The budget is a moral document
The Rhody Civics Club held an event at the Buttonwoods Brewery on Thursday to hear from the Economic Progress Institute’s policy director, Nina Harrison, and State Senator Meghan Kallman (Democrat, District 15, Pawtucket, Providence) about the state of Rhode Island’s healthcare system.
The discussion was about the catastrophic impact HR1 (Donald
Trump’s “big beautiful bill) will have on low- and middle-income Rhode
Islanders, and the massive impacts of federal cuts to Medicaid, health insurance premiums,
and food assistance. It wasn’t all doom and gloom. Senator Kallman and Nina
Harrison have presented bills currently before the Rhode Island General
Assembly that could help mitigate the impending catastrophe.
Nina Harrison
I’m the policy director at the Economic Progress Institute.
The Economic Progress Institute is a nonprofit that does policy research and
advocacy in Rhode Island. We try to get laws passed that benefit low- and
modest-income Rhode Islanders, improve racial equity in the state, and give
people a chance at economic opportunity. I am also the co-chair of the Protect Our Healthcare Coalition,
which I co-lead with Shamus Durac from RIPIN, a huge resource in the state that
advocates for children with disabilities.
I’m told that you all basically know how things work at the
State House, that people like Senator Kallman are there in the evenings, at
committee hearings, hearing testimony on bills. I’m often there giving
testimony and saying, “Please pass this bill, or please don’t pass this other
bill.”
I’m going to start by talking about what happened over the
summer, which some of you may have heard Trump talking about: one big,
beautiful bill, which is not beautiful, especially for Rhode Islanders, that
essentially cut more than a trillion dollars in funding for Medicaid and SNAP over
10 years. And they did that to pay for tax breaks for the richest people in
America. Because of the tax break Trump made permanent over the summer, the
highest-income earners are getting an average tax break of $58, 000 this year.
We’re losing healthcare and food assistance, but the highest
income earners are getting a $58, 000 a piece tax break this year.
What does that mean for Rhode Island? It means that unless
the state takes action, 53, 000 people will lose healthcare. That’s not my
stat; that’s a statistic from the state itself. About 33,000 people are
expected to lose Medicaid coverage. Medicaid is for people who are low-income,
typically 138% or less of the federal poverty line, which is already too low.














