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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRevealed: New GOP plan severely backfired when they tried it in a deep-red state
Georgia, the only state with a Medicaid work mandate, started experimenting with the requirement on July 1, 2023. As the Medicaid programs two-year anniversary approaches, Georgia has enrolled just a fraction of those eligible, a result health policy researchers largely attribute to bureaucratic hurdles in the states work verification system. As of May 2025, approximately 7,500 of the nearly 250,000 eligible Georgians were enrolled, even though state statistics show 64% of that group is working.
Gov. Brian Kemp has long advocated for Medicaid reform, arguing that the country should move away from government-run health care. His spokesperson also told The Current and ProPublica that the program, known as Georgia Pathways to Coverage, was never designed to maximize enrollment.
Health care analysts and former state Medicaid officials say Georgias experience shows that the congressional bill, if it becomes law, would cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars in administrative costs as it is implemented while threatening health care for nearly 16 million people.
https://www.alternet.org/medicaid-work-requirements/
Walleye
(43,844 posts)aocommunalpunch
(4,551 posts)the program isn't necessary. Super easy. Barely an inconvenience. Just keep the eyes closed and ears covered and the theory is just fucking brilliant.
Initech
(107,461 posts)Nobody else wants this shit forced on us.
tanyev
(48,675 posts)Although some fraudulent recipients are probably out there, the vast majority of people on Medicaid are on it because there is some valid reason they are unable to work.
usonian
(23,597 posts)In that case, it deprives people of their privacy(1)(2)and "adult" material, which might actually be useful/medical information and not just porn, and in the case of medicaid, I'll bet a buck that the massive difficulty in work verification costs millions. Maybe more than is "saved" by denying benefits to, as they say, "welfare bums", a codeword for Black Americans, but poverty cuts across all lines.

(1) https://malware.guide/news/eff-warns-online-age-verification-poses-privacy-risks-for-all-users/
(2) https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/03/age-verification-mandates-would-undermine-anonymity-online