Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Texas Can Cut Planned Parenthood From Medicaid Program, Judge Rules
Texas can remove Planned Parenthood from its Medicaid program, a state district judge ruled Wednesday. The move would stop thousands of people from accessing non-abortion services from the health provider. Texas has long tried to remove from Medicaid Planned Parenthood, which provides abortions in the state. (Falconer, 3/10)
A state judge ruled on Wednesday that Texas can remove Planned Parenthood from its Medicaid program, preventing those enrolled from using the program to get nonabortion services from the organization.聽Judge Lora Livingston decided that Texas officials had given appropriate notice to Planned Parenthood of the upcoming removal that is required under state law, after the advocacy organization contested in an emergency lawsuit that the state had not. (Coleman, 3/10)
In other news from Texas 鈥
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton threatened Wednesday to sue the city of Austin and surrounding Travis County after officials there, citing the continued threat of Covid-19, said they would continue to require residents to wear masks even 鈥渨hen outside of their residence.鈥 Paxton鈥檚 threat came on the same day the state鈥檚 mask mandate, which Texas Gov. Greg Abbott did away with last week, officially expired. 鈥淐ity/county leaders must not be thinking clearly,鈥 Paxton said in a Tweet. 鈥淢aybe it鈥檚 oxygen deprivation from quintuple-masking. Whatever the case, they鈥檝e tried this before. They lost. Travis County and Austin have a few hours to comply with state law or I鈥檒l sue them.鈥 (Siemaszko, 3/10)
As he ended Texas鈥 coronavirus restrictions Wednesday over the objections of public health officials, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has tried shifting concern about the virus鈥 spread to migrants with COVID-19 crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, though without evidence they are a significant factor. The focus by Abbott and other Republicans on migrant families has drawn criticism about invoking a long history in the U.S. of wrongly suggesting migrants spread diseases. (Weber and Marchant, 3/10)
The Texas Rangers on Wednesday announced that they will allow 100% capacity at Globe Life Field for their home opener in Arlington. The announcement comes a week after Texas Governor Greg Abbott announced he was rescinding the state's mask mandate and opening Texas "100%." "The Rangers are encouraged that the Governor's Office has given clearance for us to fully open Globe Life Field at the start of the 2021 Major League Baseball season," President of Business Operations and Chief Operating Officer Neil Leibman said in a press release Wednesday, according to CBS Sports. Liebman said all attendees will be required to wear a mask or face covering. (Freiman, 3/10)
Also 鈥
Sens. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and John Hoeven (R-N.D) have reintroduced legislation that would increase oversight of carbon monoxide prevention efforts, citing recent carbon monoxide poisoning deaths in Texas following extreme winter weather. The legislation, named after two young Minnesotan brothers who died of聽carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning,聽would require the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to ensure the safety and reliability of聽CO聽detectors and encourage states to require them in residential homes. (Budryk, 3/11)