‘Burden on our local systems’: Congressmen warn of health care impacts of Medicaid cuts

SCREENSHOT FROM STREAM - U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson, D-St. Helena, speaks at a press conference at Santa Rosa Community Health Center's Dutton Campus, in Santa Rosa, Calif., on Friday, March 7, 2025. U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, Sonoma County Supervisor Lynda Hopkins, and former Santa Rosa VA Clinic chief medical officer Dr. Ginger Schechter also spoke at the hybrid press conference, warning of potential impacts to the community if healthcare cuts outlined in a federal spending plan are made to Medicaid and other public health programs. (U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson's office via Bay City News)

Two congressmen representing districts in the North Bay gave a preview last week of how potential Medicaid cuts could impact local health care systems and residents.

U.S. Reps. Mike Thompson, D-St. Helena, and Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, spoke at a health clinic in Santa Rosa, calling on their colleagues to reject slashing Medicaid or Medicare as part of massive spending reductions proposed in the recently passed federal budget draft.

They also warned of potentially compounding impacts from about 83,000 layoffs that have been announced for employees at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

The Republican-led House of Representatives passed a draft budget plan last month that outlines $880 billion in cuts over a decade to health spending budgeted by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, which sets Medicaid and Medicare funding.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, and other Republicans who voted for the draft bill have said that no cuts to Medicaid will be made. However, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said in a letter to lawmakers that the committee’s spending showed only about $380 billion in outlays that aren’t earmarked for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, known as CHIP.

“If you take that kind of money out of any health care system in any county of the United States of America, one of two things is going to happen: either the health care providers are going to fold, or the cuts are going to be so severe that health care will be drastically limited.”

U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson, D-St. Helena

That would leave a gap of about $500 billion that the committee would be mandated to reduce, even if all other spending was eliminated.

That analysis led Thompson and Huffman to arrange the hybrid press conference at the Dutton campus of the Santa Rosa Community Health Center. Sonoma County Supervisor Lynda Hopkins, health care providers and advocates also spoke out against potential Medicaid cuts.

Thompson said about a third of all Californians have health insurance through Medicaid, which is called Medi-Cal in the state. He said one of the counties he represents has more than half its residents on the program.

“If you take that kind of money out of any health care system in any county of the United States of America, one of two things is going to happen: either the health care providers are going to fold, or the cuts are going to be so severe that health care will be drastically limited,” Thompson said.

Fight against ‘medical disaster’

Huffman said cuts to Medicaid would have ripple consequences throughout the health care system, leading to what he called “spillover effects.” He said elders with nursing care, people with disabilities, and people who had become eligible for Medicaid through its expansion in the Affordable Care Act were examples of those who could lose their insurance if cuts are enacted at the level that could be required.

He said proposed cuts to the Veterans Affairs workforce would also jolt the greater health care system if veterans can’t find adequate care.

“All of us have a tremendous stake in this. All of us need to see it coming,” Huffman said, adding that people should hold Congress accountable.

Hopkins said that Medi-Cal pays for more than half the births in California and covers critical prenatal and postpartum care.

Dr. Parker Duncan Diaz, the medical director at the Santa Rosa Community Health Center’s Lombardi campus, spoke of a pregnant patient who thought she was perfectly healthy, but actually had dangerously high blood pressure.

She would have to deliver her baby early, at 38 weeks, to prevent the possibility of eclampsia, which can cause seizures, he said.

A pregnant woman and friends pose for a photo at a baby shower on Nov. 10, 2018, in Pittsburg. Under proposed Medicaid cuts, low-income mothers could lose access to prenatal and postpartum care, increasing the risk of dangerous complications for pregnant women and their babies. (Ray Saint Germain/Bay City News)

“By having access to prenatal care, we not only saved a medical disaster, we probably saved two lives,” he said.

“This is what we all trained for, this is the purpose of our health care, to diagnose and treat things early, before they become disastrous, before they wind up in the emergency room and cost us even more to our system, and, ultimately, to our taxpayers,” he said.

Dr. Ginger Schechter, who retired as chief medical officer at the Santa Rosa VA Clinic, said veterans who have specialized medical needs would suffer, which will impact the community’s health care system overall.

“Less benefits for veterans, or lack of staff to care for them, will put a burden on our local systems that are often already busy, in need of more staff,” Schechter said.

The Republican budget plan calls for extending temporary tax cuts passed in 2017 through 2034, which would add about $4.2 trillion to the federal deficit, according to the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Tax Analysis.

A spending bill with more detailed cuts must be passed by March 14 to avoid a government shutdown, unless another temporary spending bill known as a continuing resolution is passed.

The post ‘Burden on our local systems’: Congressmen warn of health care impacts of Medicaid cuts appeared first on Local News Matters.

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