The same elected officials who trusted your vote to put them into office evidently don’t trust your vote to expand Medicaid.
The same elected officials who trusted your vote to put them into office evidently don’t trust your vote to expand Medicaid.

Dear Editor,

On Nov. 6, Utah voters passed Proposition 3 and finally put to rest a years-long debate. Voters chose to fully expand the Medicaid program as directed under the law, without relying on waiver approval from the Trump administration. Now, Medicaid expansion must be implemented, with enrollment beginning April 1, as the voters decided. Vulnerable Utahns cannot wait another day to get the care they need. For some individuals, this is the help they’ve been waiting for in order to get healthy and get back to work. For others, this is the key to finally access lifesaving medical treatment before it’s too late.

Yet recent news indicates that an effort to repeal the expansion under Proposition 3 is being considered by members of the Utah legislature. They claim the ballot initiative to expand Medicaid, now Utah state law, must be repealed and replaced with their plan, which would indefinitely delay access to care.

Any delay or significant change to Proposition 3 is a repeal of the will of the people. Calling legislative actions “fixes,” “tweaks,” or “amendments” may soften the language around repeal, but it won’t soften the harmful impact.

The Utah state legislature had six years to put together a Medicaid expansion, but it took the public to step up and get it done. Now, the same elected officials who trusted your vote to put them into office evidently don’t trust your vote to expand Medicaid. Contact your legislators and the governor today and stand up for your vote and for the health and well-being of your neighbors.

Matt Slonaker

Executive director, Utah Health Policy Project

The viewpoints expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Independent.

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