‘Shocking’ and ‘plain cruel’: Health advocates say Newsom’s Medi-Cal budget could cripple women’s reproductive care

‘Shocking’ and ‘plain cruel’: Health advocates say Newsom’s Medi-Cal budget could cripple women’s reproductive care

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.

The Planned Parenthood-East Los Angeles Health Center in East Los Angeles on Aug. 8th, 2022. Photo by Raquel Natalicchio for CalMatters

The Planned Parenthood-East Los Angeles Health Center in East Los Angeles on Aug. 8th, 2022. Photo by Raquel Natalicchio for CalMatters

Six months after California voters overwhelmingly approved a ballot initiative that increases the pay of doctors treating Medi-Cal patients, Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to divert that money to cover other health costs.

Newsom last week proposed using $1.6 billion generated by Proposition 35 over the next two years to help address California’s $12 billion state deficit. The governor said the spending plan is allowable under the ballot measure, while doctors, hospitals, clinics and others who support the measure are crying foul.

Rising costs are making Medi-Cal, the state’s health insurance for low-income people, unsustainable, triggering a controversy over use of funds that voters earmarked for specific health costs, such as doctor’s pay and women’s reproductive health.

In addition to reallocating the Prop. 35 funds, the governor also wants to move $500 million from the state tobacco tax into the state’s general fund. That money, which voters approved in a 2016 ballot measure, is supposed to support family planning and women’s health care, among other services.

Health advocates say the governor’s proposals for shifting the money will weaken the state’s health safety net and hamstring reproductive health care.

Planned Parenthood said the double hit from Newsom’s Prop. 35 and tobacco tax proposals in the state budget could cripple its services.

Jodi Hicks, chief executive of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California and co-chair of the Yes on Prop. 35 campaign, called Newsom’s proposal “shocking” and “plain cruel.” She said Planned Parenthood would lose a third of its budget if it is approved by the Legislature next month. Low-income patients would have to contend with longer wait times, fewer appointment options and potentially need to drive further to access care.

“Our footprint is so large in sexual and reproductive health care in California. There is no way for other clinics to absorb that,” Hicks said.

Newsom’s proposal comes at a time when the Republican-led Congress is contemplating deep cuts to Medicaid. Included is cutting off all federal funding for Planned Parenthood. (Medi-Cal is California’s name for Medicaid.) “We need the state to help us prepare, not make things significantly worse,” Hicks said.

The use of state health funds will likely be a centerpiece as the state Legislature negotiates a budget deal with Newsom over the next month. A final budget is due June 15.

The state’s Democratic lawmakers, who have a supermajority in the Legislature, have largely balked at Newsom’s changes to Medi-Cal, which also include freezing new enrollment for most adults without permanent legal status.

“I’m disheartened that the Governor’s updated budget is riddled with deep cuts to our constituents’ healthcare. We cannot boast about having the fourth-largest economy while balancing our budget on the back of everyday Californians’ healthcare,” Assembly Health Committee Chair Mia Bonta, a Democrat from Oakland, said in a statement.

Prop. 35, approved by 68% of California voters in November, was designed to guarantee doctors would get paid more to serve patients covered by Medi-Cal. Reimbursement rates for Medi-Cal are so low that patients often struggle to find doctors who will accept their insurance.

Prop. 35 uses a special tax paid by health insurance plans to generate revenue for Medi-Cal. Most of the money — $9 billion in 2024-25 — goes to the state’s general fund. But the additional $1.6 billion that Newsom wants to take for general Medi-Cal spending was supposed to be reserved to increase the amount doctors get paid for specific services, such as primary care, specialty care and emergency room visits.  

Newsom’s budget proposal would instead use the $1.6 billion intended for doctors’ pay increases to support higher Medi-Cal spending for primary care, specialty care, ambulances and hospital outpatient procedures.

Planned Parenthood and the California Medical Association helped lead the industry group that put the measure on the ballot.

In a statement, Dr. Shannon Udovic-Constant, president of the medical association, called Newsom’s budget proposal a “direct violation of the will of California voters.”

“The proposition was passed to prevent exactly this kind of maneuver – raiding health care funding to solve budget problems,” she said.

When questioned about the move during a budget presentation on Wednesday, Newsom denied this characterization and said the proposed spending is “absolutely consistent” with the rules established by the ballot measure.

Newsom repeatedly blamed Prop. 35 for causing part of the state’s budget shortfall and called it and other recent ballot measures “unfunded initiatives.”

The governor said Medi-Cal has a growth problem that the state cannot afford.

State spending on Medi-Cal has more than doubled since 2017 and is now projected to cost $76.8 billion in the 2024-25 budget year. Earlier this year lawmakers approved an extra $6 billion for unexpected Medi-Cal costs.

Linnea Koopmans, chief executive of the Local Health Plans of California and chair of the Prop. 35 advisory committee, said in a statement to CalMatters that Newsom’s budget does not reflect California’s values.

“Undoubtedly, the state budget challenge is real, but sweeping more than $1 billion of (Prop. 35) revenue is not an option. These funds must be used to support Medi-Cal investments in providers and workforce that are necessary to improve access to care,” Koopmans said.

The Prop. 35 advisory committee was established by the ballot initiative to oversee how the state spends the money.

Industry supporters of the measure say Newsom’s proposal doesn’t actually pay doctors more; it conflates increased costs associated with Medi-Cal’s growing enrollment with payment.

Molly Weedn, a spokesperson for the Yes on 35 campaign, said in a statement that the budget proposal raises “serious legal concerns.”

“The Governor proposes using Prop. 35 funding to cover already incurred costs in Medi-Cal and not for increasing provider payments to increase access to health care,” Weedn said.

The most contentious part of the debate comes down to whether he’s using the Prop. 35 money to pay the state’s general expenses, not just health care.

The Newsom administration’s finance department said in a document shared with CalMatters that doctors’ pay is reviewed and increased annually, which aligns with Prop. 35’s requirements. The department also denies that using the money to pay for Medi-Cal would replace general fund spending because the amount that the state is taking from the general fund for Medi-Cal continues to grow.

Critics say these standard adjustments are not necessarily a true rate increase for doctors — they mostly reflect increased Medi-Cal costs as a result of more patients enrolling or more expensive care being provided. In order to substantially increase how much doctors get paid, the state would have to submit an application for federal approval, which it has not done.

“It appears the caseload growth in Medi-Cal is being used to justify the need for these funds,” said Jennifer Kent, an advisor to the Prop. 35 campaign and former director of the health care services department.

Newsom isn’t the first governor to sweep money approved by voters into the general fund, and his budget proposal also mirrors a move made by his predecessor, Jerry Brown, in 2017 to eliminate payments made for family planning, women’s health and dentistry by the state tobacco tax.

Amy Moy, co-chief executive of Essential Access Health, which provides grants to clinics for reproductive health care, said the governor’s proposed cuts jeopardize California’s commitment to making abortion, contraceptives and other reproductive health services accessible.

Moy, a member of the Proposition 35 stakeholder advisory committee, said she is confident the final budget approved by the Legislature will pull back some of Newsom’s proposed cuts.

“Ultimately we believe that California’s commitment, including our administration’s commitment, to sexual and reproductive health will be reflected in the final budget.”

Supported by the California Health Care Foundation (CHCF), which works to ensure that people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit www.chcf.org to learn more.

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26 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Truth Be Told
Member
Truth Be Told
1 year ago

Social services are always the first things to be cut — always.

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
1 year ago

IMHO:

Meanwhile… (https://budget.house.gov/press-release/..)

California to Spend $8.4 Billion This Year on Health Care for Illegal Aliens
Yee hah ! Let’s hear it for Newsom and cohorts !

Two Dogs
Guest
Two Dogs
1 year ago
Reply to  Bozo

Yep. What is “shocking” is that the narcissistic left insists on voting for self destructive policies.
What is “cruel” is the fact it affects everyone.

I am a Robot
Guest
I am a Robot
1 year ago
Reply to  Two Dogs

It is the MAGA doing these tĥings in DC. Not liberals

old guy
Guest
old guy
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a Robot

Maga neusome ?

Two Dogs
Guest
Two Dogs
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a Robot

Bullshit. This debacle we call a state govt. is directly responsible for this mess. The article does a pretty good job of bringing this to light, if one who reads it is capable of mediocre comprehension.

I like stars
Guest
I like stars
1 year ago
Reply to  Bozo

🎯

Country Joe
Member
1 year ago
Reply to  Bozo

Illegal aliens are not entitled to medical care. They bankrupted Medical.

Permanently on Monitoring
Guest
Permanently on Monitoring
1 year ago
Reply to  Country Joe

Illegal Aliens have been milking us dry for decades…

They are actually not the minority, and they are taking your state, baby after baby after baby…

California does not even resemble itself, and soon it will look like Eureka…

Healthcare in Humboldt and practically every other place in CA is a problem delivery, and Corporate Healthcare can’t make a profit in Commuter Towns…

If you want Prenatal Care but you want Medi-Cal to pay, you might want to move to Colusa…

Country Joe
Member
1 year ago

Spot on. They have been milking this state for decades…

Ben Round
Guest
Ben Round
1 year ago

Yes, now Newsom is swinging to the right solely for himself as he prepares for run for President in 2028. Newsom only really cares about his opportunities for political advancement. Ugh!

Zipline
Guest
Zipline
1 year ago

All politicians lie continually and the real dumbasses are us who believe a word that comes out of their mouths. Stop giving them our money to play with.

Pharmstheproblem
Guest
Pharmstheproblem
1 year ago

Once again we vote for something and the money goes somewhere else!

I am a Robot
Guest
I am a Robot
1 year ago

My 70 year old friend in Oregon, despite an income of under $11,000 and being disabled, just lost her medicaid entirely. Just gone.
What has become of our once great nation?

old guy
Guest
old guy
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a Robot

Doesn’t oregon have it’s own state insurance? poorly run, but yes.

Bozo
Guest
Bozo
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a Robot

Eh ? Sounds like Oregon (OHP) was doing ‘Medicaid Unwinding’.
— AI Stuff.
Over the past two years Oregon and states across the country went through the “Medicaid unwinding,” the process of figuring out who was eligible to remain on the program after government protections enacted to keep people insured during the COVID-19 pandemic ended.
Between April 1, 2023, and Feb. 28, 2025, Oregon had to re-determine eligibility for all Oregonians enrolled in Medicaid coverage.
The Oregon Health Authority, took a number of steps to minimize the loss of coverage, particularly for people who still qualified based on their income but may have struggled to complete the necessary paperwork.

Dunno… Etc.

CsMisadventues
Guest
CsMisadventues
1 year ago
Reply to  Bozo

Non AI link: Oregon COVID “unwinding” of continuous enrolment. For starters, Oregon Health Plan (which is a version of our MediCal/Partnership) and OHP Bridge had one of the highest MediCaid renewal rates in the US. DHS letter from DC explaining it.
Yes there are slightly higher rates of ineligibility and the OHA and DHS nationally are trying to help people stay eligible. If you lost it, you might want to look into why. People forget that many of these emergency COVID rules were only temporary to begin with, and this isn’t Trumps DoGEball department, rather rules that were reaching their sunset dates, with things rolling back to pre-Covid coverages. It just happens to coincide with changes in Presidents.

Zipline
Guest
Zipline
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a Robot

Maga.

Yabut
Guest
Yabut
1 year ago
Reply to  Zipline

Since there have been only proposals under Trump and nothing yet affected, that is obviously incorrect.

Country Joe
Member
1 year ago
Reply to  Yabut

Typical of the left.

Thought Prophet
Guest
Thought Prophet
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a Robot

Top heavy government managers who don’t have to account for the exorbitant salaries and benefit packages that are not tied to a realistic or sustainable cost benefit analysis.

the one thing people outside of government jobs and contractors who rely upon government test, is that fact that running government could very well be outsourced by illegal immigrants and h1b visas.

would it not be worth watching the look on peoples faces when the crap they force us to deal with is pushed back up their arses.

you aren’t anywhere near angry enough to support such MEDIOCRE REPRESENTATION FOR THE AMOUNT OF DEBT THEY RACK UP.

Country Joe
Member
1 year ago
Reply to  I am a Robot

Democrats are what has become of our nation.

Humboldt
Member
Humboldt
1 year ago

I didn’t know that Planned Parenthood was a government entity.

I thought it was independent.

I find it weird, and out of character, for Newsom to do something that would harm MediCal.

He must have some serious reasons.

But, on the other hand, I continuously see articles in this very newspaper, in which the State is paying a million here and a million there, for projects that are far from life threatening – like building a new highway interchange at Sunset Avenue in Arcata. Those people can get on and off the highway now. I don’t see why we need to rebuild the ramps, in a time of fiscal deficit. It seems dumb.

There are many such projects I see left and right that seem superfluous compared to healthcare.

I think someone needs to use a line item veto on the budget and incorporate common sense.

Newsom, shockingly, seems to be writing his own rules, like orange is doing in Washington. Not good.

Country Joe
Member
1 year ago
Reply to  Humboldt

Newscum bankrupted Medical by giving benefits to illegal aliens that aren’t entitled to a penny.

Carricomom
Guest
Carricomom
1 year ago

Reminds me when we voted on taxes to fix our roads but our local government wants to use it to buy electric bases or some bs.