Keep in mind, the bickering between these two is related to her wanting to take his job from him in the next gov election.
http://www.thevictoriaadvocate.com/front/story/2499744p-2896490c.htmlAUSTIN (AP) - Texas forfeited $104 million in federal funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program when it failed to spend all that was allocated to the state in 2002, according to recent figures from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Gov. Rick Perry's office criticized Hutchison and Congress for not passing legislation that would allow the state to keep all the money allocated to the program.
"This is a problem of the senator's own making," said Perry spokesman Robert Black. "Texas didn't lose this money, the federal government took it away because we have no effective voice on the federal health subcommittee looking out for the interests of Texas uninsured." States have three years to spend each year's CHIP allotment before the money is redistributed to other states. Therefore, federal money allocated to Texas in 2002 could have been spent that year, or in 2003 or 2004.
Facing a $10 billion shortfall, lawmakers two years ago balanced the 2004-2005 state budget in part by tightening CHIP eligibility requirements and reducing services.
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http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/legislature/socialservices/stories/113004dntexchip.2297c.htmlAUSTIN – Texas' new wealth restrictions for poor families caused nearly 900 low-income children to be denied health care in the rules' first two months, according to the state.
Critics of cuts to the Children's Health Insurance Program also say confusion about the new thresholds for a family's cash and car value has delayed the applications for thousands of children.
On Aug. 24, Texas became one of the few states to impose an "asset test" in CHIP, the state-federal program designed to help families that make too much money to qualify for Medicaid but not enough to afford health coverage. Through October, 870 kids were dropped using the test.
Under the new rule, as families apply for CHIP or come up for renewal each six months, they are supposed to be denied coverage if their incomes exceed 150 percent of the federal poverty level ($23,505 for a family of three) and they own more than $5,000 in specified assets.
CHIP changes:
• Higher premiums
•Renewal every six months instead of annually
•Elimination of dental and vision benefits
•Reduction of mental health coverage
•A 90-day wait for new coverage