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Marin staff warn HR1 reconciliation bill could cut local health, nutrition and clean‑energy supports
Summary
Marin County staff and local health providers told the Board of Supervisors on Sept. 9 that HR1, the federal budget reconciliation bill, could reduce Medi‑Cal coverage, cut immigrant emergency funding and SNAP administration support, and eliminate some clean‑energy tax credits — with staged impacts beginning in 2026.
County staff and health providers told the Marin County Board of Supervisors on Sept. 9 that HR1, the federal budget reconciliation bill signed on July 4, could reduce coverage and funding for tens of thousands of county residents and harm local clinics, nutrition programs and clean‑energy incentives over a phased rollout beginning in 2026.
Talia Smith, director of Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs, and Ahmed Ishmael, chief fiscal officer for Health and Human Services, presented an informational report that outlined changes in the bill and their projected local effects. Smith said HR1 was passed through budget reconciliation and that significant implementation uncertainty remains pending federal and state guidance. "This presentation is intended to accompany an informational report... there is significant uncertainty still in how this bill will actually be implemented," Smith said.
Ishmael summarized local exposure: approximately 54,000 Marin residents currently rely on Medi‑Cal,…
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