| 222 South Warren Street
Trenton, NJ 08625
Contact: Ed Rogan
Cece Lentini
(609) 292-3703
RELEASE: November 21, 2001
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DYFS and Prudential sponsor Gift of Warmth
Challenge
Department of Human Services Acting Commissioner James W. Smith
announced today a two-pronged approach to making sure the popular
NJ FamilyCare health insurance program reaches its goal of insuring
as many low- and moderate-income families as possible while continuing
to stay within its budget.
"We are proud of all that NJFamilyCare has accomplished
since it was first introduced as NJKidCare in 1998," said
Acting Commissioner Smith. "This program now provides health
insurance for almost 200,000 adults and children who previously
were uninsured. The actions being announced today will strengthen
our ability to continue to enroll children and their parents in
the program in the months ahead."
Among the actions are a new marketing effort to enroll more children
and placing some limits on enrollment and benefits for adults
without children as of Sept. 1, 2001.
Smith said that a new $1.5 million marketing effort kicked off
this month with the goal of increasing awareness of the program
among children and their families. A particular target of this
effort is children with family incomes between 200 and 350 percent
of the federal poverty level, or for example, children who are
from families of four with annual incomes of $35,300 to $61,775.
The marketing effort will include mailings, assembly programs
in 200 elementary schools, informational advertising spots on
Nickelodeon TV and a joint effort in southern New Jersey with
Pennsylvania and Delaware in conjunction with the McDonald’s Corporation.
In addition to the new marketing effort, Smith said that effective
on Sept. 1, some low-income childless adults will no longer be
able to enroll in the program. Parents with family incomes up
to 200 percent of the federal poverty level and Work First/General
Assistance recipients will continue to be able to enroll in the
program.
The following changes take effect on September 1:
- Single adults and childless couples who are not eligible for
WorkFirst/General Assistance (GA) and whose applications are
received after Sept.1 will no longer be
able to enroll in the program. That means childless couples earning
more than $2600 per year, or approximately 30 percent of the Federal
Poverty Level, will no longer be eligible. These adults will continue
to be able to apply for hospital Charity Care and are guaranteed
access to hospital emergency rooms by federal law. Until now,
childless adults with an income up to 100 percent of the Federal
Poverty Level, or $8,590 for one person and $11,610 for a couple,
have been eligible for the program.
- Single adults and childless couples whose applications are
received prior to Sept. 1 and who are found eligible for the
program after Sept. 1, will not receive services until they
are enrolled in a health maintenance organization (HMO). This
will end the practice of providing services on a fee-for-service
basis pending enrollment in a managed care plan.
- Work First/General Assistance beneficiaries will continue
to be enrolled in the program. After Sept.1, however, hospital
coverage will only begin once the individual is enrolled in
an HMO. This will end the practice of providing hospital coverage
to GA beneficiaries on a fee-for-service basis pending enrollment
in a managed care plan. (WorkFirst/General Assistance is a cash
assistance program for single adults and childless couples who
are disabled or unemployed and earn less than $50 a week. These
beneficiaries receive other basic health insurance benefits
as part of their Work First/General Assistance benefit package
until they are enrolled in a NJ FamilyCare HMO. They also are
eligible for coverage under the hospital charity care program
pending enrollment in a NJ FamilyCare HMO.)
Currently, 123,000 adults are enrolled in NJ FamilyCare. This
number includes about 24,000 GA beneficiaries, 13,000 childless
adults and 85,000 parents. Between 1,000 and 2,000 adults, most
of them parents, are continuing to enroll in the program each
week and adult enrollment on Sept. 1 is expected to reach about
129,000.
NJ FamilyCare, which receives matching funds from the federal
government to insure children and parents, is expected to cost
a total of $490 million in the 2002 fiscal year. This includes
$370 million to insure adults and $120 million to insure children.
In the Fiscal Year 2002 budget, the Legislature appropriated an
additional $25 million for the program and also gave the Commissioner
of the Department of Human Services authority to make any changes
deemed appropriate to keep the program within its budget.
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