MILWAUKEE COUNTY, Wis. (CBS 58) — One in four Americans have medical debt. A new resolution coming to the Milwaukee County board could alleviate that burden for nearly 67,000 people.
The proposal would allocate $1.6 million of American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding toward a new partnership between Milwaukee County and RIP Medical Debt, a nonprofit organization.
This could potentially relieve $153 million in medical debt across the county.
RIP Medical Debt is primarily funded by donations and government allocations.
The organization can provide individuals with a $1 donation to $100 relief ratio.
“When you look at the data in Milwaukee County, a quarter of families are in medical debt collections, and a quarter of that are families of color,” said Alderman Andrew Meindl with the city of Wauwatosa.
Milwaukee County sits 4% above the national average for household medical debt.
Supervisor Shawn Rolland, co-chair of the county’s ARPA Task Force, said his proposal could significantly lower those numbers.
RIP Medical Debt had similar partnerships with Cook County, Illinois, Toledo, Ohio, and New Orleans.
“We’ve been able to get rid of $8.5 billion of medical debt, helping 5.5 million families across the country,” said RIP Medical Debt’s president and CEO, Allison Sesso.
The nonprofit buys debt directly from providers and the secondary market.
Eligible residents will have their debt automatically forgiven – that includes residents at 400% or below federal poverty level, and/or if medical debt is 5% of overall income.
“We can invest $10 and get $1,000 in return for the benefit of people who are struggling with medical debt,” Rolland said.
RIP Medical Debt noted that ARPA fund allocations allow local government more flexibility to make this partnership.
“It’s actually a relatively small percentage of the overall ARPA funds that most localities are dedicating to us, yet it’s having a huge return,” Sesso said.
In order to provide relief, local hospitals have to sell their debt to the organization.
Alderman Andrew Meindl of Wauwatosa helped Rolland spearhead the resolution. He is working to get the medical campus on board.
“This is not to vilify our hospitals, but to provide the service, so that way there’s an intermediary – RIP Medical Debt can work directly with them and get those accounts off the books,” Meindl explained.
So far, Meindl said he has received positive reception from several Milwaukee County providers.
While the resolution is a short-term fix, Rolland believes the relief has long-term implications.
“If, with a one-time use of this federal money, we can create a lot of relief in their lives, let’s do it,” Rolland said.
Several other county supervisors have voiced their support of the proposal, including County Executive David Crowley.
The ARPA Task Force will vote on the resolution Thursday.
If it passes, the full county board will take a vote this spring.
Source link