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Gov. Terry McAuliffe is urging the General Assembly to expand Virginia’s Medicaid program, in part, because it would help the working poor. Seventy percent of all uninsured live in households in which at least one person is working, he said last month in an address to the legislature. When we asked where the figure came from, McAuliffe spokesman Brian Coy sent us a presentation used by the Virginia Health Care Foundation, a non-profit organization seeking to increase access to health care for the uninsured. The percentage was computed in 2011 by the Urban Institute, a research organization. There’s a slight caveat McAuliffe did not explain. The 70 percent figure applies to people up to the age 64, as most people older than that are part of Medicare and, therefore, insured. The analysis divided workers into two categories: Those working more than 35 hours per week were deemed full-time; while those working 35 hours or less per week were deemed part-time. Of the uninsured living in Virginia: 40.7 percent lived in a family with one full-time worker 23.7 percent lived in a family with only part-time workers 5.9 percent lived in a family with two full-time workers 28.6 percent live in a family with no workers 1.1 percent are children not living with adults. That adds up to 70.3 percent of uninsured Virginians living in a household where at least one person is working. For perspective, roughly 1 million Virginians are uninsured -- about 12 percent of the population. Our ruling McAuliffe said 70 percent of medically uninsured Virginians live in households where at least one person works. His figure is backed by research from the Urban Institute and we were unable to find any contradictory study. So we rate McAuliffe’s claim True.
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