Second Longest Shutdown Since 1980

by Kristin Rowan, Editor

Second Longest Shutdown Since 1980

–As of October 30, 2025–

Shutdown day 30

Subsidy Standoff

Senate Majority Leader John Thune spoke with MSNBC about the shutdown and the subsidy expiration. “Shouldn’t people who are signing up during open enrollment know what they’re signing up for?,” MSNBC asked. Thune said the first step has to be opening the government before that conversation happens, not in the context of the budget talks. According to Thune, the Republican party objects to the current operation of the subsidy program and the incentive structure needs reform.

Subsidy Standoff Not to Blame

Current estimates show insurance premiums rising by 18% – 22% in 2026. Leader Thune suggests that only a “tiny percentage” of that increase is due to the expiration of the enhanced subsidies and the rest is coming from the insurance companies. He says premiums should not being going up by this much and the extreme rate increase is because of waste, fraud, and abuse, and the lack of incentives for insurance companies to lower costs.

No Reform, No Subsidy

Throughout the interview, Leader Thune would not commit to 

Government Shutdown Senate Majority Leader John Thune

negotiating with Democrats, would not guarantee subsidies would be saved, and would not commit to voting for any extension without at least lowering income caps back to pre-COVID levels.

After the Senate session today, Thune spoke to reporters, indicating there was a “higher level of communication” happening. He went on to repeat his earlier statement to MSNBC.

“…there are a lot of rank-and-file members that continue, I think, to want to pursue solutions and to be able to address the issues they care about, including health care, which … we’re willing to do, but it obviously is contingent upon them opening up the government.”

John Thune

Senate Majority Leader

(Un)lucky Number 13

October 28th marked the 13th vote put to the Senate to reopen the government in 28 days. The Senate reconvened yesterday and plan to vote again today, October 30th. Senators have mixed opinions about the likelihood of an agreement now that deadlines for military pay, SNAP benefits, and other programs close in.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D) said negotiations were “occasional” and that Republicans haven’t offered anything different from the original House-passed budget.

Senator Lindsey Graham (R) said resolving the differences on health care would come after the government reopens. “I’m hoping next week, hopefully after the election, that we can get the government back open, talking about our differences on health care.”

Senator Thom Tillis (R) states there is no evidence that formal negotiations are happening, just discussions. 

When Will it End?

The Senate is expected to vote today, October 30th. The measure needs 60 affirmative votes to pass. The vote to automatically continue without discussion failed 37-61. The subsequent votes to temporarily fund the government through November 21st failed 55-45 on October 1 and 54-45 on October 28. Senator Jim Justice (R-WV) voted yes in the first vote, but did not vote yesterday.

If I Were a Gambler...

The rumors and accusations fly on both sides about who is to blame for the shutdown. There are betting sites placing odds on the date the standoff will end. I’m no political expert, but I think there’s something else going on. I believe both sides are playing risky games and that neither side knows the rules to the other’s game. I think both sides know the exact date they will each agree to end this standoff. And I’m sure there are underlying motives that have nothing to do with what they’re telling us.

We will continue to report on this ongoing story as more information becomes available.

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Kristin Rowan, Editor
Kristin Rowan, Editor

Kristin Rowan has been working at The Rowan Report since 2008. She is the owner and Editor-in-chief of The Rowan Report, the industry’s most trusted source for care at home news, and speaker on Artificial Intelligence and Lone Worker Safety and state and national conferences.

She also runs Girard Marketing Group, a multi-faceted boutique marketing firm specializing in content creation, social media management, and event marketing.  Connect with Kristin directly kristin@girardmarketinggroup.com or www.girardmarketinggroup.com

©2025 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in The Rowan Report. One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@therowanreport.com

 

Government Shutdown

by Kristin Rowan, Editor

Government Shutdown Threatens Care at Home

Lawmakers on opposite sides of the aisle failed to come to a budget agreement by the deadline. This causes an immediate cease to all non-essential government functions and many government employees aren’t being paid. 

UPDATE: Shutdown, Day 16

–As of October 16, 2025–

What it Means for Care at Home

After 10 attempts, the government is no closer to an agreement than they were on September 30th. The Senate is expected to break at the end of the day, leaving the next opportunity to negotiate until at least Monday. 

Telehealth

The biggest impact on care at home during the government shut down is the ability to complete required face-to-face visits using telehealth appointments. Both home health and hospice have employed telehealth for face-to-face encounters since the COVID-era waiver, which has now been extended several times. The most recent extension, which we anticipated Congress to extend in this budget, expired on September 30th.

All face-to-face encounters occurring after October 1, 2025 must be in person.

According to home health expert Melinda A. Gaboury of Healthcare Provider Solutions says it is unlikely an extension would be retroactive even if Congress includes an extension in the finalized budget.

Payments

Conflicting information on Medicare payments leave us unsure of the actual impact. Some reports say there will be no delay while others mention 10-day holds. It is unclear whether this is in addition to the standard 14-day hold. Either way, we are anticipating (and hoping for) minimal payment disruptions.

Surveys

Initial Medicare certification for home health and hospice as well as recertifications will be delayed. If ACHA, CHAP, or another accrediting body is conducting your survey, however, there should be no delay. These accrediting bodies are continuing without interruption. State agency surbveys will be delayed until after the budget is finalized and the shutdown ends.

Look for continued updates from The Rowan Report as the shutdown and negotiations continue.

–As of October 9, 2025–

The Disagreement

Reporters and spokespoeople from both sides of the debate have suggested various reasons for the shutdown. Equally, both sides claim they are not the holdouts. What we do know for sure is that one of the primary points of contention is the continuation of subsidies for Affordable Care Act Marketplace Insurance plans. One group wants an extension written into the current budget while the other says it’s not necessary since the subsidies currently run through the end of the calendar year.

Push to Extend

The lawmakers who are pushing to get the subsidy issue resolved believe that marketplace users are not going to sign up for insurance in November and do it again in January when the subsidies are fixed. Instead, insurance commissioners warn that without the subsidies, many people will opt not to have insurance at all and others will select substandard plans based on affordability. They will be priced out of the plans they want without the subsidies in place.

Priced Out

In 2025, even with the subsidies, the average family was paying $800 per month on health insurance through the marketplace. When the subsidies expire, those same families will see their existing plan rates jump to $3,000 per month. KFF, the nonpartisan health research organization, estimates that most users will have a 114% rate increase. 

Government Shutdown

Photo Credit – The New York Times

Counter

According to ND insurance commissioner Jon Godfread, lawmakers who oppose the subsidies are actually opposing the cost of health care and insurance across the board. They insist the subsidies aren’t necessary if healthcare and insurance costs drop instead. Proponents of the subsidies agree, but say that is a longer discussion that will take a lot of time to resolve and the subsidies provide an immediate solution to a bigger problem. They are urging the holdouts to include the subsidies in the budget and tackle the rising cost of healthcare later.

Open Enrollment

The clock is ticking. Open enrollment for 2026 begins November first in every state except Idaho, where open enrollment starts next week. Insurers have already locked in their 2026 premium rates, which will likely cause sticker shock for most marketplace users. Most insurers have prepared subsidy and non-subsidy rates, but without the extension, we will only see the much higher non-subsidy rates. These rates are unlikely to change before enrollment starts and the only hope for marketplace buyers is for Congress to extend the subsidies.

Home Health & Hospice

Care at Home Impact

There are several ways in which the shutdown and the loss of the subsidy may impact care at home.

Payment delays are the most pressing risk. Government officials have promised no delay for some essential services like SNAP and WIC. It is likely Medicare and Medicaid payments will be delayed. While those payments will come through eventually, care at home agencies have to operate without payment or hope the

payers will process payments locally while waiting on the government to reopen. The longer the shutdown lasts, the more likely it is that payments will be delayed. The 6th Senate budget vote failed today, sending the shutdown to day 8.

The longer term impact for care at home will come if the subsidies are not renewed. If insurance rates increase by more than 100% on November 1, users will opt for lower priced coverage, which may no longer include care at home benefits. Fewer patients seeking care at home means less money for agencies. Long-term, it also means higher hospital and ER usage and costs, which increases government spending and usually leads to additional care at home cuts to offset the costs.

National Alliance for Care at Home has identifed current and potential implications of the shutdown. Read their analysis here.

This is an ongoing story and we will continue to provide additional information as it happens. 

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Kristin Rowan, Editor
Kristin Rowan, Editor

Kristin Rowan has been working at The Rowan Report since 2008. She is the owner and Editor-in-chief of The Rowan Report, the industry’s most trusted source for care at home news, and speaker on Artificial Intelligence and Lone Worker Safety and state and national conferences.

She also runs Girard Marketing Group, a multi-faceted boutique marketing firm specializing in content creation, social media management, and event marketing.  Connect with Kristin directly kristin@girardmarketinggroup.com or www.girardmarketinggroup.com

©2025 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in The Rowan Report. One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@therowanreport.com

 

President Biden’s Proposed Budget has Indications for Medicare and Medicaid

From the NAHC Newsdesk,

March 12, 2024

On Monday, March 11th, President Biden released a $7.26 trillion proposed budget for fiscal year (FY) 2025, which begins October 1st, 2024. While the White House budget is simply a request and Congress has final say on government spending, it does provide a window into the president’s priorities and where his administration wants to direct its efforts going forward. Lawmakers have not yet finalized spending for the current fiscal year — which runs through Sept. 30 — and will need to begin negotiating funding legislation for FY2025 simultaneously with ongoing debates over current fiscal year appropriations.

The FY2025 budget requests more than $130.7 billion to fund the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). In addition to this $130.7 billion of requested appropriations, HHS also projects spending over $1.7 trillion on mandatory programs, such as Medicare and Medicaid, that are not subject to the annual appropriations process. Notably, the budget also would extend the Medicare sequester cuts by one year until 2032 (they were previously extended through 2031 by The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021), which would provide savings of around $7.6 billion. The budget also proposes to increase contributions to the Medicare trust fund and extend its projected solvency by increasing taxes on earned and unearned income for those individuals with annual income over $400,000 from 3.8% to 5%.

Over the coming weeks members of the Executive Branch will be testifying before key committees in the House and Senate to provide additional detail around the recommendations put forth in the budget documents. As additional relevant detail is made available, it will be covered in “NAHC Report.”

Provisions of interest in the Budget include:

Medicare

Multiple provider types:

HOME HEALTH

  • Create a Permanent Medicare Home Health Value-Based Purchasing Program:
    The Home Health Value-Based Purchasing Model
    , which the CMS Innovation Center launched in 2016 and expanded nationwide in 2022, successfully improved the quality of home healthcare at lower cost without evidence of adverse risks. This proposal converts the expanded model into a permanent Medicare program, similar to value-based purchasing programs already in place for other Medicare providers. [Budget Neutral]

HOSPICE

  • The Budget proposes to implement a new “value-based purchasing” (VBP) program for hospices (and many other provider sectors that do not already have a VBP program) starting in CY2027. No further details are provided about this VBP-for-hospice program, or the other sectors’ VBP programs, other than that they would be budget-neutral, and that CMS would consider granting “hardship exemptions” to certain providers. NAHC reminds members that just last week, CMMI decided to terminate the Value-Based Insurance Design (VBID) hospice “carve-in” demonstration at the end of CY2024 (the demo had been set to run through CY2030). Over the years, various policy stakeholders have floated different Medicare hospice benefit (MHB) payment reforms, and 2010’s Affordable Care Act legislation called on CMS to pilot test a VBP program for hospices, which it has not done to-date.

Medicaid

Mirroring previous year proposals, the budget includes $150 billion over 10 years to improve and expand Medicaid home and community-based services (HCBS).
  • The budget also proposes to require that states report on the national Medicaid Adult and HCBS Quality Reporting measures. Notably, this budget proposal seeks legislative authority to mandate this reporting while CMS included a mandate for states to submit HCBS Quality Reporting in their 2023 proposed Medicaid Access rule.
  • The Budget proposes to require a Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) for Medicaid and CHIP managed care organizations, with required remittances if plans do not meet the minimum standard. Current law allows, but does not require, states to impose a MLR on their health plans.
  • Proposes to authorize CMS to negotiate supplemental drug rebates on behalf of interested States in order to leverage savings from pooled purchasing power. (5.18 billion savings) As discussed in the State of the Union address, President Biden’s budget includes a proposal to create a Federal option that provides health care coverage to low-income individuals in States that have not expanded Medicaid. As a corollary to this proposal, the budget includes incentives for states to retain existing Medicaid expansions not default to the Federal Option. The budget contains several proposals to strengthen and streamline services for dual eligible individuals including:
    • Aligning Medicare Savings Programs and Part D Low income Subsidy Eligibility Methodologies to make it easier for states and individuals to determine eligibility and enroll in both.
    • Extending the Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB) certification period. Currently states can limit QMB eligibility to periods less than one year, whereas this proposal would establish a 12-month eligibility certification. Provide CMS with the authority to unify appeals processes for Medicare and Medicaid review for individuals enrolled in integrated managed care plans by waiving amount-in-controversy minimums and allowing benefits to continue while an appeal is pending.
    • Allow retroactive coverage of Medicare Part B premiums for QMB applicants.
    •  
  • A proposal to allow CMS to issue partial deferrals and disallowances that target issues of noncompliance in managed care environments and to provide CMS with additional managed care enforcement options.

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR (DOL)/HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE

  • The President’s Budget proposes to establish a national, comprehensive paid family and medical leave program administered by the Social Security Administration to ensure all workers can take up to 12 weeks of leave to care for a seriously ill loved one. Further, the President continues to call on Congress to require employers to provide at least seven paid sick days per year to all workers, and to ensure that employers cannot penalize workers for taking time off to address the health needs of a family member.
  • The Budget expands workforce training along with creating career pathways to in-demand jobs through an $8 billion mandatory Career Training Fund.
  • Broadens Access to Registered Apprenticeships: The Budget increases support for Registered Apprenticeships, a training tool for future workforces in a number of in-demand industries, including health care.
    • The proposal seeks to invest $70 million in the Strengthening Community college training program, which builds community colleges’ capacity to design and deliver high-quality, evidence-based training programs.
    • Invests in Caregivers Support Programs through the VA. Recognizing the critical role family caregivers play in supporting the health and wellness of veterans, the Budget provides critical funding for the Program of General Caregivers Support Services. The Budget also specifically provides $2.9 billion for the Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers, which includes stipend payments and support services to help empower family caregivers of eligible veterans.
    • Nursing Workforce Development — The FY 2025 budget includes $320 million for Nursing Workforce Programs, an increase of $20 million above FY 2023. The budget includes an additional $10 million to address national nursing needs, train more nurses, and strengthen workforce capacity in education, practice, and retention. HRSA will support an increase in the number of nurses trained to provide prenatal care through investments in perinatal maternal healthcare in rural and underserved community settings to increase access and improve the quality of patient care. The investment also increases the number of nurse faculty and clinical preceptors which are critical to expanding nurse training and producing more new nurses.
    • The budget also includes an increase of $10 million for Advanced Nursing Education to bolster the maternal and perinatal workforce by supporting maternal health nurses available to provide specialized care. The program will continue to increase the number of qualified nurses in the primary care workforce, including nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, and Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners.
    • Health Care Workforce Innovation Program — The FY 2025 budget invests $10 million for a new program to jumpstart strategies to grow the healthcare workforce and address healthcare workforce shortages across disciplines such as physicians, nursing, and behavioral health. This new program would invest in innovative approaches to accelerate the transformation of healthcare workforce training to support a modern, robust, and diverse workforce training pipeline.
  • HRSA supports the health workforce through health professions scholarships and loan repayments in return for service in underserved and rural communities. The FY 2025 budget requests $16.3 billion for HRSA, which is $2.0 billion above FY 2023. This total includes $8.3 billion in discretionary budget authority and $8.0 billion in mandatory funding and other sources.

PROGRAM INTEGRITY AND OVERSIGHT EFFORTS

    • The Budget includes a proposal to “Increase Private Equity and Real Estate Investment Trust Ownership Transparency in Long-Term Care Facilities.” This proposal continues the Administration’s aggressive oversight of Wall Street activity in health care and would require skilled nursing facilities with either of these ownership types, whether direct or indirect, to provide additional financial disclosures above and beyond other provider types.
    • The budget also includes a proposal that would modify the requirement that owners with a five percent or greater direct or indirect ownership must be reported on the provider/supplier’s enrollment application, to require owners with any percentage-level of interest be reported.
    • HHS states that “top priorities that would require additional funding for CMS include:
      • Increasing Medicare fee-for-service medical review, including the possible adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and natural language processing technologies;
      • Addressing vulnerabilities identified by the Vulnerability Collaboration Council, report recommendations from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) and HHS-OIG, and emerging issues;
      • Increasing nursing home enforcement (e.g., ownership reporting validation, reviewing Part D data of beneficiaries who reside in nursing facilities, and supporting DOJ in cases brought under the False Claims Act related to quality of care) and enforcement of home and community-based services (HCBS); and
      • Quickly addressing fraud scams, as needed, above current levels.”
  • HHS states that OIG’s “key focus areas” will include managed care, nursing homes, and home and community-based services.

Health Equity

SURVEYS AND CERTIFICATIONS (MEDICARE & MEDICAID)

  • Generally and across provider types, CMS indicates in many places in the budget documents that they are struggling with survey backlogs, primarily amongst state survey agencies (SSAs), and mostly as a result of both lingering COVID impacts and multi-year stagnant funding from Congress for Survey & Certification activities. CMS states that “With years of flat funding, the Survey and Certification program can no longer meet statutory frequency requirements or adequately guarantee the safety and quality of care for patients receiving care in CMS certified facilities.”
  • They also write that “CMS forecasts an increased number of complaint surveys pending and overdue for investigation across all provider types, including some immediate jeopardy complaints. The concern with the backlog is further confounded by the aforementioned increasing number of complaints being reported as well as surveyors finding more serious quality of care issues when conducting onsite surveys. These findings result in longer surveys and possible onsite revisit surveys. They also indicate a general worsening in the quality of services being provided to patients and residents.”
  • Specifically for the hospice program, CMS states that “CMS did not meet the FY 2020 – FY 2022 target of 98% [of hospices surveyed within the last 36-months, as required by law] due to the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE) and reprioritization of survey activities based on guidance published throughout the PHE.”
  • “While Accrediting Organizations have eliminated backlogs resultant from the PHE, SAs still face challenges. As SAs reduce the backlog, we anticipate meeting the target goal of hospice facilities surveyed within the required 36 months in the upcoming years.” CMS indicates that for FY2022, the most recent year with complete data, 87.1 percent of hospices were surveyed in the last 36 months.

NAHC POSITION: “This is important data for NAHC’s advocacy around CMS’ flawed Special Focus Program (SFP) design and the CMS’ plan to launch the program at the end of 2024. Given that hospice surveys are such a critical component of the SFP algorithm, it is important that CMS use accurate and up-to-date survey data; however, the budget language here seems to indicate that CMS is not caught up on the hospice survey backlog and may not be able to ensure that all hospices have indeed been surveyed in the last 36 months for at the near future.”

  • The budget requests $492 million for Survey and Certification, an increase of $85 million or 21 percent above FY 2023, to fund Medicare and Medicaid provider survey and certification activities. If funded at this level, CMS claims it would have sufficient resources to ensure states:
      • Complete approximately 85% of the recertification surveys for statutory facilities (up from the current 65% via FY2024 levels), survey projected complaints in all facility types at an Actual Harm, Immediate Jeopardy (IJ), and Non-IJ High levels, address a portion of the current complaint backlog, and a proportional recertification survey frequency rate for non-statutory facilities with a focus on those facility types with higher beneficiary risks.
      • CMS also states that at this level, Hospice and ESRD facilities will have funding to perform initial surveys on new providers wanting to enter the program to gain Medicare and/or Medicaid certification
  •  
  • Additionally, the budget proposes, effective in FY 2026, to shift the funding mechanism for nursing home surveys from discretionary to mandatory appropriation and to increase the amounts to a level necessary to achieve a 100 percent nursing home survey frequency, adjusted annually for inflation.

ADMINISTRATION FOR COMMUNITY LIVING (FUNDING FOR AGING AND DISABILITY COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS)

    • The proposal includes $2.7 billion for ACL, which is an increase of $70 million on paper above FY 2023 amounts, but it effectively represents an approximately $112 million increase due to eliminating $42 million of earmarks in the accounting tables.
    • ACL requests an additional $10 million to expand their Direct Care Workforce Strategies Center and fund capacity-building grants to states to support building partnerships among state Medicaid, aging, disability, and workforce agencies; coordinating and leveraging programs and funding streams; and developing and testing strategies to attract, train and retain direct care professionals.
  • ACL also requests $1.1 billion for nutrition services, which is the largest part of the Older Americans Act and would be an increase of $83 million above FY 2023.

HEALTH RESOURCES AND SERVICES ADMINISTRATION

    • HRSA — $320M line item for Nursing Workforce Development (pg. 25):
      • Nursing Workforce Development &mndash; The FY 2025 budget includes $320 million for Nursing Workforce Programs, an increase of $20 million above FY 2023. The budget includes an additional $10 million to address national nursing needs, train more nurses, and strengthen workforce capacity in education, practice, and retention. HRSA will support an increase in the number of nurses trained to provide prenatal care through investments in perinatal maternal healthcare in rural and underserved community settings to increase access and improve the quality of patient care. The investment also increases the number of nurse faculty and clinical preceptors which are critical to expanding nurse training and producing more new nurses.
      • The budget also includes an increase of $10 million for Advanced Nursing Education to bolster the maternal and perinatal workforce by supporting maternal health nurses available to provide specialized care. The program will continue to increase the number of qualified nurses in the primary care workforce, including nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, and Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners. (pg. 30)
    • HRSA — $10m line item for a Health Care Workforce Innovation Program (pg. 25)
      • Health Care Workforce Innovation Program – The FY 2025 budget invests $10 million for a new program to jumpstart strategies to grow the healthcare workforce and address healthcare workforce shortages across disciplines such as physicians, nursing, and behavioral health. This new program would invest in innovative approaches to accelerate the transformation of healthcare workforce training to support a modern, robust, and diverse workforce training pipeline.(pg. 30)
  • HRSA — $51m line item for Medical Student Education (pg. 25)
    • HRSA — “HRSA supports the health workforce through health professions scholarships and loan repayments in return for service in underserved and rural communities. The FY 2025 budget requests $16.3 billion for HRSA, which is $2.0 billion above FY 2023. This total includes $8.3 billion in discretionary budget authority and $8.0 billion in mandatory funding and other sources. (pg. 27)

     

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