to our staff,” Evans said. “I’m getting ready to send out some incentive, hoping to encourage them to work some additional overtime so that we can meet our milestones.”
They are also trying to hire new employees, she said, but it takes three to four months to get someone trained to start processing applications.
However, advocates and experts have said that the problem lies in Missouri’s decision to review each application individually, rather than accepting information verified by the federal government that could cut down on the number of Missouri employees necessary.
After prompted by a question from Schupp, Evans said this was part of the plan to meet their new milestones. Evans’ team saw that other states were processing applications more quickly using this information, but they lacked the computer coding knowledge to follow their lead, she said.
“I should hear something tomorrow with our teams that are working in the eligibility system,” she said. “We gave them till tomorrow to give us a plan of how quickly we could get some of this implemented.”
Another big piece of the backlog problem is the state’s customer service call center, where applications are processed and phone calls are answered regarding a variety of benefits — including Medicaid, temporary assistance and food stamps. The Family Support Division within the Department of Social Serices operates the center, and wait times have been hours long.
As she consistently does at board meetings, Schupp asked about the call wait time. Evans said she didn’t bring that information to the meeting, but that she thought it was under an hour.
“I don’t know if you have a target to lower the wait time,” Schupp said. “It’s really hard for a lot of people to be able to wait even for an hour, and that’s certainly a lot better than where we were before. We need to keep on top of that and see what we need to do to improve those waiting times.”
But when oversight committee asked how many days it takes to process an application currently, Evans said she hadn’t seen the numbers.
“So this is the beginning of June,” said Sen. Jill Schupp, a Creve Coeur Democrat and committee member, “and you’re saying in two months, we’ll be at 45 days?”
As of Wednesday morning, there were 58,000 Missourians who had Medicaid applications pending, Evans said, and the state is working with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on a “mitigation plan” of how they will get the pending applications completed.
The state has repeatedly pointed to staffing shortages as being the main reason behind the application backlog.
“We are offering overtime to our staff,” Evans said. “I’m getting ready to send out some incentive, hoping to encourage them to work some additional overtime so that we can meet our milestones.”
They are also trying to hire new employees, she said, but it takes three to four months to get someone trained to start processing applications.
However, advocates and experts have said that the problem lies in Missouri’s decision to review each application individually, rather than accepting information verified by the federal government that could cut down on the number of Missouri employees necessary.
After prompted by a question from Schupp, Evans said this was part of the plan to meet their new milestones. Evans’ team saw that other states were processing applications more quickly using this information, but they lacked the computer coding knowledge to follow their lead, she said.
“I should hear something tomorrow with our teams that are working in the eligibility system,” she said. “We gave them till tomorrow to give us a plan of how quickly we could get some of this implemented.”
Another big piece of the backlog problem is the state’s customer service call center, where applications are processed and phone calls are answered regarding a variety of benefits — including Medicaid, temporary assistance and food stamps. The Family Support Division within the Department of Social Serices operates the center, and wait times have been hours long.
As she consistently does at board meetings, Schupp asked about the call wait time. Evans said she didn’t bring that information to the meeting, but that she thought it was under an hour.
“I don’t know if you have a target to lower the wait time,” Schupp said. “It’s really hard for a lot of people to be able to wait even for an hour, and that’s certainly a lot better than where we were before. We need to keep on top of that and see what we need to do to improve those waiting times.”
1 comment:
"What do we want? Free stuff! When do we want it? NOW ! "
Signed,
Lazy Liberal
Post a Comment