March 27, 2026

Florida’s out of excuses to expand KidCare

The op-ed below was printed in the Palm Beach Post on March 12, 2026.

In 2023, the Florida House and Senate took a critical step to improve children’s health coverage. Lawmakers voted unanimously to expand KidCare, the state’s Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), to include families earning up to 300% of the federal poverty level – about $99,000 for a family of four.

That bipartisan agreement stipulated that 42,000 uninsured children would receive the health insurance they desperately needed. In a state where 8.5% of kids lack health insurance – the fifth-worst rate in the nation – this expansion represented a genuine policy win.

In late 2024, the federal government approved the expansion. Yet, here we are in 2026 and implementation has still not happened.

Instead of moving forward, the DeSantis administration filed a lawsuit challenging a federal requirement that children enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP receive coverage for 12 months. The federal rule prevents disenrollment for missed premium payments, and it is intended to protect children from sudden lapses of coverage. Florida became the only state in America to defy federal law and strip children of health coverage for missed premiums. While the DeSantis administration sued, 43,000 children already enrolled in KidCare unlawfully lost their insurance, and another 42,000 children eligible for the expansion were locked out of coverage.

State Sen. Gayle Harrell, who supported the expansion, summed it up best at an October 2025 hearing with the Agency for Health Care Administration: 'We are essentially being held hostage on implementation … because of this lawsuit.'

Children like 7-year-old Sadie Smith, who has a rare genetic disease that requires continuous care, continue to suffer without the expansion of KidCare. Under the expansion, she would be able to access therapies, nursing, and services that aren’t covered under her family’s private plan. While expansion has stalled, families like Sadie’s have been left in an impossible situation.

The good news is that on Feb. 6, after more than a year of pressure from child health advocates, the DeSantis administration finally dropped its lawsuit, stoking hopes that KidCare expansion will soon follow. In fact, Florida Health Justice Project and the National Health Law Program have recently filed a lawsuit to require Florida officials to implement the state’s KidCare expansion. Every lawmaker has a responsibility to make the state government follow through on what was voted for. The message from the Legislature must be clear: there’s no more lawsuit, no more excuses. It’s time to implement the bipartisan law passed nearly three years ago – the health and lives of thousands of Florida children depend on it.

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