In May 2023, the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE) officially ended. Each state was required to begin reviewing the eligibility of everyone who had enrolled in Medicaid since the beginning of the pandemic. For Colorado, this was 1.8 million enrollees—far more than had ever been enrolled in the state’s history. Unfortunately, some of the 64 counties responsible for determining eligibility began this work already behind in their processing of public benefits, and the technology systems they relied on had been plagued with errors for years.
Colorado Center on Law and Policy (CCLP) recognized these unique challenges and sought to establish avenues to gather information from community advocates during this process. Through recurring meetings with Medicaid enrollment assisters and disability advocates around the state, CCLP helped identify systemic issues as they arose. Together with data gathered from Open Records Act requests and national sources, CCLP advocated directly with the state’s Medicaid agency, the Department of Health Care Policy and Financing (HCPF), to institute changes aimed at keeping vulnerable populations enrolled.
This case study by CCLP Legal Director Katherine Wallat, Esq., details how CCLP got involved in the disenrollment crisis, the role of community engagement in identifying the systemic problems that impacted thousands of Coloradans and their ability to access care, and the many long term positive outcomes of this work. It is the hope of CCLP’s staff that this report may provide insights into what worked and what could work again in addressing systemic issues relating to public benefits such as Medicaid, particularly in light of the Federal government’s cuts this year in H.R.1.
Acknowledgements
CCLP would like to thank Colorado Kids and Families, Colorado Community Health Network, The Arc of Colorado, Advocacy Denver, Family Voices Colorado, Colorado Cross Disability Coalition, Colorado Lawyers Committee, Colorado Legal Services, and the many individual HCPF staff members, members of the provider community, advocates and Medicaid enrollees who we worked alongside, and who made our contributions possible.


CCLP Public Comment to HHS Reinterpretation of Federal Public Benefit
Public Comment, Publications