Deloitte Consulting is taking in tens of millions in tax dollars to build, manage and market Georgia's Medicaid work requirement program. Yet only 3% of eligible residents have enrolled.
This article was published on Wednesday, May 14, 2025 in ProPublica.
By Margaret Coker, The Current
When the state of Georgia handed Deloitte Consulting a $10.7 million marketing contract last July to promote the nation's only Medicaid work requirement program, the initiative was in need of serious PR.
At the time, a year after the program's rollout, less than 2% of those eligible for Georgia Pathways to Coverage had enrolled, well short of state targets.
To get the word out, the state turned again to the firm that it had relied on to build and manage the program. About 60% of the marketing contract went toward creating and placing ads about Pathways on television and radio, including during NFL games and morning talk shows.
Much of the remainder of the seven-month contract would go toward two efforts: $250,000 per month for Deloitte-trained teams to hand out brochures and Pathways-branded merchandise at community events and $300,000 a month for Deloitte to produce reports about its own performance.
When Deloitte's publicity campaign ended in February, enrollment in Pathways remained less than 3% of the approximately 250,000 Georgians who are potentially eligible.
The marketing contract is part of a larger suite of services that Georgia has commissioned from Deloitte for its Medicaid experiment. Deloitte has made at least $51 million as of Dec. 31 to manage Pathways, including creating and maintaining its problematic software platform, as The Current and ProPublica previously reported. It is also earning at least $3 million more to oversee the state's relationship with federal regulators, including its application to extend the experiment beyond its expiration this fall.
Deloitte's outsize — and unusual — role in promoting the program it has built has allowed the firm to keep pulling in payments despite Pathways' struggles. And there is virtually no public accounting of how well it is increasing enrollment, a key goal of the policy experiment.
The marketing contract, obtained through a public records request, allows Deloitte to charge the state nearly half a million dollars for a final report on its publicity campaign, which was due to be submitted in February. When The Current and ProPublica requested the monthly and final performance reports, the state said they needed to be "reviewed" first and demanded $900 for that work. The news outlets did not pay because previous responses to public records requests for Deloitte's Pathways contracts were heavily redacted, with the general counsel's office at the Department of Community Health citing "confidential/trade secret." The agency did not charge for those records.
The state recently approved another $10 million to Deloitte, Fiona Roberts, spokesperson for the Department of Community Health, Georgia's Medicaid agency that oversees Pathways, said in response to questions about the effectiveness of Deloitte's marketing efforts. The new marketing contract, which runs until November, includes more community meetings and a text message campaign by Salesforce Marketing Cloud rolling out in May to potentially eligible Georgians, Roberts said.
"In 20 years of researching these kinds of programs, I can't think of another instance like this" in which a state has selected a for-profit company to both manage and market a federal benefit program, said Joan Alker, executive director for Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy Center for Children and Families, where researchers have concluded that Medicaid work requirements prevent people from accessing health insurance.
Deloitte has designed and managed Medicaid and other benefit programs for many states, including Georgia, making the firm one of the nation's experts in government health policy. But Alker said that when states want to educate and enroll residents in federal safety net programs, they typically select local nonprofits that have established relationships with low-income communities. Georgia's arrangement with Deloitte raises questions, she said, about "whether the state is more committed to spending money on consultants or poor people."
Deloitte, which has been in charge of the Pathways communications strategy for the past three years, declined to answer questions about its Georgia Pathways work, referring requests for information to the Department of Community Health. A contract signed in 2023 worth approximately $7 million stipulates that Deloitte would "develop first draft of response to media inquiries" on behalf of the Department of Community Health, but that responses "will be submitted by DCH and not Deloitte." Deloitte's duties also include drafting talking points for media interviews, including for the governor.
Roberts declined repeated requests for an interview with agency officials. When asked about Deloitte's marketing and outreach work and whether the firm has met the state's goals, she described the effort as a "robust, comprehensive awareness and outreach campaign throughout the state" that has generated 1.6 million visitors to the Pathways website since the campaign's August 2024 launch.
"The state has invested heavily in marketing and outreach to reach Georgians potentially eligible for Pathways," Roberts said in a written statement.
Gov. Brian Kemp has described Pathways as an innovative alternative to expanding Medicaid, something 40 other states have done. By contrast, Georgia's program covers only the poorest individuals who can prove they are working, studying or volunteering at least 80 hours a month. Congressional Republicans are pointing to similar work requirements as a model in their budget negotiations.
In early 2024, less than a year after Pathways' launch, however, Georgia legislators — including some of Kemp's Republican allies — considered ending the experiment and instead expanding Medicaid without any work requirements. Georgia's uninsured rate was 11.4%, or 1.2 million people, compared to the national average of 8% in 2023, the latest data available, according to KFF, a nonprofit focused on national health issues. State data showed that Pathways enrollment was well under the first-year target of 25,000 published in Georgia's agreement with the federal government. As of April 25, approximately 7,400 Georgians were enrolled, according to the Department of Community Health.
An independent evaluation team commissioned by the state recommended ways to boost enrollment in a December 2024 report. The evaluators, Public Consulting Group, highlighted North Carolina's strategy of allowing residents from rural communities and communities of color to help create outreach campaigns for its expanded Medicaid program in 2023. North Carolina Medicaid officials told The Current and ProPublica that they designed their outreach efforts to maximize participation in the new program, with a two-year target of enrolling 600,000 people. They achieved that goal within one year.
Georgia and Deloitte, however, took a different tack. The $10.7 million marketing contract does not lay out specific enrollment goals as a way of measuring the success of Deloitte's efforts. The purpose of Pathways "is not and has never been to enroll as many Georgians as possible," according to the state's application to the federal government to continue the experiment.
The contract budgeted $247,000 to create up to four testimonial videos featuring satisfied Pathways clients; only one can be found on the state Medicaid agency's YouTube channel, where it has received approximately 350 views since it was posted in January. The state did not respond when asked how many testimonials Deloitte produced.
Meanwhile, another part of Deloitte's marketing strategy has also failed to catch wind: Deloitte had sent public relations teams to dozens of community events including farmers markets, a school Christmas pageant and a catfish festival to plug Pathways and encourage applications.
In March, one such team drove two hours from Atlanta to a health fair in Central Georgia's rural Washington County. At the Pathways booth, the Deloitte team barely looked up from their phones for three hours. Residents largely bypassed the team to chat with locals staffing other kiosks where they could receive diapers, information on subsidized in-home nursing care and blood pressure screenings. Of those who stopped at the Pathways booth, only a handful asked about enrollment.
Other public events were tied to the state's pursuit of federal permission to extend the Pathways program beyond September, when its original five-year mandate expires. Georgia is once again paying Deloitte to ensure that happens.
The monthslong process, managed by Deloitte, requires opportunities for public comment. A summary of these comments must be submitted with the application, which Deloitte is drafting. Health advocacy organizations say public outreach for this effort, especially to Black Georgians, has been superficial at best.
The only notice for two virtual public meetings appeared on a Department of Community Health web page that was not linked from the agency's homepage. During both virtual events, health care advocates criticized the program's inequitable access, but state officials did not engage with the speakers.
A third event — an in-person meeting in the rural 10,000-person town of Cordele — was added later and posted on the same website just one week before it was scheduled to occur. Only about a dozen people, some traveling for more than 80 miles, showed up to the noon meeting on St. Patrick's Day.
The low attendance reflected the meeting's out-of-the-way location and holiday timing, not a lack of public interest, said attendee Sherrell Byrd, executive director of Sowega Rising, a community advocacy group based in the majority Black town of Albany.
Inside the one-story cinder block building, three state health officials sat along a table at the front of the largely vacant room. One by one, attendees rose to the microphone to complain of technical glitches in the Pathways enrollment process, the lack of customer service and the generational health care inequalities faced by Black Georgians.
Tanisha Corporal, who lives approximately 140 miles away in Atlanta, was the only person to participate virtually. She told the Department of Community Health officials that she had submitted a Pathways application three times over the Deloitte-built digital portal only to have her file disappear. The licensed clinical social worker whose nonprofit job ended in January 2024 said state agencies offered her little enrollment support.
The state health officials did not respond to any of the speakers during the meeting. Grant Thomas, Kemp's former health policy advisor and deputy director of the state Medicaid agency, sat in the back of the room and did not interact with the attendees. Thomas declined to speak on the record.
"There is a lot of disdain for real-life problems of Georgians who look like us," Byrd said.
Robin Kemp of The Current contributed reporting.
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KEY TAKEAWAYS
About 60% of Deloitte's $10.7 million marketing contract went toward creating and placing ads about Pathways on television and radio, including during NFL games and morning talk shows.
Much of the contract went toward two efforts: $250,000 per month for Deloitte-trained teams to hand out brochures and and $300,000 a month to produce reports about its own performance.
When Deloitte's publicity campaign ended in February, enrollment in Pathways remained less than 3% of the approximately 250,000 Georgians who are potentially eligible.