The Universal Health Care Work Group (Work Group) was established in 2019 to make recommendations to the Legislature related to the creation, implementation, maintenance, and funding of a universal health care system. The Work Group consisted of 37 members and was staffed by the Health Care Authority and private consulting groups. The definition of "universal health care," as adopted by the Work Group, means that "all Washington residents have access to essential, effective, appropriate, and affordable health care services when and where they need it." The Work Group considered three models for realizing universal health care: (1) a state-governed and administered program; (2) a state-governed, and health plan administered program; and (3) a program for undocumented residents to access coverage. The final report was issued on January 15, 2021, and provided analysis of each with respect to expected costs, access, equity, governance, quality, administration, affordability, and feasibility.
The Universal Health Care Commission (Commission) is established for the purpose of creating immediate and impactful changes in Washington's health care access and delivery system and to prepare the state for the creation of a health care system to provide coverage and access through a universal financing system, including a unified financing system, once federal authority has been acquired.
The Commission consists of the following voting members:
The representative from the Authority serves as the chair. The Commission may establish advisory committees that include members of the public who are not on the Commission. The Authority is responsible for staffing the Commission.
The Commission must submit a baseline report to the Governor and the Legislature by November 1, 2022. The baseline report must include:
Following the release of the baseline report, the Commission must work to identify opportunities to implement reforms to the current health care system and structural changes to prepare the state for a unified health care financing system. The Commission must submit annual reports detailing its work, opportunities to advance changes to the health care system, which of those opportunities a state agency is implementing, which require legislative authority, and which require federal authority.
The Commission is not authorized to implement a universal health care system through a unified financing system until further action is taken by the Legislature and the Governor.
The striking amendment reduces the membership of the Universal Health Care Commission (Commission) by removing four of the eight legislators, the representative of local health jurisdictions, the representative of the Department of Social and Health Services, two of the eight members with experience in health care administration, and the representative of the Department of Retirement Systems. The member from the Health Care Authority is designated as the chair.
The striking amendment removes the expiration date for the Commission and makes it permanent. The Commission's responsibility to develop a plan to create a health care system with a universal financing system is eliminated, and instead the Commission is assigned with creating immediate changes in the health care access and delivery system in Washington and preparing the state for the creation of a health care system with a universal financing system once the necessary federal authority has been obtained.
The striking amendment replaces reporting requirements with a baseline report to be submitted by November 1, 2022, and subsequent annual reports every November 1. The baseline report includes the same topics as the report in the underlying bill and: (1) adds a strategy for developing implementable changes to increase health care access, reduce health care costs, reduce health disparities, improve quality, and prepare for the transition to a unified health care financing system; (2) changes the recommendations of key design elements of a universal health care system to an inventory of such design elements; (3) adds an assessment of the state's current level of preparedness to meet the design elements; (4) removes a reference to coverage expansions for Medicaid for persons regardless of immigration status; and (5) adds recommendations for implementing reimbursement rates for health care providers serving medical assistance requirements at a rate that is no less than 80 percent of the rate paid by Medicare. Subsequent annual reports must detail the Commission's work, opportunities to advance the Commission's goals, which opportunities are being implemented by a state agency, which opportunities should be pursued with legislative authority, and which opportunities are beneficial, but lacking federal authority.
The striking amendment removes intent language that all Washington resident have health coverage under a publicly-financed and privately and publicly-delivered health care system by 2026. Legislative findings are added regarding the implementation of a unified health care financing system being dependent on the changes from the federal government. Legislative intent is added to implement immediate changes in the state's health care system and to establish the preliminary infrastructure to be prepared to establish a universal health system once federal authorities have been realized.
(In support) At the end of last year there were 541,000 Washingtonians without health coverage. The cost and inaccessibility of health care is the reason for many businesses failing, families going bankrupt, and children and parents dying unnecessarily. Washington needs health care that is comprehensive, accessible, and affordable to protect the health of every resident. Universal health care in Washington would provide access to health care for American Indians and Alaska Natives who are left out of the Indian health care delivery system. The current system of health care is part of a system of structural racism and discrimination that needs to be thoughtfully dismantled and rebuilt. The pandemic has further exposed the inequities in the health care system and there needs to be work to address equity, access, and disproportionality in health care. Health care is currently being relegated to those who have resources, instead of those who need it. There needs to be a better, less expensive, and more inclusive system to cover Washington citizens' basic health needs. Other countries have shown that this is possible with better outcomes and lower costs. This bill will eliminate restrictive narrow networks, increase provider choice, and reduce administrative costs. This bill will control health care spending and increase affordability and access for the benefit of everyone. Health care providers and hospitals would benefit under this bill because every patient would be a paying patient. This bill will help keep critical access hospitals open and help small business owners who have been struggling to afford the growing cost of health plans. People struggle to find providers who will take their insurance, especially specialists. Universal health care would reduce business costs, increase workplace productivity, increase business viability, and provide for healthy businesses and employees in Washington. This bill will create an even playing field.
This bill would start implementation of what the majority of the Universal Health Care Work Group (Work Group) favored which is a unified, publicly-funded plan for universal health coverage through a state agency. This bill is building on steps that have already been taken by bringing agency representatives together to come up with the next steps for implementation. There needs to be a Universal Health Care Commission (Commission) that can create a sustainable plan that will work for all providers and patients. There should be a designated chairperson, such as an outside expert on health care systems. There should be a November 1, 2023, deadline. Recommendations for short-term fixes should not have to wait until the final report because there are people who are hurting now who need help.
(Opposed) This bill does nothing but form a commission and gives it four years to solve problems that have already been solved. This bill pushes badly needed health care coverage further down the road and, most likely, kills it forever. The consequences of this bill will be more suffering and needless deaths. This bill crushes the hopes of residents who are suffering from a horrible health care system that allows insurers to make decisions over what procedures people get.
(Other) Multiple studies have shown that the state can save the most money and improve outcomes by moving to a single-payer health system. The Work Group conducted a comprehensive study of the problem and determined that a single-payer system would cover nearly everyone in the state and save billions of dollars. The studies have all been completed and the time for action is now. This bill is not bold enough. There should be an amendment to the bill to empower the Commission to enact Senate Bill 5204. Small businesses need access to affordable insurance now. There needs to be a universal, single payer health care system for Washington residents, regardless of immigration status, until a single payer system is enacted nationally. The Legislature has the power to move quickly and bring life-saving health care to Washington citizens before 2026. The scope of the bill should be broadened to consider some of the underlying issues in the health care system that could potentially be solved in the shorter term such as affordability, access to care, disparities, and outcomes.