Governor Cooper Highlights Urgent Need to Start Medicaid Expansion at Yadkin County Roundtable | Eastern North Carolina Now

Press Release:

    RALEIGH: Today, Governor Roy Cooper held a roundtable discussion in Yadkinville to highlight the urgent need to start Medicaid Expansion that has already been agreed to in a strong bipartisan vote of the legislature. The Governor was joined by health care providers, members of law enforcement, local elected officials, business leaders and community advocates to discuss the impacts of the failure to expand Medicaid. Governor Cooper also viewed the closed Yadkin Valley Community Hospital, which is one of seven rural hospitals in North Carolina to be shut down since 2014 when Medicaid Expansion first became an option under the Affordable Care Act.

    "Like many of our rural communities, Yadkin County has seen access to health care diminish due to the lack of Medicaid Expansion," said Governor Cooper. "It's past time for Republican leaders to do their jobs, pass a budget and start Medicaid Expansion now to give our rural areas resources to prevent hospital closures and combat the opioid crisis."

    "The lack of Medicaid Expansion has been an unfunded mandate on communities across the state, especially rural communities which have been ground zero for the opioid epidemic and have a higher rate of uninsured individuals," said Department of Health and Human Resources Secretary Kody H. Kinsley. "We're working every single day to launch Medicaid Expansion so they can get the care they need - we just need one sentence of authority from the General Assembly to make that happen."

    "Greater Winston-Salem, Inc. advocates for the right of all North Carolinians to be able to access quality health care," said Greater Winston-Salem, Inc. Vice President of Public Policy Calvin McRae. "Increased health care access improves workforce outcomes and helps keep costs more affordable for employers. It is critical for legislators to pass the North Carolina budget to maintain our momentum as the top state for business."

    "Rural areas face many challenges regarding access to health care," said Town of East Bend Mayor James Dunn. "Medicaid Expansion would provide more coverage to hardworking individuals as a safety net and would hopefully provide incentives for providers to once again service our rural areas."

    "Expanding Medicaid is probably the best decision that our state leadership has made in many years to improve the health and well-being of the citizens of North Carolina and to improve health services in the rural communities of our state," said PLLC Family Medicine Owner Dr. James McGrath.

    "How can communities grow and thrive if residents have no health care insurance?" said retired Yadkin County health care professional Marty Driver. "Emergency rooms are not the answer for basic health care and unhealthy workers continue to cost our businesses and industries due to absences related to untreated chronic illness."

    Yadkin Valley Community Hospital was suddenly shut down in May 2015, resulting in the closure of the only hospital in Yadkin County at the time.

    In recent weeks, NC DHHS has started the legally-required process of removing people from Medicaid who are no longer eligible with the end of the Public Health Emergency. Since June 1, at least 18,000 people have lost health care coverage who likely would have been able to keep it under Medicaid Expansion and an estimated 9,000 people will continue losing coverage each month.

    Medicaid Expansion includes a so-called signing bonus of $1.8 billion in addition to $521 million per month to North Carolina that would boost rural hospitals by increasing reimbursement rates and reducing the risk of financial troubles. The signing bonus can be used to boost mental health services across the state that are key to fighting the opioid epidemic.

    Governor Cooper signed a bill authorizing Medicaid Expansion into law on March 27, 2023, but a provision that the Governor opposed in the bill tied enactment of Medicaid Expansion to passage of this year's state budget. Legislative leaders touted then that a budget would be passed by June.

    Despite holding supermajorities in both chambers, the Republican controlled legislature still has not passed a budget.

    Governor Cooper's administration is working to support health care in rural communities, often working directly with providers. Governor Cooper has also prioritized a major expansion of high-speed internet that can bring telehealth to areas that lack in-person medical providers, including over $340 million in GREAT grants that have been awarded to bring high-speed internet to 139,599 households and 4,447 businesses across the state.


    Contact: Sam Chan

    Phone: (919) 814-2100  •      Email: govpress@nc.gov
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




Governor Cooper Statement in Response to General Assembly Election Bills Press Releases: Elected office holders, Op-Ed & Politics, Bloodless Warfare: Politics NC Legislature overrides governor’s vetoes, protects women, children, parents


HbAD0

Latest Bloodless Warfare: Politics

Only two of the so-called “three Johns” will be competing to replace Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) as leader of the Senate GOP.
Daily Wire Editor Emeritus Ben Shapiro, along with hosts Matt Walsh, Andrew Klavan, and company co-founder Jeremy Boreing discussed the state of the 2024 presidential election before President Joe Biden gave his State of the Union address on Thursday.
Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said this week that the criminal trials against former President Donald Trump should happen before the upcoming elections.
It’s “Bo time” again, this time in North Carolina’s Sixth Congressional District.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on Tuesday that he has selected Nicole Shanahan to be his vice presidential running mate as he continues to run as an Independent after dropping out of the Democratic Party’s presidential primary late last year.
On Tuesday, another Republican announced that he plans to retire early from the House, a decision that would further diminish a narrow GOP majority in the lower chamber.

HbAD1

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) introduced a bill Wednesday that would shave 8 hours off the standard 40-hour work week that has been around for several decades.
Glenn Beck: 'When the United States government can come after individuals, that's when you know our republic is crumbling.'
Washington, D.C. — Congressman Greg Murphy, M.D. issued the following statement on the latest continuing resolution:
WASHINGTON – Today, as Joe Biden continues his Bankrupting America Tour in North Carolina, Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel released the following statement:
Former President Donald Trump dominated the North Dakota Republican Caucus on Monday as he continues to inch closer to officially securing the party’s presidential nomination.
RALEIGH: Today, Governor Cooper visited a bus facility in Durham to highlight the recent significant federal funding for electric school buses in North Carolina.

HbAD2

The White House unveiled a new term on Thursday for the millions of illegal aliens who have flooded into the U.S. under President Joe Biden, which came just shortly before Biden took a trip to the border for a photo op at a spot that has had few illegal aliens cross.

HbAD3

 
Back to Top