Gov. Walker wants Wisconsin to drug test Medicaid applicants
MADISON, Wis. — Gov. Scott Walker wants to make Wisconsin the first state in the country to require able-bodied, childless adults applying for Medicaid health benefits to undergo drug screening, a move that could serve as a national model.
Walker’s plan, which needs federal approval, comes as he prepares to run for a third term next year. Wisconsin’s Republican-controlled budget committee approved Walker’s proposal on Thursday, a key vote that will clear the way for the full Legislature to pass it later this summer.
While it signed off on a wide range of Walker’s proposed welfare changes, the committee also gave itself the power to have final say on what Walker wants to do before implementation in 2019. Walker’s plan includes imposing a new work requirement on childless adult Medicaid recipients and parents who receive food stamps.
Democrats don’t have the votes to block the changes.


