New North Carolina Governor Cancels Health Exchange, Opposes Medicaid Expansion

North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory issued a statement claiming a review of its readiness to implement parts of the health law indicated the state was not prepared to take on the financial risk of an expanded Medicaid program, nor is it prepared to build and run its own health insurance exchange.

Gov. McCrory was sworn in Jan. 5, following former Gov. Bev Perdue, a Democrat who supported the state-run exchange option and accepted a $74 million federal grant to set up the exchange. If North Carolina does not proceed with building its own exchange, it would need to return the money, according to a report by the News & Observer.

"In light of recent Medicaid audits, the current system in North Carolina is broken and not ready to expand without great risk to the taxpayers and to the delivery of existing services to those in need. We must first fix and reform the current system," Gov. McCrory said.

His statement continued, "There has been a lack of preparation within state government during the past year to build necessary and reliable systems to implement a state exchange."

More Articles on Medicaid Expansion:

4 Health Plans Chosen to Lead New Mexico's Reformed Medicaid
14 Texas Hospitals Fight for New Medicaid Payments
Michigan's Rick Snyder Becomes 6th GOP Governor to Expand Medicaid

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