Current:Home > FinanceA claim that lax regulation costs Kansas millions has top GOP officials scrapping -AssetTrainer
A claim that lax regulation costs Kansas millions has top GOP officials scrapping
View
Date:2025-04-13 00:12:55
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — An audit released Tuesday by Kansas’ attorney general concluded that the state is losing more than $20 million a year because its Insurance Department is lax in overseeing one of its programs. The department said the audit is flawed and should be “discounted nearly in its entirety.”
The dispute involves two elected Republicans, Attorney General Kris Kobach and Insurance Commissioner Vicki Schmidt, who are considered potential candidates in 2026 to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly. Their conflict flared a week after the GOP-controlled state Senate approved a bill that would give Kobach’s office greater power to investigate social services fraud through its inspector general for the state’s Medicaid program.
The audit released by the inspector general said the Insurance Department improperly allowed dozens of nursing homes to claim a big break on a per-bed tax that helps fund Medicaid. It said that from July 2020 through August 2023, the state lost more than $94 million in revenues, mostly because 68% of the certificates issued by the Insurance Department to allow homes to claim the tax break did not comply with state law.
But Schmidt’s office said the inspector general relied on an “unduly harsh and unreasonable” interpretation of state law and “unreliable extrapolations” to reach its conclusions. Also, the department said, the conclusion that most applications for the tax break were mishandled is “astronomically unreflective of reality.”
The state taxes many skilled nursing facilities $4,908 per bed for Medicaid, which covers nursing home services for the elderly but also health care for the needy and disabled. But nursing homes can pay only $818 per bed if they have 45 or fewer skilled nursing beds, care for a high volume of Medicaid recipients or hold an Insurance Department certificate saying they are part of a larger retirement community complex.
“There are proper procedures in place; however, they are not being followed,” the audit said.
The inspector general’s audit said the Insurance Department granted dozens of certificates without having complete records, most often lacking an annual audit of a nursing home.
The department countered that the homes were being audited and that it showed “forbearance” to “the heavily regulated industry” because annual audits often cannot be completed as quickly as the inspector general demands.
Insurance Department spokesperson Kyle Stratham said that if the agency accepted the inspector general’s conclusions, “Kansas businesses would be charged tens of millions of dollars in additional taxes, which would have a devastating impact on the availability of care for senior Kansans.”
veryGood! (82)
Related
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Proud Boys leader gets harshest Jan. 6 sentence yet, Tropical Storm Lee forms: 5 Things podcast
- Week 1 fantasy football rankings: Chase for a championship begins
- MLB places Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías on administrative leave after arrest
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Aerosmith kicks off Peace Out farewell tour in Philadelphia
- United Airlines lifts nationwide ground stop after technology issue
- Prosecutors in Trump’s Georgia election subversion case estimate a trial would take 4 months
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- America’s state supreme courts are looking less and less like America
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- When Big Oil Gets In The Carbon Removal Game, Who Wins?
- Yankees' Giancarlo Stanton blasts 400th career home run
- Suspect sought after multiple Michigan State Police patrol vehicles are shot and set on fire
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- 'My tractor is calling me': Jennifer Garner's favorite place is her Oklahoma farm
- Florida man arrested while attempting to run across Atlantic Ocean in giant hamster wheel
- Judge rules Trump in 2019 defamed writer who has already won a sex abuse and libel suit against him
Recommendation
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
'I've been on high alert': As hunt for prison escapee rolls into 7th day, community on edge
North Carolina public school students performing better on standardized tests, report says
Couple kidnapped from home, 5 kids left behind: Police
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Lidcoin: How much bitcoin does the federal government still hold?
Officers fatally shoot man in South Carolina after he kills ex-wife and wounds deputy, sheriff says
Another person dies after being found unresponsive at Fulton County Jail in Atlanta