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The George family, Tiffany, June, Jason and Wiley, sit outside their home on the Heights. Wiley, who’s 6 years old, has a rare genetic disorder that’s disrupted her immune system and has caused other physical and intellectual disabilities. As co-owners of a small business, Tiffany and Jason depend on Medicaid to care for Wiley. 

THE GORGE — Last Thursday, the U.S. House of Representatives approved a budget blueprint already ratified by the Senate that all but guarantees significant cuts to Medicaid, which will not only impact low-income, disabled and other people who can’t afford health care, but also rural hospitals writ large.

While the reconciliation bill does not mandate reductions in Medicaid spending, as President Donald Trump and Speaker Mike Johnson have promised, it directs the House Energy and Commerce Committee to slash $880 billion over the next 10 years. Experts and a report from the Congressional Budget Office, however, have confirmed it’s mathematically impossible for the committee, which also oversees Medicare, to meet that threshold without touching Medicaid. Congress will draft specific spending bills and allocate funding in the coming months.