HOUSE BILL REPORT

2SHB 1087

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

As Passed House:

February 21, 2019

Title: An act relating to long-term services and supports.

Brief Description: Concerning long-term services and supports.

Sponsors: House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Jinkins, MacEwen, Cody, Harris, Tharinger, Slatter, Kloba, Ryu, Macri, DeBolt, Bergquist, Doglio, Robinson, Stanford, Stonier, Frame and Leavitt).

Brief History:

Committee Activity:

Health Care & Wellness: 1/16/19, 1/25/19 [DPS];

Appropriations: 2/4/19, 2/13/19 [DP2S(w/o sub HCW)].

Floor Activity:

Passed House: 2/21/19, 63-33.

Brief Summary of Second Substitute Bill

  • Establishes the Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Program (Trust Program) to provide benefits for long-term services and supports to qualified individuals who need assistance with at least three activities of daily living.

  • Establishes eligibility requirements for the Trust Program for persons who pay a premium of 0.58 percent of a person's wages for a specific amount of time.

HOUSE COMMITTEE ON HEALTH CARE & WELLNESS

Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 13 members: Representatives Cody, Chair; Macri, Vice Chair; Caldier, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Chambers, Davis, DeBolt, Harris, Jinkins, Riccelli, Robinson, Stonier, Thai and Tharinger.

Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 2 members: Representatives Schmick, Ranking Minority Member; Maycumber.

Staff: Chris Blake (786-7392).

HOUSE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS

Majority Report: The second substitute bill be substituted therefor and the second substitute bill do pass and do not pass the substitute bill by Committee on Health Care & Wellness. Signed by 20 members: Representatives Ormsby, Chair; Bergquist, 2nd Vice Chair; Robinson, 1st Vice Chair; MacEwen, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Caldier, Cody, Dolan, Fitzgibbon, Hansen, Hudgins, Jinkins, Pettigrew, Pollet, Ryu, Senn, Springer, Stanford, Steele, Tarleton and Tharinger.

Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 7 members: Representatives Rude, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Dye, Hoff, Kraft, Schmick, Volz and Ybarra.

Minority Report: Without recommendation. Signed by 2 members: Representatives Stokesbary, Ranking Minority Member; Mosbrucker.

Staff: Mary Mulholland (786-7391).

Background:

Persons who need assistance with activities of daily living such as bathing, dressing, medication administration, personal hygiene, or other health-related tasks may access assistance through several types of care providers in different settings. Many of these settings also provide skilled nursing and therapists, activities, rehabilitation, and coordinated care. Providers of long-term services and supports include unpaid family caregivers, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, adult family homes, home health services, and individual and agency providers. Sources of funding for long-term services and supports include personal resources, private long-term care insurance, and Medicaid.

The 2015-17 Operating Budget funded the Department of Social and Health Services to contract for an independent feasibility study and actuarial modeling of two options to provide financial assistance to persons with preparations for long-term services and supports needs. The first option was to review a public long-term care benefit for workers funded through a payroll tax deduction. The second option was to review a public-private reinsurance model to provide a stable source of reimbursement for insurers for a portion of catastrophic long-term services and supports losses. The study was released in January 2017. The 2017-19 Operating Budget funded an update to the 2016 feasibility study and directed the study to also review alternative variations of the public long-term care benefit. In addition, the 2017-19 Operating Budget established a work group to develop a proposal to include family members as providers of long-term services and supports under the public long-term care benefit.

Summary of Second Substitute Bill:

The Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Program (Trust Program) is established to provide long-term services and supports benefits to persons who have paid into the Trust Program for a specific amount of time and who have been assessed as needing a certain amount of assistance with activities of daily living.

Beginning January 1, 2022, employees in Washington who are working at least 10 percent of full-time employment status shall be assessed a premium of 0.58 percent of their wages. Washington residents receive "qualified individual" status if they are at least 18 years old and have paid the premium for either: (1) three years within the last six years, or (2) for a total of 10 years, with at least five of those years paid without interruption. Beginning January 1, 2025, a qualified individual may become an "eligible beneficiary" if the individual has been determined by the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) to require assistance with at least three activities of daily living.

Upon becoming an eligible beneficiary, a person may receive approved services through a benefit unit model. A benefit unit is the equivalent of up to $100, adjusted by an annual 3 percent index, that the DSHS pays to a long-term services and supports provider for providing approved services to an eligible beneficiary. An eligible beneficiary may receive up to 365 benefit units over the course of the beneficiary's lifetime. Eligible beneficiaries may combine benefit units to fund approved services, as long as they do not exceed their lifetime limit. Partial benefit units may be retained by the eligible beneficiary if a day of care costs less than the value of the benefit unit.

Approved services are long-term services and supports, including adult day services, in-home personal care, assisted living services, adult family home services, nursing home services, care transition coordination, dementia supports, home safety evaluation, adaptive equipment, respite for family caregivers, transportation, home-delivered meals, education and consultation, relative care, professional service, and services to assist family members care for eligible individuals.

Approved services must be provided by a long-term services and supports provider that is qualified to provide the approved service and is registered with the DSHS to participate in the Trust Program. Long-term services and supports providers may be a home care aide, assisted living facility, adult family home, nursing home, in-home services agency, adult day health program, vendor, instructor, qualified family member, or other entity. Within 120 days of becoming a long-term care worker, a spouse or registered domestic partner who is a long-term care worker under the Trust Program for a spouse or domestic partner must receive 15 hours of basic training and six hours of focused training based on the spouse or domestic partner's needs. The spouse or domestic partner acting as a long-term care worker does not need to become certified as a home care aide.

The Trust Program is administered jointly by the DSHS, the Employment Security Department (ESD), and the Health Care Authority (HCA). Each agency has the following responsibilities:

The Commission is established and is comprised of:

The Commission shall propose recommendations related to criteria for qualified individuals and eligible beneficiaries, minimum qualifications for the registration of long-term services and supports providers, improvements to the operation of the Trust Program, annual adjustments of the value of the benefit unit, and the preparation of actuarial reports on the solvency and financial status of the Trust Program. In addition, the Commission must monitor agency administrative expenses. Beginning November 15, 2020, the Commission must submit annual reports to the Governor and fiscal committees of the Legislature related to administrative expenses. The November 15, 2025 report must include recommendations for a method of calculating future agency administrative expenses to limit administrative spending while allowing for sufficient funds to adequately operate the Trust Program.

The DSHS must seek data to analyze the potential savings in Medicare expenditures resulting from the Trust Program. In addition, the DSHS must apply for a federal demonstration waiver to allow the state to share in savings to the federal government in Medicaid long-term services and supports and Medicare due to the operation of the Trust Program. By December 1, 2022, the DSHS must submit a report to the Office of Financial Management and the appropriate committees of the Legislature regarding the status of the waiver request.

Beginning December 1, 2026, the Commission must submit an annual report to the Legislature on the Trust Program. The report must include information about projected and actual Trust Program participation, the adequacy of premium rates, fund balances, benefits paid, demographic information on Trust Program participants, and the extent to which the Trust Program has resulted in savings to the Medicaid program through cost avoidance.

Monies collected from the premium must be deposited in the Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Account (Trust Account).  The Trust Account may only be used for supporting the administrative activities and payment of benefits related to the Trust Program. An appropriation is required for administrative expenses, but not for benefit payments.

Determinations made by the HCA and the ESD are subject to appeal procedures.

Beginning January 1, 2023, self-employed persons may elect coverage under the Trust Program. Those who elect such coverage may voluntarily withdraw from participation. The ESD may cancel elective coverage if the self-employed person fails to make the required payments or file reports.

By December 1, 2032, the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee must report on the performance of the Commission in its role of providing oversight to the Trust Program. The report must include recommendations to the Legislature on ways to improve the functioning, efficiency, and membership of the Commission, as well as whether the Commission should continue to exist or should expire.

Legislative findings are made related to the difficulty in obtaining coverage for long-term care, the need for long-term care, the cost of long-term care, the inability of seniors to rely on family caregivers, the cost to the state of providing long-term services and supports, the need for an alternative funding mechanism for long-term services and supports, and the need for the state to continue to promote consumer choice in selecting approved services and long-term care settings.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Available.

Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of the session in which the bill is passed.

Staff Summary of Public Testimony (Health Care & Wellness):

(In support) Most Washingtonians are financially unprepared for the care that they will need to have as they age. Seven out of 10 people over age 65 will need long-term care and 90 percent of those people have no savings for it. People are forced to spend into poverty before they can get care. If the Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Program (Trust Program) benefit were available there would be another solution for people needing care and for family members who need to go back to work. The need to improve long-term care financing has been foreseeable for some time and this approach has been studied extensively and declared to be actuarially sound for the next 75 years.

Long-term care insurance is out of reach for many. This bill could help save the long-term care insurance market that still exists and could create a market for supplemental long-term care insurance beyond this benefit.

There are 850,000 Washingtonians who are serving as family caregivers and providing $11 billion of care and services each year. By 2030, the pool of family caregivers will be cut in half. Family caregivers are forced to spend into poverty to care for a family member. This bill is about consumer choice and supports family caregivers. This bill will allow family caregivers to be reimbursed for their services. This bill can reduce stress, illness, and physical strain for caregivers. The bill allows for flexibility in the use of the benefits, including training one's family caregiver. This bill will help those in the sandwich generation who take care of their elders while raising a young family and cannot save for themselves.

This bill will add new pathways into the caregiving workforce and help alleviate the growing workforce shortage. By allowing family members to be compensated for their work, the bill provides additional pathways into caregiving. Demand for care far exceeds the current workforce and is expected to grow.

This bill has flexibility to allow access to private pay home care, skilled nursing in the home, palliative care, and hospice care.

The need for services for this population will have a large impact on the budget over time. The Trust Program benefit will encourage people to get care earlier and it will diminish the pressure on the state budget. This bill will provide Washington with resources for the impending age wave. This bill is expected to save Washington $34 million to the taxpayers by 2025 and $470 million by 2052. This bill will help to shore up the existing Medicaid funding crisis in assisted living and skilled nursing. There is an opportunity to work with the federal government to share in the savings to the federal government.

(Opposed) None.

Staff Summary of Public Testimony (Appropriations):

(In support) ) Long-term care is the last remaining uninsured healthcare risk.  People who make it to age 65 have a seven in 10 chance of needing long-term care. In Washington there are 850,000 unpaid caregivers providing $11 billion worth of uncompensated services.  Currently, the only option is for people to spend down to eligibility for Medicaid long-term care services.  The Trust Program provides another solution. It solves both a Medicaid problem and an individual family problem. The actuarial analysis estimates that the Trust program will save taxpayers $19 million in 2025, and over $400 million per year by 2050. The DSHS will work with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to see if the state can share in savings that may result from the Trust Program. The Trust Program is projected to be solvent for 75 years.  Start-up costs paid by the State General Fund will be reimbursed by the Trust Account. The long-term care insurance market is broken, and 90 percent of people cannot afford long-term care insurance.  No private insurer is offering the product because no one wants to buy it.  The Trust Program gets people to buy into long-term care insurance in a way that is mandatory, and provides a robust, although somewhat limited, benefit.  The Trust Program will take the pressure off the existing long-term care insurance market and may create a market for a supplemental insurance produce. A recent poll showed that seven of 10 registered voters support the concept of a Trust Program. Six of 10 registered voters would vote for a bill to establish a Trust Program if it appeared on the ballot. Adults age 18 to 34 are the population most likely to support creation of a Trust Program. The $100 daily benefit unit is meaningful when an individual wants to remain in his own home or another community setting. The benefit could purchase 25 hours of care per week in one's own home, five to six months in a nursing home, or five years of training and support for a family caregiver. The three state agencies charged with implementing the Trust Program will leverage their skill sets and infrastructure for maximum efficiency.

(Opposed) None.

Persons Testifying (Health Care & Wellness): Representative Jinkins, prime sponsor; Dan Murphy, North West Regional Council; Cathleen MacCaul, AARP Washington; Ruth Egger, Puget Sound Advocates for Retirement Action; John Ficker, Adult Family Home Council; Brenda Orffer, Washington Health Care Association; Barbara Kaelberer; Peter Newbold, Alzheimer's Association; Madeleine Foutch, Service Employees International Union 775; Adriana Hutchings; Bea Rector, Department of Social and Health Services; Lonnie Johns-Brown, Office of the Insurance Commissioner; Leslie Emerick, Washington Hospice and Palliative Care Organization; and Nathaniel Kwak, Huntingtons Association of Washington.

Persons Testifying (Appropriations): Representative Jinkins, prime sponsor; Dan Murphy, Northwest Regional Council; Cathleen MacCaul, AARP Washington; Bea Rector, Aging and Long Term Support Administration, Department of Social and Health Services; and Lonnie Johns-Brown, Office of the Insurance Commissioner.

Persons Signed In To Testify But Not Testifying (Health Care & Wellness): None.

Persons Signed In To Testify But Not Testifying (Appropriations): None.