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Continued CHIP Funding And What It Means For North Carolina

Eight-year-old Abigail Gabriel, center, hugs her mother, Erin, from her wheelchair at a news conference in Pittsburgh, PA about the Children's Health Insurance Program in December 2017. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

The measure that passed Monday night to reopen the government has big implications for the Children's Health Insurance Program or CHIP. Without a deal, funding would have run out. 

CHIP was a bipartisan initiative that began in 1997 to serve children of low-income families – those who made too much to qualify for Medicaid but not enough to afford private coverage. Under the program, a child is defined as anyone under the age of 19.

The state's version of CHIP is called North Carolina Health Choice.

And it's popular. According to the state Department of Health and Human Services, as of this month, there are over 95,000 children enrolled in North Carolina. And over 90 percent of children who are eligible for the program participate.

CHIP programs around the country are jointly funded by states and the federal government. The short-term spending agreement passed by the House and Senate Monday night secures funding for CHIP for the next six years.

Bethany joined the staff of WFDD in the fall of 2012. She received her B.A. and M.A. in English Literature from Wake Forest University and focused on Anglo-Irish writing. Between undergraduate studies and graduate school, Bethany served as the intern to Talk of the Nation at NPR in D.C., participating in live NPR Election Night Coverage, Presidential debate broadcasts, regular Talk of the Nation shows, and helping to plan the inaugural broadcast of ‘Talk of the World.' She enjoys engaging with her interests in books, politics, and art in the interdisciplinary world of public radio. Before becoming Assistant News Director, Bethany was a reporter and Associate Producer for WFDD's Triad Arts and Triad Arts Weekend. Originally from Jacksonville, Florida, Bethany enjoys calling the Piedmont home.

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