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Maryland Delegation Announces More Than $3 Million for Rural Health Care Facilities

October 26, 2022
Press Release

(Washington, DC) – Congressman C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, along with U.S. Senators Ben Cardin and Chris Van Hollen and Congressmen Steny H. Hoyer, John Sarbanes, Kweisi Mfume, Anthony G. Brown, Jamie B. Raskin and David Trone (all D-Md.), today announced $3,079,600 in U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development funding for six Maryland health and wellness-based facilities to improve and modernize their services.

Funding comes through the Emergency Rural Health Care Grants Program of the American Rescue Plan Act and will be allocated to the following facilities:

Westminster Rescue Mission Inc., $998,400 – To hire additional staff for its Addiction Healing Center, upgrade the Mission’s building and purchase more COVID-19 tests and resources for staff and patients.
Garrett County Regional Medical Center, $802,700 – To provide equipment for Garrett County Memorial Hospital that will help hospital staff assess patients over 65, who are at greater risk of contracting a more serious case of COVID-19, and replace equipment that has been exhausted during the pandemic.
Eastern Shore Entrepreneurship Center, $459,000 – To establish the “Eastern Shore Delmarva Farm to Freezer Project” – a produce processing and aggregation facility that will increase the availability of locally processed produce, increase opportunities for local farmers and provide a wider access to a variety of foods in Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne’s, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico and Worcester Counties.
Minary’s Dream Alliance Inc., $374,900 – To fund the staff and their travel expenses, along with the purchase of food, packaging supplies and equipment for the Alliance’s “Feed the Elderly Program,” which was established during the pandemic to provide food to low-income seniors in Kent County.
Brook Lane Health Services Inc. in Washington County, $268,100 – To reimburse lost revenue caused by the pandemic. Over the past three years, Brook Lane was forced to remove some of its inpatient beds to limit the spread of COVID-19.
End Hunger in Charles County, Maryland Inc., $176,500 – To establish a food distribution facility in Indian Head, Maryland by investing in a building, trucks, walk-in freezers and bulk food. Indian Head has a population of 3,844 people, over 12 percent of whom live in poverty. This will serve as the first fresh food source in the town since 1999.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has been tough on Maryland families in every corner of our state, exacerbating challenges that have been building up in the health care system for years. That’s why we must keep working to ensure that everyone has equitable access to health services they need, regardless of their zip code,” the lawmakers said. “These federal funds will support the health and wellbeing of people across our state, especially targeting rural areas that are often under-served. We will continue to support these health care facilities and work to increase access to health care in all of our communities.”

TeamMaryland fought to pass the historicAmerican Rescue Plan Act with unified Democratic support.

The Emergency Rural Health Care Grants were first made available in August 2021. The grants provide assistance to health care facilities, tribes and communities looking to expand health care services and nutrition assistance in rural areas.

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Cardin will fight repeal of federal health care law

Senator touts prescription drug benefit
Matthew Bieniek
The Cumberland Times-News Wed Jan 05, 2011, 10:00 AM EST

— CUMBERLAND — Senior citizens in Allegany and Garrett counties will reap significant benefits from changes to Medicare that went into effect with the new year, said U.S. Sen. Benjamin Cardin, part of last year’s health care reform law titled the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. To protect those benefits, Cardin said he’ll fight hard against a Republican plan to attempt to repeal the law.

Cardin offered his take on the law and its possible repeal during a conference call on Tuesday from his Washington office, in which the Times-News participated.

“The Republican plan to repeal is hard to understand from a position of policy. I understand the politics,” Cardin said. Republicans have introduced legislation to repeal the health care law and made repeal one of their top priorities in the new Congress. “For Marylanders, the repeal of the Affordable Care Act would have a devastating effect on our seniors,” he said.

One portion of the law designed to help out seniors struggling with the high costs of prescription drugs was among the provisions that went into effect Jan. 1, he said. The changes seek to close the so-called “doughnut hole” which can hit seniors hard, Cardin said. Before the new law passed, Medicare participants had 75 percent of their medication costs paid by Medicare after an initial deductible of $310. However, once drug costs reached $2,800 in a calendar year, Medicare stopped paying for prescriptions, creating a gap until prescription costs hit $4,550, according to an article by Jonathan Blum, deputy administrator and director for the Center of Medicare at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services posted at healthcare.gov, a federal government website.

“Some people hit it within a month or two,” said Michelle Holzer, speaking about the doughnut hole. Holzer works for the Senior Health Insurance Assistance Program, Maryland Department of Aging. Cardin said about 32,000 Maryland citizens find themselves in that position each year. The new law helps fill the gap, said Cardin, by implementing a 50 percent discount on brand-name drugs prescribed by a doctor.

The new rule will provide greater benefits than the $250 rebate checks sent last year to qualifying seniors as part of a doughnut hole reimbursement, he said. “By 2020 the doughnut hole will be completely eliminated,” he said, if the law is not repealed.

The portion of the law closing the gap would benefit 944 senior citizens in Allegany County and save them more than $8 million between 2011 and 2020, according to numbers from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In Garrett County the new law would affect 338 senior citizens and save them more than $3 million over the same time period. The benefit should be calculated automatically, said Cardin, and won’t require additional paperwork by senior citizens, he said.

Seniors “will pay a real price for repeal if it goes forward,” he said. Cardin said he thought repeal unlikely, but he said his legislative experience is that sometimes bills pass when you don’t expect them to pass.

Additional provisions of the law taking effect this year include free yearly wellness exams, Cardin said.

Contact Matthew Bieniek at mbieniek@times-news.com

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Increase in alcohol tax would save millions of dollars

Since Maryland’s tax on beer and wine has not been increased since 1972 and the tax on spirits has not been increased since 1955, Barry Rascovar was absolutely right in his column (“Tough budget cuts could make O’Malley a national player,” Nov. 26) in describing an increase in our state’s alcohol tax as “long overdue.”

According to a study by professors David Jernigan and Hugh Waters of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the dime-a-drink increase in the Maryland alcohol tax that we and a broad coalition of Marylanders are proposing as the Lorraine Sheehan legislation in the 2011 session would save many lives from alcohol abuse and hundreds of millions of dollars in health care costs.

Approximately 100,000 of these new enrollees were children who have been eligible for years but were not enrolled, and we commend the O’Malley-Brown administration and, particularly, Secretary of Health John Colmers for doing all they could to make sure that as many of Maryland’s children as possible have the health care they need.

Others are parents like Crystal Moon of Garrett County, whose doctor told her she would have been killed by an illness that her new state health care card helped to prevent. You can see other stories like Ms. Moon’s of how the new health care law helped people at www.healthcareforall.com

Read the full article here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Public Invited To Local Viewing Of Health Care Forum

Support the Republican Newspaper! It’s only $9.95/year for the online edition!

Dec. 2, 2010

A forum to explain the impact health care reform will have on rural citizens, communities and businesses will be held on Tuesday, Dec. 14, from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at five locations around the state, including the Garrett County Health Department in Oakland. The public and press are invited to attend.

Presentations will originate from the University of Maryland College Park and be webcast to rural areas. Each location will have its own facilitators and conduct its own discussions.

There is no fee to attend any of the forums, but registration is required by Tuesday, Dec. 7. Registration is available online at rural.state.md.us.

“Setting up a location in Garrett County to view the webcast of the health care forum is an excellent way for all of us to learn more about the health care law and particularly how it will impact rural areas and each one of us,” said Garrett County health officer Rodney Glotfelty. “We are especially happy to be a participating site for the forum.”

Other viewing locations include the Eastern Shore Higher Education Center at Chesapeake College at Wye Mills, Wor-Wic Community College in Salisbury, College of Southern Maryland in Prince Frederick, and University of Maryland 4-H Center in College Park.

Read the full article here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!