Z-0589.2  _______________________________________________

 

                         SENATE BILL 5450

          _______________________________________________

 

State of Washington      54th Legislature     1995 Regular Session

 

By Senators Quigley, Moyer, Wojahn, Deccio, Winsley and Franklin; by request of Health Services Commission

 

Read first time 01/24/95.  Referred to Committee on Health & Long‑Term Care.

 

Ensuring access to the uniform benefits package under circumstances of religious objection.



    AN ACT Relating to ensuring access to the uniform benefits package under circumstances of religious objection; amending RCW 43.72.130, 43.72.210, and 43.72.220; providing an effective date; and declaring an emergency.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

 

    Sec. 1.  RCW 43.72.130 and 1993 c 492 s 449 are each amended to read as follows:

    (1) The commission shall define the uniform benefits package, which shall include those health services that, consistent with the goals and intent of chapter 492, Laws of 1993, are effective and necessary on a societal basis for the maintenance of the health of citizens of the state, weighed against the need to control state health services expenditures.

    (2) The schedule of covered health services shall emphasize proven preventive and primary health care and shall be composed of the following essential health services:  (a) Primary and specialty health services; (b) inpatient and outpatient hospital services; (c) prescription drugs and medications; (d) reproductive services; (e) services necessary for maternity and well-child care, including preventive dental services for children; and (f) case-managed chemical dependency, mental health, short-term skilled nursing facility, home health, and hospice services, to the extent that such services reduce inappropriate utilization of more intensive or less efficacious medical services.  The commission shall determine the specific schedule of health services within the uniform benefits package, including limitations on scope and duration of services.  The schedule shall be the benefit and actuarial equivalent of the schedule of benefits offered by the basic health plan on January 1, 1993, including any additions that may result from the inclusion of the services listed in (c) through (f) of this subsection.  The commission shall consider the recommendations of the health services effectiveness ((panels [committee])) committee established pursuant to RCW 43.72.060 in defining the uniform benefits package.

    (3) The uniform benefits package shall not limit coverage for preexisting or prior conditions, except that the commission shall establish exclusions for preexisting or prior conditions to the extent necessary to prevent residents from waiting until health services are needed before enrolling in a certified health plan.

    (4) The commission shall establish enrollee point of service cost-sharing for nonpreventive health services, related to enrollee household income, such that financial considerations are not a barrier to access for low-income persons, but that, for those of means, the uniform benefits package provides for moderate point of service cost-sharing.  All point of service cost-sharing and cost control requirements shall apply uniformly to all health care providers providing substantially similar uniform benefits package services.  The schedule shall provide for an alternate and lower schedule of cost-sharing applicable to enrollees with household income below the federal poverty level.

    (5) The commission shall adopt rules related to coordination of benefits and premium payments.  The rules shall not have the effect of eliminating enrollee financial participation.  The commission shall endeavor to assure an equitable distribution, among both employers and employees, of the costs of coverage for those households composed of more than one member in the work force.

    (6) In determining the uniform benefits package, the commission shall endeavor to seek the opinions of and information from the public.  The commission shall consider the results of official public health assessment and policy development activities including recommendations of the department of health in discharging its responsibilities under this section.

    (7) The commission shall submit the following to the legislature by December 1, 1994, and by December 1 of the year preceding any year in which the commission proposes to significantly modify the uniform benefits package:  (a) The uniform benefits package; and (b) an independent actuarial analysis of the cost of the proposed package, giving consideration to the factors considered under RCW 43.72.040(6).  The commission shall not modify the services included in the uniform benefits package before January 1, 1999.

    (8) The commission shall adopt rules allowing individuals, religious organizations, religiously sponsored organizations, or other organizations with an identified religious or moral tenet opposed to abortion services to purchase the uniform benefits package from certified health plans without the abortion benefit.  At a minimum, these rules shall define the employers permitted to exercise this option, the process by which certified health plans will offer this option, and the mechanism that all certified health plans offering the uniform benefits package without abortion to individuals and qualified groups must offer to all enrollees a reinstatement of the abortion benefit.  The commission may also contract to implement the mechanism established to carry out this provision.

 

    Sec. 2.  RCW 43.72.210 and 1993 c 492 s 463 are each amended to read as follows:

    (1) All residents of the state of Washington are required to purchase a uniform benefits package from a certified health plan no later than July 1, 1999.  This participation requirement shall be waived if imposition of the requirement would constitute a violation of the freedom of religion provisions set forth in the First Amendment, United States Constitution or Article I, section 11 of the state Constitution.  Alternatively, if the individual is objecting to the inclusion of the abortion benefit in the uniform benefits package, the individual may choose to comply with the provisions of RCW 43.72.130(8).  Residents of the state of Washington who work in another state for an out-of-state employer shall be deemed to have satisfied the requirements of this section if they receive health insurance coverage through such employer.

    (2) The commission shall monitor the enrollment of individuals into certified health plans and shall make public periodic reports concerning the number of persons enrolled and not enrolled, the reasons why individuals are not enrolled, recommendations to reduce the number of persons not enrolled, and recommendations regarding enforcement of this provision.

 

    Sec. 3.  RCW 43.72.220 and 1993 c 494 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:

    (1) The legislature recognizes that small businesses play an essential and increasingly important role in the state's economy.  The legislature further recognizes that many of the state's small business owners provide health insurance to their employees through small group policies at a cost that directly affects their profitability.  Other small business owners are prevented from providing health benefits to their employees by the lack of access to affordable health insurance coverage.  The legislature intends that the provisions of chapter 492, Laws of 1993 make health insurance more available and affordable to small businesses in Washington state through strong cost control mechanisms and the option to purchase health benefits through the basic health plan, the Washington state group purchasing association, and health insurance purchasing cooperatives.

    (2) On July 1, 1995, every employer employing more than five hundred qualified employees shall:

    (a) Offer a choice of the uniform benefits package as provided by at least three available certified health plans, one of which shall be the lowest cost available package within their geographic region, and for employers who have established a registered employer health plan, one of which may be its own registered employer health plan, to all qualified employees.  The employer shall be required to pay no less than fifty percent of the premium cost of the lowest cost available package within their geographic region.  On July 1, 1996, all dependents of qualified employees of these firms shall be offered a choice of packages as provided in this section with the employer paying no less than fifty percent of the premium of the lowest cost package within their geographic region.

    (b) For employees who work fewer than thirty hours during a week or one hundred twenty hours during a calendar month, three hundred sixty hours during a calendar quarter or one thousand four hundred forty hours during a calendar year, and their dependents, pay, for the period of time adopted by the employer under this subsection, the amount resulting from application of the following formula:  The number of hours worked by the employee in a month is multiplied by the amount of a qualified employee's premium, and that amount is then divided by one hundred twenty.

    (c) If an employee under (b) of this subsection is the dependent of a qualified employee, and is therefore covered as a dependent by the qualified employee's employer, then the employer of the employee under (b) of this subsection shall not be required to participate in the cost of the uniform benefits package for that employee.

    (d) If an employee working on a seasonal basis is a qualified employee of another employer, and therefore has uniform benefits package coverage through that primary employer, then the seasonal employer of the employee shall not be required to participate in the cost of the uniform benefits package for that employee.

    (3) By July 1, 1996, every employer employing more than one hundred qualified employees shall:

    (a) Offer a choice of the uniform benefits package as provided by at least three available certified health plans, one of which shall be the lowest cost available package within their geographic region, to all qualified employees.  The employer shall be required to pay no less than fifty percent of the premium cost of the lowest cost available package within their geographic region.  On July 1, 1997, all dependents of qualified employees in these firms shall be offered a choice of packages as provided in this section with the employer paying no less than fifty percent of the premium of the lowest cost package within their geographic region.

    (b) For employees who work fewer than thirty hours during a week or one hundred twenty hours during a calendar month, three hundred sixty hours during a calendar quarter or one thousand four hundred forty hours during a calendar year, and their dependents, pay, for the period of time adopted by the employer under this subsection, the amount resulting from application of the following formula:  The number of hours worked by the employee in a month is multiplied by the amount of a qualified employee's premium, and that amount is then divided by one hundred twenty.

    (c) If an employee under (b) of this subsection is the dependent of a qualified employee, and is therefore covered as a dependent by the qualified employee's employer, then the employer of the employee under (b) of this subsection shall not be required to participate in the cost of the uniform benefits package for that employee.

    (d) If an employee working on a seasonal basis is a qualified employee of another employer, and therefore has uniform benefits package coverage through that primary employer, then the seasonal employer of the employee shall not be required to participate in the cost of the uniform benefits package for that employee.

    (4) By July 1, 1997, every employer shall:

    (a) Offer a choice of the uniform benefits package as provided by at least three available certified health plans, one of which shall be the lowest cost available package within their geographic region, to all qualified employees.  The employer shall be required to pay no less than fifty percent of the premium cost of the lowest cost available package within their geographic region.  On July 1, 1999, all dependents of qualified employees in all firms shall be offered a choice of packages as provided in this section with the employer paying no less than fifty percent of the premium of the lowest cost package within their geographic region.

    (b) For employees who work fewer than thirty hours during a week or one hundred twenty hours during a calendar month, three hundred sixty hours during a calendar quarter or one thousand four hundred forty hours during a calendar year, and their dependents, pay, for the period of time adopted by the employer under this subsection, the amount resulting from application of the following formula:  The number of hours worked by the employee in a month is multiplied by the amount of a qualified employee's premium, and that amount is then divided by one hundred twenty.

    (c) If an employee under (b) of this subsection is the dependent of a qualified employee, and is therefore covered as a dependent by the qualified employee's employer, then the employer of the employee under (b) of this subsection shall not be required to participate in the cost of the uniform benefits package for that employee.

    (d) If an employee working on a seasonal basis is a qualified employee of another employer, and therefore has uniform benefits package coverage through that primary employer, then the seasonal employer of the employee shall not be required to participate in the cost of the uniform benefits package for that employee.

    (5) This employer participation requirement shall be waived if imposition of the requirement would constitute a violation of the freedom of religion provisions of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution or Article I, section 11, of the state Constitution.  In such case the employer shall, pursuant to commission rules, set aside an amount equal to the applicable employer contribution level in a manner that would permit his or her employee to fully comply with the requirements of this chapter.  If the employer is objecting on these grounds to the inclusion of the abortion benefit in the uniform benefits package, the employer may choose to comply with the provisions of RCW 43.72.130(8).

    (6) In lieu of offering the uniform benefits package to employees and their dependents through direct contracts with certified health plans, an employer may combine the employer contribution with that of the employee's contribution and enroll in the basic health plan as provided in chapter 70.47 RCW or a health insurance purchasing cooperative established under RCW 43.72.080 and 48.43.160.  Any subsidy that may be provided according to the provisions of chapter 70.47 RCW shall not lessen the employer's obligation to pay a minimum of fifty percent of the premium and the full amount of the direct subsidy shall be for the benefit of the employee or the dependent.

    (7) For purposes of determining the financial obligation of an employer who enrolls employees or employees and their adult dependents in the basic health plan, the premium shall be the per adult, per month, cost of coverage in the plan, including administration.

 

    NEW SECTION.  Sec. 4.  This act is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or support of the state government and its existing public institutions, and shall take effect July 1, 1995.

 


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