Rick's Blog

Andrade Targets Three Issues: Infant Mortality, Hope Florida Loophole, Public Records

State Rep. Alex Andrade is swinging at three major targets this legislative session — and none of them are softballs. In a conversation on (We Don’t) Color On the Dog, Andrade laid out an aggressive agenda that challenges Florida’s managed Medicaid system, addresses the fallout from the Hope Florida scandal, and takes aim at public agencies stonewalling records requests.

Making Medicaid Plans Earn Their Money

Andrade’s most ambitious move is a conforming bill in the House healthcare budget that would force Medicaid managed care plans to compete on outcomes — specifically, infant mortality rates.

“We thought that turning Medicaid over to private companies would inject some private market efficiencies into this system,” Andrade said. “But what we’ve really discovered is that there’s no real competition in Medicaid managed care plans.”

He pointed to an alarming trend: some companies have abandoned private health insurance entirely because Medicaid managed care is so profitable. “They’ve gotten out of the private health insurance game entirely because this Medicaid managed care system is so profitable for them. That’s a problem.”

Hope Florida: ‘Those Are Just the Facts’

Andrade also addressed the governor’s efforts to dismiss the Hope Florida investigation as a “nothing burger,” pointing to an anonymous DOJ source who told a blogger no federal action was forthcoming.

His new bill would prohibit the diversion of state settlement funds to third parties as a condition of settlement, along with provisions barring public officials from fundraising in their official capacity — language DeSantis vetoed last year.

Public Records: ‘Compliance Is Abysmal’

Perhaps closest to home for journalists and citizens alike, Andrade is pushing a bill to overhaul Florida’s public records process. He didn’t mince words about the current state of affairs.

Under his bill, agencies would have three days to either produce records, provide a good-faith timeline and cost estimate, or cite the specific statutory exemption justifying denial. The bill also streamlines litigation, eliminating the five-day notice requirement before filing suit and stripping agencies of a good-faith presumption if they failed to follow the three-day response process.

“I didn’t think we needed to statutorily spell out how to act honestly and in good faith,” Andrade said, “but based on all my experiences, it appears like it’s necessary.”

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