Mike Randol will be entering the private sector in Kansas City after two years in Montana.
byMara Silvers
The top Medicaid official in Montana’s state health department has submitted his resignation and will be taking a job in the private sector, an agency spokesperson said Thursday afternoon.
Mike Randol will leave the role of state Medicaid director almost two years after taking the position under the prior head of Gov. Greg Gianforte’s Department of Public Health and Human Services, Adam Meier. Department spokesperson Jon Ebelt said Randol’s resignation was accepted April 23 and his last day will be on May 10.
“Mike has made lasting contributions to Montana’s Medicaid program during his tenure with DPHHS,” health department director Charlie Brereton said in an emailed statement. “I’m grateful to Mike for his service and wish him well as he returns home to Kansas City and enters the private sector.”
Randol was previously employed at Cerner Corp., a health technology firm, before assuming the Montana position. Prior to that, he had run Medicaid programs in Iowa and Kansas. Ebelt did not respond immediately to additional questions about the company Randol is joining or the nature of his new job.
The state’s largest agency has seen a steady reshuffling of top leadership since Gianforte took office in 2021. Brereton, 29, took over as director in 2022 upon Meier’s departure, roughly a month after Randol joined the department. Other high-level departures include Human Services Executive Director Erica Johnston, a holdover from the administration of former Gov. Steve Bullock, and Chief Healthcare Facilities Officer Will Evo, who had been hired by Meier.
During Randol’s time in Montana, the department successfully applied for a Medicaid program waiver expansion that created new reimbursem*nt opportunities for substance use disorder treatments and services, a key priority of the Gianforte administration. The agency also implemented massive increases to many Medicaid reimbursem*nt rates across behavioral health, senior and long-term care and developmental disabilities sectors.
But the agency has also navigated complex challenges, many of which landed in Randol’s wheelhouse. He oversaw continued turmoil and staffing shortages at the Montana State Hospital in Warm Springs, which lost its federal certification before he joined the department. Additionally, over 120,000 Montanans lost Medicaid coverage as mass-eligibility reviews were conducted during the last year and Medicaid providers have complained about lags in Medicaid reimbursem*nts and contract payments in recent months.
Ebelt said Thursday that Brereton had appointed Rebecca de Camara, the current administrator of the Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities Division, as acting Medicaid director beginning May 13. De Camara’s position will be backfilled by deputy division administrator Meghan Peel.
Ebelt said the Healthcare Facilities Division, which includes the Montana State Hospital and is situated under Randol’s division, will report directly to Brereton in the interim.
The department, Ebelt continued, “will both consider internal candidates and launch a national search” for a new Medicaid director.
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Mara writes about health and human services stories happening in local communities, the Montana statehouse and the court system. She also produces the Shared State podcast in collaboration with MTPR and YPR. Before joining Montana Free Press, Mara worked in podcast and radio production at Slate and WNYC. She was born and raised in Helena, MT and graduated from Seattle University in 2016.More by Mara Silvers