SENATE BILL REPORT
SHB 2304
As of April 21, 2005
Title: An act relating to debts owed to the department of social and health services for medical assistance and recovery of those debts.
Brief Description: Recovering debts owed to the state for medical assistance.
Sponsors: House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Sommers, McCoy and Williams; by request of Office of Financial Management).
Brief History: Passed House: 4/21/05, 56-41.
SENATE
Staff: Tim Yowell (786-7435)
Background: The Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) recovers the cost of
publicly-funded long-term care and medical assistance from recipients' estates after their death.
Recovery is deferred until the death of a surviving spouse. Recovery is also deferred if there is
a surviving child residing in the family home who is under age 21, blind, or disabled. Estate
recoveries are projected to total about $14.5 million this fiscal year.
Under current state and federal law, if a recipient sells or transfers property within three years of
receiving Medicaid-funded services, the value of the sold or transferred property is treated as
client income. However, DSHS often has no way of knowing when such transfers occur.
DSHS places liens on recipients' property following their death. Unlike federal law, state law
does not allow the department to impose a lien during the recipients' lifetime.
The property an owner uses as a residence is subject to a $40,000 homestead exemption from
attachment or forced sale for the owner's debts. Judgements against the owner that are greater
than $40,000 become liens on the property 's value in excess of this exemption.
DSHS must collect overpayments or other debts due the state within six years after giving notice
of the overpayment or debt, or within ten years if it has initiated court action to recover the debt.
Summary of Bill: DSHS may file a request for notice when real property owned by a public
assistance recipient is transferred or encumbered. County clerks must record the request in the
property's deed and mortgage records. An individual transferring or encumbering the property
must notify DSHS within 30 days of the property's transfer or encumbrance.
DSHS is directed to place property liens prior to a client's death if the client's condition is such
that he or she is not reasonably likely to return to the property from a medical institution. DSHS
must provide notice and opportunity for a hearing before filing the lien.
If there is a judgement ordering a forced sale, debts owed the state for recovery of long-term care
and medical assistance costs are not subject to the homestead exemption.
DSHS liens for recovery of long-term care and medical assistance costs are enforceable against
a deceased recipient's life estate or joint tenancy interest in real property acquired after June 30,
2005. However, such a lien is not enforceable against someone who purchases the property
before the lien or before a request for notice is filed. The value of the life estate subject to the lien
is the value of the deceased recipient's interest in the property immediately prior to death. The
value of the joint tenancy interest subject to the lien is the fractional interest the recipient would
have owned in the property if he or she and the other joint tenants had held title to the property
as tenants in common on the date of the recipient's death.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.