State Budget Developments: A Legislative Update from Austin Presentation to St. Luke’s Episcopal Health Charities Eva De Luna Castro, Analyst,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Department of State Health Services (DSHS) House Human Services Committee August 8, 2006.
Advertisements

Senate Criminal Justice Committee Interim Charge 1 June 21, 2006.
30.5.  State funding helps keep tuitions low at public colleges. As a result, more Texans can afford college.  For the years 2000 and 2001, the Texas.
Washoe County School District Budget Tentative Budget Hearing May 18, 2010.
May 20, Budget Shortfall Projected in January Budget $(19.9) Special Session Solutions 1.4 Achieved Federal Funding 0.7 Revenue Decline (0.6) Cost.
Testimony Senate Finance Committee SB 1 February 13, 2009 Testimony Senate Finance Committee SB 1 February 13, 2009 Anne Dunkelberg, Assoc. Director,
October 18, nd Texas Legislature Prospective Legislative Issues Presented to TASSCUBO Vice Chancellor Barry McBee.
Social Welfare System....Those goods and services that a society believes to be a collective responsibility. Although the terms convey a sense of order,
MONEY, MONEY, MONEY… Balancing the Texas Budget in
Chapter 11 Public Finance in Texas. The Budget The state constitution requires that the legislature operate within a balanced budget. The Texas budget.
Center for Public Policy Priorities 80 th Texas Legislature and Health Care Access: Major Actions and Solutions 80 th Texas Legislature and.
Out with the Old….. The Old Budget Game Cost- Based Budgeting Starting PointLast Year = BASE costs FocusAdd/ Subtract costs re: BASE Addition Autopilot.
Health Care and the 2005 Legislative Session: An Advocate’s Perspective IAF Conference on Education and Health Issues, Austin, Texas February 6, 2005 Anne.
The State Budget Surplus: Fact or Fiction The State Budget Surplus: Fact or Fiction Rotary Club of Dallas January 24, 2007 Eva DeLuna Castro,
All About the Money: The State Budget One Voice: A Collaborative for Health and Human Services September 30, 2004 Eva De Luna Castro, Budget Analyst
Center for Public Policy Prioritieswww.cppp.org Child Protection Child Protection Houston Conference on Children June 15, 2005 F. Scott McCown, Executive.
The Texas Tax & Budget Primer Dick Lavine, Eva DeLuna,
North Dakota Medicaid Expansion Julie Schwab, MNA, MMGT Director of Medical Services North Dakota Department of Human Services.
State Budget Overview for the 2005 Legislative Session January 5, 2005 Eva De Luna Castro, Budget Analyst 900 Lydia Street - Austin,
Presentation to Commission Legislative Update July 2011.
Health Care Briefing Health Care Briefing University of Texas at San Antonio November 17, 2006 Eva DeLuna Castro, Senior Budget Analyst.
A Presentation of the Colorado Health Institute 1576 Sherman Street, Suite 300 Denver, Colorado Hot Issues in.
Center for Public Policy Priorities Hobby Policy Conference: Strong Public Structures October 13, 2006 F. Scott McCown, Executive Director.
A Balanced Approach To Meeting the Needs of Texas F. Scott McCown, Dick Lavine, Eva DeLuna Castro
San Marino Unified School District Second Interim Financial Report and Long Range Financial Projections March 11, 2008.
One Voice Pre-Legislative Forum Maximizing Federal Funds: The State Budget September 27, 2006 Eva DeLuna Castro, Senior Budget Analyst Center.
EXECUTIVE OFFICES of MINNESOTA
1 Department of Human Services (DHS) Board Meeting Presentation Revised Lynn Vellinga, CFO August 24, 2011.
Medicaid “Reform” and Mental Health Leighton Ku Senior Fellow Presentation at NAMI Conference, June 2005
83 rd Session Wrap-up Rey Garcia President & CEO - TACC TCCIA Annual Conference June 3, 2013.
Department of State Health Services Public Health in Texas.
80 th Session Post-Legislative HHS Forum United Way Tarrant County, Sept. 17, th Session Post-Legislative HHS Forum United Way Tarrant County,
Keeping Budgetary Commitments to the Poor? Texas and the Welfare Block Grant, Eva De Luna Castro, Budget and Policy Analyst, CPPP
Stan Rosenstein Former California Medicaid Director Retired December 22, 2008.
Show Me the Money! Texas Catholic Conference Show Me the Money! Texas Catholic Conference 21 st Annual Gathering February 5, 2007 Eva DeLuna.
Budget Update: Where We Stand Eva DeLuna Castro Senior Budget Analyst Center for Public Policy Priorities June 1, 2011.
SB1824 – Its Relevance for Education and Transition 2011 Texas Transition Conference February 7-9, 2011 Doubletree Hotel ~ Austin, TX PANEL MEMBERS Kathy.
Texas KIDS COUNT: The State of Fort Worth and Tarrant County Children Frances Deviney, PhD Texas KIDS COUNT Director Center for Public Policy Priorities.
How the EITC Refund Affects Eligibility for Public Benefits City of Laredo “Maximizing Federal Tax Benefits” Seminar January 20, 2005 Celia Hagert, Senior.
The Texas State Budget: Bringing it Home to Dallas/Collin/Denton Counties November 29, 2006 Eva DeLuna Castro, Senior Budget Analyst Center.
2009-A Legislative Session January 13,  State Budget Situation  2007/08 Budget - $72 billion  2008/09 Budget - $66 billion  Total Budget Reduction.
Center for Public Policy Priorities 1 Texas Medicaid and CHIP Enrollment Update for Children’s Hospital Association of Texas October 24, 2006.
Government Spends, Collects, and Owes.  dex_with_mods.php?PROGRAM= &VIDEO=-1&CHAPTER=16
A LEGISLATIVE UPDATE ON BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND INTELLECTUAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES Mental Health Needs Council by Amanda Jones, J.D. Legislative.
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and Texas Budget Issues, November 18, 2010 Eva DeLuna Castro, Budget Analyst
Using Data to Make the Case for Policy Change in Times of Fiscal Crisis National Association of Council for Children Conference October 21, 2010 Jane Burstain,
Budget Update: Where We Stand Eva DeLuna Castro Senior Budget Analyst Center for Public Policy Priorities May 13, 2011.
1 Comments on proposed Medicaid and CHIP funding in SB 1 and HHSC Exceptional Items House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Health and Human.
1 Testimony: FMAP and Health Insurance House Select Committee on Federal Economic Stabilization Funding March 12, 2009 Testimony: FMAP and Health Insurance.
Presented to: DHS Board of Directors Presented by: Ashley Fielding Date: December 9, 2015 DHS Legislative Update Georgia Department of Human Services.
Texas Impact Advocacy Camp Revenue Background January 13, 2009 Dick Lavine
A Tale of Two Deficits Testimony Before the House Select Committee on Fiscal Stability August 23, 2010 Dick Lavine
Maryland’s Approach to Coverage Expansion 2004 Presentation by the Honorable John Adams Hurson Chairman, Health & Government Operations Committee Maryland.
A Preview of the 2012 Colorado Legislative Session CO AHEC, Central CO AHEC and CHI Conversation Series January 4, 2012.
Moving Ahead… Alabama Interagency Autism Coordinating Council & Regional Autism Centers American Academy of Pediatrics Alabama Chapter September 18, 2009.
Purposeful Engagement Quality Teachers Continuous Improvement & Collaboration Valuing Individual Schools/Community Board Budget Workshop June.
Board of Health Proposed 2011 Public Health Budget October 29, 2010 Dr. David Fleming Director and Health Officer.
Oxnard College Campus Budget Forum Presented by: Richard Duran, President John al-Amin, VP Business Services Scott Corbett, President Academic Senate April.
The California State Budget Senator Carol Liu, Chair Senate Budget & Fiscal Review Subcommittee on Education.
HIGHER EDUCATION FINANCE AND BUDGETING May 2017
The Challenge Ahead February 22, 2007 Presentation for Zero-to-Three Fact Finding Trip Eva DeLuna Castro, Budget Analyst (512)
900 Lydia Street - Austin, Texas 78702
How to navigate the process and
Legislative Appropriations Request for FY Joint Budget Hearing
Presentation to the Senate Finance Committee
Educate to advocate 2019 A Year of Change.
Health Care Reform: What It Means for You Jewish Family Service Austin Alamo Breast Cancer Foundation December 16, 2010 Stacey Pogue, Senior Policy.
Health and Human Services System Budget Presentation
Testimony Senate Finance Committee SB 1 February 13, 2009 Anne Dunkelberg, Assoc. Director, 900 Lydia Street - Austin, Texas
Presentation transcript:

State Budget Developments: A Legislative Update from Austin Presentation to St. Luke’s Episcopal Health Charities Eva De Luna Castro, Analyst, Janet Hutchison, Development Specialist, April 22, Lydia Street, Austin, Texas, (512)

1 First, some CPPP information Update on Effect of State HHS Consolidation on State Agencies and on Providers Budget Impact by Program at State and Local Level Presentation Outline

2 CPPP Activities State Budget & Taxes Workforce & Economic Development Income/ Support Health Care Child Well- Being Hunger & Nutrition

3 Facts & the Future: The William P. Hobby Policy Conference Doubletree Hotel – Austin, 6500 N. IH-35 Featuring Addresses By: Former Lt. Governor Bill Hobby, Texas Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, State Demographer Dr. Steve Murdock Mark Your Calendars: May 13-14

4 September to December: Budget Recommendations Developed; Legislative Budget Estimates Issued February to April: House and Senate Budget Hearings, Mark-Up, and Conference Committee September: New Biennium Begins; Operating Budgets Prepared Even Years Two-Year Cycle Odd Years April to June: Instructions for Agency Budget Requests Issued June to August: Strategic Plans and Budget Requests Due; Budget Hearings Held Throughout the biennium: quarterly performance reports due Where We Are in the State Budget Cycle

5 State Budget, Biennium

6 State Budget, Fiscal 2004

GR Budget Percent of All GR Texas Education Agency$20.7 billion35% Health and Human Services Commission$7.4 billion13% Dept. of Criminal Justice$4.6 billion8% Teacher Retirement System$3.9 billion7% Department of Human Services$3.3 billion6% State worker retirement and health insurance$2.6 billion4% Mental Health and Mental Retardation$2.1 billion4% Higher Education Coordinating Board$675 million1.1% Family and Protective Services (formerly PRS) $483 million0.8% University of Texas at Austin$483 million0.8% Where the GR Is, by Agency

8 House Bill 1: General Appropriations Act for (charts later in this presentation show budgeted outcomes) House Bill 2292: Cut $1 billion in General Revenue out of Medicaid, CHIP, and other HHS programs; reorganized HHS agencies Federal budget decisions: 2005 has not yet been decided by Congress School Finance Session: Governor’s proposal limits future uses of General Revenue for HHS & other non-K-12 needs; limits ability of local governments to make up for state cuts Major HHS Agencies and Programs Affected by…

9 February 1, 2004: Department of Family and Protective Services is launched March 1: Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services is launched September 1: Departments of State Health Services and of Aging and Disability Services will begin operating Other: Eligibility determination (for cash welfare, Food Stamps, Medicaid) moves to Health and Human Services Commission, along with Nutritional Services and Family Violence programs. HHSC also responsible for centralized administrative services, HHS program policy, and interagency initiatives. HHS Reorganization Update

10 Health & Human Services Council Office of Inspector General Post-Consolidation Org. Chart

11 Department of Family and Protective Services: Everything that was overseen by Protective and Regulatory Services (child abuse and neglect investigations, foster care and adoption payments, at-risk prevention and intervention programs, adult protective services, child care licensing and regulation, MHMR investigations) Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services: everything that was at the Rehabilitation Commission, Commission for the Blind, Commission for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, and Interagency Council on Early Childhood Intervention Department of State Health Services: programs provided by the Department of Health, the Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, and the Health Care Information Council, and mental health community services and state hospitals run by the Dept. of Mental Health and Mental Retardation (MHMR) Department of Aging and Disability Services: mental retardation and state schools run by MHMR, community care and nursing home services at the Department of Human Services, and services of the Department of Aging What’s in the New Agencies?

12 Many contractors and vendors will now only have to deal with HHSC (because of consolidation of leasing/facilities management, legal services, human resources, purchasing, information resources management, financial management, and other admin. functions). Some providers may have to work with MORE agencies (for example, a provider helping people who have mental retardation AND mental illness now works with MHMR, but in the future may have to deal with DADS and DSHS). Consolidation of central administrative functions is supposed to result in 716 fewer employees by the end of fiscal 2005, saving the state almost $46 million in General Revenue. Not a lot of information yet on what will happen to staffing at local offices; outcome depends on decisions about call centers (eligibility determination). What Does this Mean for Providers?

13 Medicaid Acute Care after HB 2292 and other State Budget Cuts

14 Medicaid Caseloads, by Client Category

15 Long-Term Care Clientele

16 Community Care, by Program

17 HB 2292 Policy Changes Also Cut CHIP

18 CHIP Enrollment Down 25% Statewide

19 Public Health Programs at TDH

20 More TDH Programs (moving to HHSC)

21 More Public Health Program Cuts

22 More Responsibilities for Locals, Less $$

23 Community MH Services for Adults, Children

24 Services for Texans with Mental Retardation

25 Services for Neglected/Abused Children

26 Services for Neglected/Abused Elderly

27 Child Care: Less Help for Working Poor

28 Cash Assistance Will be Even Scarcer

29 Nutrition Programs Will Grow, But There’s Still a Large Unmet Need

30 50-State Ranking 11 th 47 th 31 st 34 th 13 th 15 th 35 th 41 st 21 st 36 th 41 st 38 th Even Before Cuts, Texas was Low- Spending

31 Budget Impact Stories Needed! CPPP’s web site (at is collecting information about the impact of state budget cuts and policy changes made during the 78th Legislature. We are interested in hearing about the impact of budget decisions at all levels, from individuals to businesses/organizations to units of government. Social service agencies; advocacy organizations; schools and teachers; hospitals and clinics; agency caseworkers; Medicaid, CHIP, TANF, or Food Stamps recipients; city or county government officials; non-profit leaders; and anyone else who was affected are all encouraged to participate. If you have a personal story or a report to share about how state budget decisions have changed your life, your work, your organization, or your community, please use the online form.

32 Early April 2004: HHSC reports higher-than- budgeted costs in Medicaid and CHIP (vendor drugs); shortfall of $582 million? Comptroller urging restorations to CHIP. Unused funds: $583 million (April 13 th estimate) Leadership so far has been reluctant to undo HHS and other budget cuts, arguing that unspent funds may be needed for Medicaid or other shortfalls that develop before January 2005 HHS Budget Updates

33 Eliminate “Robin Hood” system that redistributes local property tax revenue and benefits 88% of Texas school children Lower school property taxes and limit the ability of other local governments (counties, cities, hospitals, special districts) to raise property taxes in the future Make some small changes to state/local funding for K-12 (cigarette tax increase, new tax on adult entertainment, revenue from video slot machines, business school property taxes considered state rather than local revenue, etc.), but nothing that will significantly increase what Texas spends on K-12 or any other public service Governor’s Goals for Special Session on K-12 Finance

34 Governor Rick Perry ( Citizen's Opinion Hotline: (800) ; Fax: (512) ; Office of the Governor, P.O. Box 12428, Austin, Texas Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst (P.O. Box 12068, Austin, TX 78711) Speaker of the House Tom Craddick (P. O. Box 2910, Austin, TX 78768) Your Own Legislators: Representative (P. O. Box 2910, Austin, TX 78768) and Senator (P.O. Box 12068, Austin, TX 78711) Other Members of the LBB: Senator Steve Ogden Representative Talmadge Heflin Senator Robert Duncan Representative Brian McCall Senator John Whitmire Representative Fred Hill Senator Judith Zaffirini Representative Vilma Luna Health and Human Service Chairs of Budget Committees: Senator Jane Nelson, HHS Workgroup Chair, Senate Finance Committee Representative John Davis, HHS Subcommittee Chair, House Appropriations Committee (see for more contact info and “Who Represents Me?” search engine) Contacting State Officials

35 (Health and Human Services Commission webpage on HHS Transformation) (Fiscal Size Up ; Texas Budget Source; Federal Funds Watch; appropriations act) (William P. Hobby Conference, May 13-14; Policy Page subscriptions, policy briefs, presentations, and other reports) More Reorganization and State Budget-Related Information