If Governor Bentley, in his infinite wisdom, expanded Medicaid in Alabama could your people be covered that way?That was one of the poorly-thought through aspects of the ACA. I represent the largest AL-based, non-medical, 501(c)(3) in the state. In fact, I started it. At least 80% of our 700+ employees have to be federally defined as "disabled." Here's the "Catch-22": These people are the people that Medicaid was designed for - the kind for whom you're going to provide care one way or the other, usually the "other," the ER, most expensive of all clinics. Since we have more than the minimum number of employees, if we didn't provide a health insurance plan, we'd be fined under ACA. If you want to see some hair-raising insurance rates, try forming a plan for employees like these. If we didn't, the ACA fine would be a bit short of a couple of million a year - not acceptable for a nonprofit, both with accrediting agencies and the IRS. So, we have to do the best we can do, which is to provide a plan we know is short of where they'd be on Medicaid. However, no elasticity is provided in ACA for these types of employees. It just wasn't thought through...
I wonder if Medicaid had been expanded in Alabama would more rural hospitals have remained open?
http://blog.al.com/wire/2014/04/10_alabama_hospitals_have_clos.html