E2SHB 2069 -
By Committee on Health & Long-Term Care
Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
"NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 (1) The legislature finds that:
(a) As a result of escalating health care costs, small employers
are finding it more and more difficult to offer health benefits to
employees and their dependents, and their employees are struggling to
pay their share of rising premiums;
(b) An estimated one hundred fifty thousand state residents who are
either employees of small businesses or are dependents of employees of
small businesses are uninsured, and these employees and their
dependents account for a quarter of the state's uninsured population;
and
(c) An erosion in employer-based coverage, as demonstrated by data
showing a decrease in the percentage of people under sixty-five who
have employer-based coverage from seventy-one percent in 1993 to sixty-six percent in 2004, is detrimental to the health of uninsured
employees and puts additional cost pressures on small businesses and
other employers that provide health benefits.
(2) The legislature further finds that building public-private
partnerships in which employers, employees, and the public share in the
cost of health care holds the promise of expanding coverage and
reducing the adverse cost consequences of caring for uninsured
populations.
(3) It is the intent of the legislature that the state, in
collaboration with carriers and small businesses, develop mechanisms to
provide small businesses, particularly those who currently are unable
to purchase health benefit plans, with affordable and meaningful
coverage options that meet the health care needs of employees and their
families.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 For purposes of this chapter "small
employer" and "carrier" have the same meaning as in RCW 48.43.005.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 By January 1, 2007, the health care
authority established under chapter 41.05 RCW shall implement a program
to assist small employers in providing meaningful health care coverage
to their employees and employees' dependents. The program shall:
(1) Offer a choice of health benefit plans at varying prices that
are consistent with the requirements of section 4 of this act,
including a high deductible plan that may be used in conjunction with
a health savings account;
(2) Require an affordable premium contribution from participating
employers and employees, subsidized as available federal, state, local,
or other funding allows and if necessary to provide meaningful
coverage;
(3) Be designed to: (a) Encourage small employers that do not
offer health coverage to do so, and discourage those that offer
coverage from dropping it in favor of the small employer assistance
program; (b) meet the needs of small employers in different areas of
the state; and (c) meet the needs of small employers with differing
work force characteristics;
(4) Use appropriate and effective risk management mechanisms where
they would reduce the cost of coverage;
(5) Collaborate with and make maximum use of existing federal,
state, local, and other programs providing coverage or health care to
the uninsured, particularly those who are employed by small employers.
Initially, the program may be offered in limited areas of the
state, but if so, the health care authority shall develop a plan for
expanding the program statewide.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 Any health benefit plan offered under the
small employer assistance program shall reflect the conscientious,
explicit, and judicious use of current best information and data with
regard to patient care. In designing the schedule of benefits and cost
sharing, the authority shall:
(1) Include preventive care services, based on the recommendations
of the United States preventive services task force, with minimal
enrollee cost sharing;
(2) Include other benefits determined to be the most efficacious
and cost-effective within the limits affordable to small employers and
their employees, given the available subsidy;
(3) Structure enrollee cost sharing to discourage demand for
inappropriate or unnecessary treatment, encourage enrollee
responsibility, including the use of efficacious and cost-effective
services and products, and promote quality care.
A carrier may offer any health benefit plan available under the
small employer assistance program to any small employer, whether
through the small employer assistance program or otherwise.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 In contracting with a carrier to offer
coverage under the small employer assistance program, the health care
authority shall ensure that the carrier:
(1) Actively educates enrollees regarding responsible health care
decision making and encourages their engagement in health promotion and
wellness activities and their receipt of appropriate preventive
services;
(2) Actively seeks to identify and encourage appropriate,
efficacious, and cost-effective care by its providers based on evidence
of best practices and promotes the use of quality providers by its
enrollees;
(3) Actively seeks to identify enrollees with, or with the
potential for, chronic or other high-cost conditions and provides them
coordinated care through disease and demand management programs;
(4) Actively encourages innovative, efficient, and patient-centered
facility designs and service delivery methods that improve enrollee
access to care and health outcomes.
If the health care authority implements a self-insured plan, it
shall be responsible for these requirements.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 The activities and operations of the small
employer assistance program, including carriers to the extent of their
participation in the program, are exempt from the provisions and
requirements of Title 48 RCW except:
(1) Carriers are subject to RCW 48.43.022, 48.43.500, 48.43.505
through 48.43.535, 48.43.545, and 48.43.550;
(2) Persons appointed or authorized to solicit applications for
enrollment in a plan offered under the small employer assistance
program, including employees of the health care authority, must comply
with chapter 48.17 RCW. For purposes of this section, "solicit" does
not include distributing information and applications for the small
employer assistance program and responding to questions; and
(3) Amounts paid to a carrier representing the premium contribution
of employers and employees must comply with RCW 48.14.0201.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 7 The health care authority may implement a
self-funded or self-insured method of providing insurance coverage, as
provided in RCW 41.05.140, under the small employer assistance program
if no carrier is willing to provide coverage under the program in a
given area and the health care authority has received a certification
from a member of the American academy of actuaries that the funding
available in the small employer assistance self-insurance reserve
account is sufficient for the self-funded or self-insured risk assumed,
or expected to be assumed, by the authority.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 8 The health care authority shall consult with
interested parties in its development of the small employer assistance
program and shall provide a progress report on its implementation to
the legislature by December 1, 2005. The report shall: (1) Identify
and provide an explanation for any variance in the program design from
the requirements of Title 48 RCW; (2) discuss funding options to
support the subsidy of small employer program enrollees; and (3)
identify any additional statutory changes necessary to meet the intent
of the program.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 9 The health care authority may adopt rules to
implement this chapter.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 (1) Beginning July 1, 2006, the health care
authority may accept applications for premium assistance from
individuals whose current small employer has not offered health
insurance within the last six months, on behalf of themselves and their
spouses and dependent children. The health care authority may
determine the minimum premium contribution to be paid by small
employers whose employees are participating in this premium assistance
option.
(2) To the extent of funding provided in the biennial operating
budget, the health care authority may make premium assistance payments
to help employees pay their premium obligation for their employer's
health benefit plan when:
(a) The individual seeking premium assistance, plus the
individual's spouse and dependent children: (i) Is not confined or
residing in a government-operated institution, unless he or she meets
eligibility criteria adopted by the health care authority; (ii) has
gross family income at the time of enrollment that does not exceed two
hundred percent of the federal poverty level as adjusted for family
size and determined annually by the federal department of health and
human services; (iii) resides within the state of Washington; and (iv)
meets the definition of eligible employee as defined in RCW 48.43.005;
(b) The premium assistance paid would be less than the subsidy that
would be paid if the individual, or the individual plus his or her
spouse and dependent children, were to enroll in the Washington basic
health plan under chapter 70.47 RCW as subsidized enrollees. The
amount of an individual's premium assistance shall be determined by
applying the percent of premium subsidy paid for subsidized basic
health plan enrollees under RCW 70.47.060 to the employee's premium
obligation for his or her employer's health benefit plan;
(c) The premium assistance enrollee agrees to provide verification
of continued enrollment in his or her small employer's health benefit
plan on a semiannual basis, or to notify the health care authority
whenever his or her enrollment status changes, whichever is earlier.
Verification or notification may be made directly by the employee, or
through his or her employer or the carrier providing the small employer
health benefit plan. When necessary, the health care authority has the
authority to perform retrospective audits on premium assistance
accounts.
(3) The health care authority may adopt standards for minimum
thresholds of small employer health benefit plans for which premium
assistance will be paid under this section. The office of insurance
commissioner under Title 48 RCW shall certify that small employer
health benefit plans meet any standards developed under this
subsection.
(4) The health care authority, in consultation with small
employers, carriers, and the office of insurance commissioner under
Title 48 RCW, shall determine an effective and efficient method for the
payment of premium assistance and adopt rules necessary for its
implementation.
(5) Funds received by a family as part of participation in the
adoption support program authorized under RCW 26.33.320 and 74.13.100
through 74.13.145 may not be counted toward a family's current gross
family income for the purposes of this chapter. No premium assistance
may be paid to an employee whose current gross family income exceeds
twice the federal poverty level or who is a recipient of medical
assistance or medical care services under chapter 74.09 RCW.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 11 Sections 1 through 10 of this act
constitute a new chapter in Title
NEW SECTION. Sec. 12 (1) The sum of five hundred thousand
dollars, or as much thereof as may be necessary, is appropriated from
the general fund to the health care authority for the fiscal year
ending June 30, 2006, to carry out the purposes of this act.
(2) The sum of two hundred twenty-four thousand dollars, or as much
thereof as may be necessary, is appropriated from the general fund to
the health care authority for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2007, to
carry out the purposes of this act."
E2SHB 2069 -
By Committee on Health & Long-Term Care
On page 1, line 2 of the title, after "program;" strike the remainder of the title and insert "adding a new chapter to Title 70 RCW; and making appropriations."