Wisconsin Sen. Roger Breske announced Friday he is planning to reintroduce the controversial "hospital tax' that was eliminated from the recent state budget.
Breske (D-Eland) said he is working to draft legislation to capture matching federal funds that were lost when the hospital tax was eliminated by Republicans during the recent debate on the state budget. The budget was approved by the Legislature Tuesday and signed by Gov. Jim Doyle Friday.
The tax proposed by Doyle would have raised $418 million from a .08 percent tax on hospitals' gross revenue, which would then be matched by federal funds. The tax was expected to bring more than $165 million into Milwaukee-area hospitals over two years and was the only way Doyle said hospitals would receive an increase in Medicaid reimbursement.
The hospital tax, which was supported by the Wisconsin Hospital Association and the Greater Milwaukee Committee, was hoped to offset high health care costs by reducing the amount of cost-shifting to commercially insured patients that occurs in hospitals with large Medicaid populations. Wisconsin hospitals receive an average of 48 percent reimbursement of the cost of care for Medicaid patients, which hasn't increased in 12 years.
Medicaid is a federal-state program that helps pay for health care for the needy, aged, blind and disabled and for low-income families with children.
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