Thirteen advocacy groups -- including UnidosUS -- have jointly filed a civil rights complaint against Florida.
The groups say Florida's process for redetermining Medicaid eligibility is unfair to recipients who are Latino, immigrant or Black.
Some 431,000 Florida residents -- including many children -- have lost Medicaid since May, when the state began unwinding the continuing coverage mandated during the pandemic.
The Kaiser Family Foundation says about half were no longer eligible. The other 49% were dropped for failing to complete the renewal process.
Stan Dorn, health policy director for UnidosUS, says the state has made that process difficult for many Floridians of color and immigrants.
The groups point to an April letter from the Department Health and Human Services Office of Civil Rights stressing legal requirments to address communication in different languages and the needs of disabled recipients.
Policies that in effect deny access to federal benefits based on race or national origin are illegal unless there's a compelling need for them, Dorn said. "There's no compelling need for making your website inaccessible to smartphones for making parents wait two and a half hours to talk to someone in Spanish at the call center and for saying we're not going to bother to translate training videos into any language other than English."
In a recent update, the Florida Department of Children and Families touts Florida's outreach efforts and says 89% have responded to redetermination requests.
As of May, two-thirds of Florida's children were enrolled in Medicaid.
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