The wheels keep turning, and the news continues to be...only not as bad as it could be.
Based on this report, and in line with DDS director Reese's announcement at the meeting of DC's Project ACTION! meeting on Saturday May 17, DC's chief financial officer started his 10-day review of the mayor's FY2026 budget last Thursday, which by my count would put it into the DC council's hands by a week from today (although that's Memorial Day, so probably May 27 instead). Mendelson reported that he expects the council to hold its final budget vote on August 1, so it's looking like a busy June and July for budget hearings. Meantime, no word on a fix in the House of Representatives for DC's FY2025 budget, so $410 million in cuts can be expected before the end of September.
DDS director Reese also announced at Project ACTION! that the DDS forum on May 23 would focus on the IFS waiver and vocational rehabilitation state plan, with, hopefully, a briefing on the proposed DDS budget for FY 2026 on May 30.
The fate of Medicaid nationally continues to churn. The House budget committee passed a budget reconciliation bill over the weekend, rumored to have gotten the votes of the House Freedom Caucus based on the promise that Medicaid work requirements would start in 2027 instead of in 2029 as agreed by the House energy and commerce committee the previous weekend. And for some of the most conservative House representatives, even this isn't enough.
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