SENATE BILL REPORT
E2SHB 1441
As of April 22, 2005
Title: An act relating to health insurance coverage for children.
Brief Description: Providing access to health insurance for children.
Sponsors: House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Clibborn, Morrell, Campbell, Cody, Tom, Moeller, Schual-Berke, Wallace, Grant, Williams, Lovick, Ormsby, Chase, Kessler, Kagi, Hunt, Appleton, Darneille, Upthegrove, Sells, Roberts, Conway, Miloscia, Fromhold, P. Sullivan, Santos, Takko, Green, Wood, Simpson, Hasegawa and Dickerson).
Brief History: Passed House: 4/21/05, 66-32.
SENATE
Staff: Tim Yowell (786-7435)
Background: Under federal law, immigrant children who cannot document that they reside in
the country legally, and most of those who have entered the country legally within the previous
five years, only qualify for emergency medical care under Medicaid.
Prior to October 2002, the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) provided these
immigrant children the same non-emergency medical and dental services they would have
received if eligible for Medicaid, with the state paying 100 percent of the cost, provided their
family income was below the federal poverty level. Approximately 22,000 immigrant children
received this state-funded medical assistance coverage in Fiscal Year 2002, at a state cost of about
$16 million.
DSHS medical assistance coverage for undocumented and other immigrant children ineligible
for Medicaid was terminated in fall 2002, and state funding was instead provided for their
coverage by the subsidized Basic Health Plan (BHP). Approximately 13,000 immigrant children
initially transferred from DSHS to BHP coverage in late 2002, but the number continuing BHP
coverage decreased steadily in subsequent months. It has been suggested that language barriers;
the need to make monthly premium payments, co-pays, and deductibles; the mobility of the
population; and the lack of dental and other services available under DSHS medical assistance
all make the BHP an insufficient method for providing medical coverage for undocumented and
other immigrant children ineligible for Medicaid.
Summary of Bill: The Department of Social and Health Services may provide health care services to children with family incomes below the federal poverty level who are not otherwise eligible for Medicaid. The program is to operate within appropriated funds. To accomplish this, the department may impose enrollment freezes.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Not requested on engrossed second substitute.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect on July 1, 2005.