A federal appeals court ruled on Friday that the Trump administration unlawfully allowed Arkansas to impose a work requirement on recipients of coverage under the state’s medicaid expansion program, affirming a lower court’s 2019 ruling.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar's approval of Arkansas’ work requirement was “arbitrary and capricious,” Senior U.S. District Judge David Sentelle wrote for the three judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

Arkansas along with the federal government had appealed March rulings by U.S. District Judge James Boasberg of Washington D.C. that struck down the Medicaid work requirement in Arkansas.

[DOCUMENT: Read the ruling from the panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals » arkansasonline.com/215work/]

Arkansas was the first state to create such a work requirement, and it required enrollees — ages 19-49 — to spend 80 hours per month on work or other approved activities, like volunteering or job hunting. Those activities then had to be reported over the internet. An option was created in December for enrollees to report their work activities over the phone.

In a statement, Gov. Asa Hutchinson said he hopes the U.S. Supreme Court will review the ruling. He said it otherwise makes Arkansas' program "less effective in helping recipients gain independence."

"Arkansas implemented a work requirement in order to help recipients get worker training and job opportunities while receiving benefits," Hutchinson said. "It is difficult to understand how this purpose is inconsistent with federal law. The court's ruling undermines broad public support for expanded health care coverage for those struggling financially."

For the nine months it was in effect, 18,164 people lost their coverage. Those who failed to meet the requirement for three months during a year were booted from the program and barred from re-enrolling for the remainder of the year.

Read Saturday's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette for full details.

— Hunter Field

EARLIER:

The Trump administration's legal bid to restore a work requirement for Medicaid benefits in Arkansas was rejected on appeal, a blow to the government's larger effort to reshape U.S. health-care policy.

Friday's ruling, by a federal appeals court in Washington, upholds a lower-court decision in March that voided the work rules and jeopardizes similar programs approved by the U.S. Health and Human Services Administration in seven other states, likely prompting the government to seek a Supreme Court review.

The initiative, which requires some Medicaid recipients to work, attend school or volunteer in order to maintain coverage, is part of a broader push to chip away at the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. The administration defeated a legal challenge to rules permitting expansion of short-term and limited-duration insurance policies in July. It lost an earlier ruling on a program allowing small businesses and individuals to create group plans that are cheaper than those offered under Obamacare but provide less coverage.

The appeals court said the U.S. Health and Human Services Department's stated objectives in approving Arkansas' plan -- making people healthier and more independent -- were not consistent with the statutory goal of Medicaid.

"The text of the statute includes one primary purpose, which is providing health-care coverage without any restriction geared to healthy outcomes, financial independence or transition to commercial coverage," Circuit Judge David Sentelle, a Reagan appointee, wrote for a unanimous panel that also included Circuit Judges Nina Pillard and Harry Edwards, both Democratic appointees. They heard arguments on Oct. 11.

U.S. District Judge James Boasberg in Washington had voided programs in Kentucky and Arkansas programs in simultaneous rulings on March 27, finding that HHS's impact analysis, required in federal rulemaking, was inadequate. It failed, for example, to consider those who might lose coverage simply because they lacked internet access and couldn't report their work activity online, Boasberg found.

"The secretary's failure to consider the effects of the project on coverage alone renders his decision arbitrary and capricious," Boasberg wrote of the Arkansas program's approval by HHS Secretary Alex Azar, because it didn't address "whether and how the project would implicate the 'core' objective of Medicaid: the provision of medical coverage to the needy."

Kentucky, under a new, Democratic governor, dropped its work requirement on Dec. 16 and asked the court to dismiss its appeal without affecting any others. Maine abandoned the work requirement for its low-income health insurance program in January.

The programs at issue require certain low-income adults to engage in their communities for 80 hours a month by working, looking for work, participating in job-skills training, getting an education or performing community service. They mostly cover people who got coverage after the Affordable Care Act expanded Medicaid, a joint federal-state program with more than 65 million people on its rolls as of July.

The federal government says the ACA authorized grants for states that give Medicaid recipients incentives for various "healthy behaviors" such as community engagement and financial independence.

State residents fighting the work-for-Medicaid requirement -- joined in some cases by groups including the American Heart Association, the American Medical Association and The Southern Poverty Law Center -- argue that conditioning eligibility on employment will lead to mass disenrollment and dramatically worsen health outcomes.

Kentucky estimated that 95,000 adults would lose coverage under the new rules. More than 18,000 people lost coverage in Arkansas during its partial implementation.

The appeals court ruling centered on Azar's approval of the two programs, not on the lawfulness of the work requirements itself. Health policy scholars say that's an important distinction to understand when looking at the impact of the court's ruling.

"Regardless of your impressions of the Medicaid Act, the broad waiver authority that was granted to the secretary gives more than enough authority for this particular waiver," said Wes Butler, outside counsel for the Kentucky Hospital Association, which advocated for the state programs to be upheld. "If the court of appeals has a different take on that, that's only a question the Supreme Court can resolve."

It isn't clear whether the justices would take the case. The upholding of the lower court's ruling doesn't mean other states are blocked from issuing the requirements, said Leonardo Cuello, director of health policy for the National Health Law Program, which represented the state residents who challenged the requirements.

Friday's ruling may serve as a warning for future approvals.

"I think it sends a very clear signal to the Trump administration that this policy is unlawful and that they should stop approving these waivers," said Joan Alker, a research professor at Georgetown University's Health Policy Institute. "But they probably won't."

— Lydia Wheeler and Andrew Harris / Bloomberg News

This story was originally published at 10:55 a.m.