BILL REQ. #: S-5384.2
State of Washington | 62nd Legislature | 2012 1st Special Session |
READ FIRST TIME 04/06/12.
AN ACT Relating to public school employees' insurance benefits; amending RCW 28A.400.280, 28A.400.350, 28A.400.275, and 42.56.400; adding new sections to chapter 48.02 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 48.62 RCW; creating new sections; and making appropriations.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 (1) The legislature finds that:
(a) Each year, nearly one billion dollars in public funds are spent
on the purchase of employee insurance benefits for more than two
hundred thousand public school employees and their dependents; and
(b) The legislature needs better information regarding school
employee benefits to effectively oversee the use of state funds for
employee benefits.
(2) The legislature establishes the following goals:
(a) Improve the transparency of health benefit plan claims and
financial data to assure prudent and efficient use of taxpayers' funds,
and to significantly reduce administrative costs;
(b) Support greater parity in employee health insurance premiums
between classified and certificated employees;
(c) Make school district employee premiums more responsive to the
need for greater equity and affordability for full family coverage,
with a goal that employee premiums for full family coverage are not
more than three times the premiums for employee only coverage for the
same health benefit plan; and
(d) Maintain greater parity in state allocations for state employee
and K-12 employee health benefits.
(3) The legislature intends to retain current collective bargaining
for benefits, and retain state, school district, and employee
contributions to benefits.
Sec. 2 RCW 28A.400.280 and 2011 c 269 s 1 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Except as provided in subsection (2) of this section, school
districts may provide employer fringe benefit contributions after
October 1, 1990, only for basic benefits. However, school districts
may continue payments under contracts with employees or benefit
providers in effect on April 13, 1990, until the contract expires.
(2) School districts may provide employer contributions after
October 1, 1990, for optional benefit plans, in addition to basic
benefits, only for employees included in pooling arrangements under
this subsection. Optional benefits may include direct agreements as
defined in chapter 48.150 RCW, but may not include employee beneficiary
accounts that can be liquidated by the employee on termination of
employment. Optional benefit plans may be offered only if:
(a) The school district pools benefit allocations among employees
using a pooling arrangement that includes at least one employee
bargaining unit and/or all nonbargaining group employees;
(b) Each full-time employee included in the pooling arrangement is
offered basic benefits, including coverage for dependents((, without a
payroll deduction for premium charges));
(c) Each employee included in the pooling arrangement who elects
medical benefit coverage pays a minimum premium charge subject to
collective bargaining under chapter 41.59 or 41.56 RCW;
(d) The employee premiums are structured to ensure employees
selecting richer benefit plans pay the higher premium;
(e) Each full-time employee included in the pooling arrangement,
regardless of the number of dependents receiving basic coverage,
receives the same additional employer contribution for other coverage
or optional benefits; and
(((d))) (f) For part-time employees included in the pooling
arrangement, participation in optional benefit plans shall be governed
by the same eligibility criteria and/or proration of employer
contributions used for allocations for basic benefits.
(3) Savings accruing to school districts due to limitations on
benefit options under this section shall be pooled and made available
by the districts to reduce out-of-pocket premium expenses for employees
needing basic coverage for dependents. School districts are not
intended to divert state benefit allocations for other purposes.
Sec. 3 RCW 28A.400.350 and 2011 c 269 s 2 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The board of directors of any of the state's school districts
or educational service districts may make available liability, life,
health, health care, accident, disability, and salary protection or
insurance, direct agreements as defined in chapter 48.150 RCW, or any
one of, or a combination of the types of employee benefits enumerated
in this subsection, or any other type of insurance or protection, for
the members of the boards of directors, the students, and employees of
the school district or educational service district, and their
dependents. Such coverage may be provided by contracts or agreements
with private carriers, with the state health care authority after July
1, 1990, pursuant to the approval of the authority administrator, or
through self-insurance or self-funding pursuant to chapter 48.62 RCW,
or in any other manner authorized by law. Any direct agreement must
comply with RCW 48.150.050.
(2) Whenever funds are available for these purposes the board of
directors of the school district or educational service district may
contribute all or a part of the cost of such protection or insurance
for the employees of their respective school districts or educational
service districts and their dependents. The premiums on such liability
insurance shall be borne by the school district or educational service
district.
After October 1, 1990, school districts may not contribute to any
employee protection or insurance other than liability insurance unless
the district's employee benefit plan conforms to RCW 28A.400.275 and
28A.400.280.
(3) For school board members, educational service district board
members, and students, the premiums due on such protection or insurance
shall be borne by the assenting school board member, educational
service district board member, or student. The school district or
educational service district may contribute all or part of the costs,
including the premiums, of life, health, health care, accident or
disability insurance which shall be offered to all students
participating in interschool activities on the behalf of or as
representative of their school, school district, or educational service
district. The school district board of directors and the educational
service district board may require any student participating in
extracurricular interschool activities to, as a condition of
participation, document evidence of insurance or purchase insurance
that will provide adequate coverage, as determined by the school
district board of directors or the educational service district board,
for medical expenses incurred as a result of injury sustained while
participating in the extracurricular activity. In establishing such a
requirement, the district shall adopt regulations for waiving or
reducing the premiums of such coverage as may be offered through the
school district or educational service district to students
participating in extracurricular activities, for those students whose
families, by reason of their low income, would have difficulty paying
the entire amount of such insurance premiums. The district board shall
adopt regulations for waiving or reducing the insurance coverage
requirements for low-income students in order to assure such students
are not prohibited from participating in extracurricular interschool
activities.
(4) All contracts or agreements for insurance or protection written
to take advantage of the provisions of this section shall provide that
the beneficiaries of such contracts may utilize on an equal
participation basis the services of those practitioners licensed
pursuant to chapters 18.22, 18.25, 18.53, 18.57, and 18.71 RCW.
(5) School districts offering medical, vision, and dental benefits
shall offer:
(a) A high deductible health plan option with a health savings
account that conforms to section 223, part VII of subchapter 1 of the
internal revenue code of 1986. School districts shall comply with all
applicable federal standards related to the establishment of health
savings accounts;
(b) Employee premiums that are established to ensure that full
family coverage premiums are not more than three times the premiums for
employees purchasing single coverage for the same coverage plan. This
requirement may be phased in, but must be fully in place no later than
the fall 2014 school year;
(c) Employees at least one health benefit plan that is not a high
deductible health plan offered in conjunction with a health savings
account in which the employee share of the premium cost for a full-time
employee, regardless of whether the employee chooses employee-only
coverage or coverage that includes dependents, does not exceed the
share of premium cost paid by state employees during the state employee
benefits year that started immediately prior to the school year.
(6) All contracts or agreements for employee benefits must be held
to responsible contracting standards, meaning a fair, prudent, and
accountable competitive procedure for procuring services that includes:
(a) Accurate cost comparisons to assure cost-effective purchasing;
(b) Assuring contractor compliance with workplace, tax, and other
laws and consideration of past and pending legal actions concerning the
contractor's contractual performance;
(c) Sufficient documentation to enable an effective audit trail for
subsequent reviews of the contracting process; and
(d) An open competitive process, except where an open process would
compromise cost-effective purchasing, with documentation justifying the
approach.
(7) Any school district and their benefit providers offering a
benefit plan by contract or agreement must:
(a) Significantly reduce administrative costs for school districts;
(b) Improve customer service;
(c) Reduce differential plan premium rates between employee only
and family health benefit premiums;
(d) Protect access to coverage for part-time K-12 employees; and
(e) Use innovative health plan features designed to reduce health
benefit premium growth, reduce utilization of unnecessary health
services, and offer evidence-based health care services, which may
include, but are not limited to, adoption of state health technology
assessment program decisions under chapter 70.14 RCW and participation
in efforts such as the Bree collaborative under chapter 70.250 RCW.
(8) All contracts or agreements for insurance or protection
described in this section shall be in compliance with this act.
(9) If the superintendent of public instruction determines that a
school district has not complied with the reporting requirements of RCW
28A.400.275, and the failure is due to the action or inaction of the
school district, the superintendent:
(a) Must notify the legislature of the noncompliance; and
(b) Is authorized to limit the school district's authority provided
in subsection (1) of this section regarding employee health benefits to
the provision of health benefit coverage provided by the state health
care authority.
Sec. 4 RCW 28A.400.275 and 1990 1st ex.s. c 11 s 5 are each
amended to read as follows:
(1) Any contract or agreement for employee benefits executed after
April 13, 1990, between a school district and a benefit provider or
employee bargaining unit is null and void unless it contains an
agreement to abide by state laws relating to school district employee
benefits. The term of the contract or agreement may not exceed one
year.
(2) School districts and their benefit providers shall annually
submit the following information and data for the prior calendar year
to the ((Washington state health care authority)) office of the
insurance commissioner:
(a) A summary ((descriptions of all benefits offered under the
district's employee benefit plan. The districts shall also submit data
to the health care authority specifying)) of each health benefit plan
offered to each group of school employees under the district's employee
benefit plans.
(b) The summary must include the following:
(i) The financial plan structure and overall performance of each
health plan including:
(A) Total premium expenses;
(B) Total claims expenses;
(C) Claim reserves; and
(D) Plan administration expenses, including compensation paid to
brokers;
(ii) A statement as to whether the plan qualifies as a high
deductible health plan under section 223, part VII of subchapter 1 of
the internal revenue code of 1986;
(iii) A description of the plan's innovative health plan design
features, including, but not limited to, the use of enrollee health
assessments or health coach services, care management for high-cost or
high-risk enrollees, medical or health home payment mechanisms, and
plan features designed to create incentives for improved personal
health behaviors;
(iv) The total number of employees and, for each employee, types of
coverage or benefits received including the number((s)) of covered
dependents, the number of eligible dependents, the amount of the
district's contribution to premium, additional premium costs paid by
the employee through payroll deductions, and the age and sex of ((the))
each employee and each dependent.
(3) The ((plan descriptions and the)) information and data shall be
submitted in a format and according to a schedule established by the
((health care authority)) office of the insurance commissioner under
section 5 of this act to enable the commissioner to meet his or her
reporting obligations under that section.
(((3))) (4) Any benefit provider offering a benefit plan by
contract or agreement with a school district under subsection (1) of
this section shall ((agree to)) make available to the school district
the benefit plan descriptions and, where available, the demographic
information on plan subscribers that the district ((is)) and benefit
provider are required to report to the ((Washington state health care
authority)) office of the insurance commissioner under this section.
(((4))) (5) This section shall not apply to benefit plans offered
in the 1989-90 school year.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 A new section is added to chapter 48.02 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) For purposes of this section, "benefit provider" has the same
meaning as provided in RCW 28A.400.270.
(2)(a) By December 1, 2013, and December 1st of each year
thereafter, the commissioner shall submit a report to the legislature
on school district health insurance benefits. The report shall include
each school district's health insurance benefits' aggregated data. The
report shall be available on the commissioner's web site. The
confidentiality of personally identifiable data shall be safeguarded
consistent with the provisions of RCW 42.56.400(21).
(b) The report shall include the data and information furnished by
school districts and their benefit providers related to their
requirements to:
(i) Significantly reduce administrative costs for school districts;
(ii) Improve customer service;
(iii) Reduce differential plan premium rates between employee only
and family health benefit premiums;
(iv) Protect access to coverage for part-time K-12 employees; and
(v) Use innovative health plan features designed to reduce health
benefit premium growth, reduce utilization of unnecessary health
services, and offer evidence-based health care services, which may
include, but are not limited to, adoption of state health technology
assessment program decisions under chapter 70.14 RCW, and participation
in efforts such as the Bree collaborative under chapter 70.250 RCW.
(c) The report shall include a summary of each health benefit plan
offered to school employees by benefit providers. The summary must
include the following:
(i) The financial plan structure and overall performance of each
health plan including:
(A) Total premium expenses;
(B) Total claims expenses;
(C) Claim reserves; and
(D) Plan administration expenses, including compensation paid to
brokers;
(ii) Whether the plan qualifies as a high deductible health plan
under section 223, part VII of subchapter 1 of the internal revenue
code of 1986;
(iii) A description of the plan's innovative health plan design
features including, but not limited to, the use of enrollee health
assessments or health coach services, care management for high-cost or
high-risk enrollees, and medical or health home payment mechanisms and
plan features designed to create incentives for improved personal
health behaviors;
(iv) The total number of enrollees in each type of coverage,
including the number of employees and the number of dependents.
(3) If adequate progress is not being made in the areas of health
benefit equity, transparency, and efficiency, the commissioner may
submit recommendations to the legislature regarding additional steps
that may be taken by school districts or their benefit providers to
achieve greater progress.
(4) The commissioner shall:
(a) Specifically review the appropriateness of the legislative goal
that full family coverage premiums be no more than three times the
premiums for employee only coverage for the same health benefit plan;
(b) Report to the legislature by December 1, 2013, on the
appropriateness of the goal, including recommendations on any
alternative goals recommended by the commissioner as a result of the
commissioner's review; and
(c) Develop a schedule of incremental improvements school districts
must make in order to fully achieve the legislative goal in (a) of this
subsection by the 2017-18 school year.
(5) In completing the report required under subsection (2)(a) of
this section, the commissioner shall review and report to the
legislature on whether each school district is meeting the requirements
established in RCW 28A.400.350 (5) and (6).
(6) By December 1, 2015, and annually thereafter, the commissioner
must determine which districts have achieved the requirements
established in RCW 28A.400.350 (5) and (6). If the commissioner
determines that a district has not achieved the requirements, the
school district must purchase benefits through the public employees'
benefits board program beginning the following school year.
(7) The commissioner shall collect data from school districts or
their benefit providers to fulfill the requirements of this section.
The commissioner may adopt rules necessary to implement the data
submission requirements under this section and RCW 28A.400.275,
including the format, timing of data reporting, data standards,
instructions, definitions, and data sources.
(8) Data, information, and documents, other than those described in
subsection (2)(c) of this section, that are provided by a school
district or an entity providing coverage pursuant to this section are
exempt from public inspection and copying under this act and chapters
42.17A and 42.56 RCW.
(9) If a school district or benefit provider does not comply with
the data reporting requirements of this section or RCW 28A.400.275, and
the failure is due to the actions of an entity providing coverage
authorized under Title 48 RCW, the commissioner may take enforcement
actions under this chapter.
(10) The commissioner may enter into one or more personal services
contracts with third-party contractors to provide services necessary to
accomplish the commissioner's responsibilities under this act.
(11) In completing the tasks under this section, the commissioner
may request the assistance or advice of the school employees' benefits
technical working group created in section 6 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 A new section is added to chapter 48.02 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) A technical working group, to be known as the school employees'
benefits technical working group, is established within the office of
the insurance commissioner.
(2) By January 30, 2013, the commissioner shall appoint the
following members to the school employees' benefits technical working
group:
(a) One member from an association representing district level
administrators;
(b) One member from an association representing certificated
employees;
(c) Two members from associations representing classified
employees; and
(d) Two representatives of the health care authority, one
representative with expertise in health care plan design and
administration, and one representative with expertise in the state
medicaid program including the apple health for kids program.
(3) Initial tasks of the school employees' benefits technical
working group are to:
(a) Review and analyze the benefits, opportunities, and risks of
school employee and dependent enrollment in health benefit plans
offered through the Washington health benefit exchange and the apple
health for kids program;
(b) By December 30, 2013, submit a report to the governor and the
legislature of findings and any recommendations on utilization of the
exchange and the apple health program to serve K-12 employees and their
dependents; and
(c) Provide assistance and advice to the insurance commissioner
upon request, as provided in section 5 of this act.
Sec. 7 RCW 42.56.400 and 2012 c 222 s 2 are each amended to read
as follows:
The following information relating to insurance and financial
institutions is exempt from disclosure under this chapter:
(1) Records maintained by the board of industrial insurance appeals
that are related to appeals of crime victims' compensation claims filed
with the board under RCW 7.68.110;
(2) Information obtained and exempted or withheld from public
inspection by the health care authority under RCW 41.05.026, whether
retained by the authority, transferred to another state purchased
health care program by the authority, or transferred by the authority
to a technical review committee created to facilitate the development,
acquisition, or implementation of state purchased health care under
chapter 41.05 RCW;
(3) The names and individual identification data of either all
owners or all insureds, or both, received by the insurance commissioner
under chapter 48.102 RCW;
(4) Information provided under RCW 48.30A.045 through 48.30A.060;
(5) Information provided under RCW 48.05.510 through 48.05.535,
48.43.200 through 48.43.225, 48.44.530 through 48.44.555, and 48.46.600
through 48.46.625;
(6) Examination reports and information obtained by the department
of financial institutions from banks under RCW 30.04.075, from savings
banks under RCW 32.04.220, from savings and loan associations under RCW
33.04.110, from credit unions under RCW 31.12.565, from check cashers
and sellers under RCW 31.45.030(3), and from securities brokers and
investment advisers under RCW 21.20.100, all of which is confidential
and privileged information;
(7) Information provided to the insurance commissioner under RCW
48.110.040(3);
(8) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner under RCW 48.02.065, all of which are confidential and
privileged;
(9) Confidential proprietary and trade secret information provided
to the commissioner under RCW 48.31C.020 through 48.31C.050 and
48.31C.070;
(10) Data filed under RCW 48.140.020, 48.140.030, 48.140.050, and
7.70.140 that, alone or in combination with any other data, may reveal
the identity of a claimant, health care provider, health care facility,
insuring entity, or self-insurer involved in a particular claim or a
collection of claims. For the purposes of this subsection:
(a) "Claimant" has the same meaning as in RCW 48.140.010(2).
(b) "Health care facility" has the same meaning as in RCW
48.140.010(6).
(c) "Health care provider" has the same meaning as in RCW
48.140.010(7).
(d) "Insuring entity" has the same meaning as in RCW 48.140.010(8).
(e) "Self-insurer" has the same meaning as in RCW 48.140.010(11);
(11) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner under RCW 48.135.060;
(12) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner under RCW 48.37.060;
(13) Confidential and privileged documents obtained or produced by
the insurance commissioner and identified in RCW 48.37.080;
(14) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner under RCW 48.37.140;
(15) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner under RCW 48.17.595;
(16) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner under RCW 48.102.051(1) and 48.102.140 (3) and (7)(a)(ii);
(17) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner in the commissioner's capacity as receiver under RCW
48.31.025 and 48.99.017, which are records under the jurisdiction and
control of the receivership court. The commissioner is not required to
search for, log, produce, or otherwise comply with the public records
act for any records that the commissioner obtains under chapters 48.31
and 48.99 RCW in the commissioner's capacity as a receiver, except as
directed by the receivership court;
(18) Documents, materials, or information obtained by the insurance
commissioner under RCW 48.13.151;
(19) Data, information, and documents provided by a carrier
pursuant to section 1, chapter 172, Laws of 2010; ((and))
(20) Information in a filing of usage-based insurance about the
usage-based component of the rate pursuant to RCW 48.19.040(5)(b); and
(21) Data, information, and documents, other than those described
in section (5)(2)(c) of this act, that are submitted to the office of
the insurance commissioner by an entity providing health care coverage
pursuant to RCW 28A.400.275 and section 5 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 8 A new section is added to chapter 48.62 RCW
to read as follows:
If an individual or joint local government self-insured health and
welfare benefits program formed by a school district or educational
service district does not comply with the data reporting requirements
of RCW 28A.400.275 and section 5 of this act, the self-insured health
and welfare benefits program is no longer authorized to operate in the
state. The state risk manager shall notify the state auditor and the
attorney general of the violation and the attorney general, on behalf
of the state risk manager, must take all necessary action to terminate
the operation of the self-insured health and welfare benefits program.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 9 (1) In addition to the classified staff
units insurance benefit adjustment factor provided in section
502(7)(b), chapter 9, Laws of 2011 2nd sp. sess., for the 2012-13
school year, the number of classified staff units determined in section
502 (4) and (5), chapter 9, Laws of 2011 2nd sp. sess. is multiplied by
an enhanced adjustment factor of 0.038. The adjustment factor provided
in section 502 (4) and (5), chapter 9, Laws of 2011 2nd sp. sess. and
this section provide a total adjustment factor of 1.190 for the 2012-13
school year. The 1.190 factor reflects a weighted average of an
adjustment factor of 1.152 per month for the months September through
December 2012, and an adjustment factor of 1.209 for the months January
through August 2013.
(2) The sum of seven million dollars, or as much thereof as may be
necessary, is appropriated from the state general fund to the
superintendent of public instruction for the fiscal year ending June
30, 2013, solely for the purposes of this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 (1) In addition to the maintenance rate for
insurance benefit allocations of seven hundred sixty-eight dollars per
month for the 2012-13 school year provided in section 504(2), chapter
9, Laws of 2011 2nd sp. sess., this section provides for a rate
increase to seven hundred ninety dollars per month for the 2012-13
school year. The rate of seven hundred ninety dollars for the 2012-13
school year reflects a weighted average of the legislature's intent to
provide a seven hundred sixty-eight dollar monthly rate for the months
September through December 2012 and increase to an eight hundred dollar
monthly rate for the months January through August 2013.
(2) The sum of nineteen million dollars, or as much thereof as may
be necessary, is appropriated from the state general fund to the
superintendent of public instruction for the fiscal year ending June
30, 2013, solely for the purposes of this section.