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Committee reviews plan to consolidate Medicaid school-based administration under Agency of Human Services

House Committee (markup) · February 20, 2026

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Summary

Legislative counsel told the committee a bill would transfer sole administrative authority for school‑based Medicaid services to the Agency of Human Services and create a special fund for federal reimbursements; the change would shift an estimated 5 percentage points more reimbursement to schools and adjust state administrative share.

Legislative counsel told the House committee on Feb. 20 that a proposed bill would move sole administrative responsibility for Medicaid school‑based services from a split arrangement to the Agency of Human Services, while keeping service delivery in schools.

The bill, discussed at a committee markup, would repeal an existing education‑title special reimbursement fund and create a new special fund under AHS and assign the Department of Vermont Health Access as the Medicaid school‑based services administrator, Jen Carby of the Legislative Council said. "It establishes the Agency of Human Services and through them, the Department of Vermont Health Access as the administrator of the Medicaid school based services," Carby said.

Why it matters: supporters and education advocates said the change is intended to streamline federal compliance and paperwork so schools receive the maximum allowable federal reimbursement. Con Robinson of Vermont NEA told the committee the measure had been checked with practitioners and national partners and gave the bill a "thumbs up," saying it would help "ensure that the maximum allowable resources are getting to schools and students that need those resources."

What the bill would change: under current practice, about half of federal reimbursements for school‑based Medicaid services are available to schools, with up to 30% used for state administration and remaining unspent administrative dollars credited to the education fund. The proposed language discussed by Carby would increase the schools' share to about 55% and reduce the state's administrative cap from up to 30% to up to 25%, while preserving an education‑fund flow for unspent administrative dollars. Carby emphasized the bill sets administrative responsibility with AHS while leaving to the Agency of Education the authority to define how schools may spend "reinvestment" dollars from federal payments.

Committee process and next steps: committee members asked technical questions about how money flows from federal Medicaid to the state special fund and then to schools, and about supervisory‑union terminology in statute. Members noted that detailed fiscal questions will go to Ways and Means; the bill will also likely be reviewed by education and appropriations committees as it advances. The committee did not adopt full implementing language at the markup; Carby cautioned the text discussed was a short form (statement of purpose) and that legislative counsel would draft standard form language if the committee so directed.

The committee moved on to other business and scheduled further consideration of related items in subsequent committee stops. The bill's administrative changes and the percentages discussed were presented as legislative intent rather than as immediate changes to federal reimbursement amounts.