The Foundational Public Health Services Account holds money used to:
The account is funded with half of the money collected from the vapor products tax.
All funding for foundational public health services must be appropriated to the Office of Financial Management (OFM). OFM may only allocate funding to the Department of Health (DOH) if DOH, after consultation with federally recognized Indian tribes, jointly certifies with a state association representing local health jurisdictions and the State Board of Health, that they are in agreement on the distribution and uses of the funds across the public health system. If joint certification is provided, DOH shall distribute the funding according to the agreed-upon distribution and uses. If joint certification is not provided, appropriations for this purpose shall lapse.
The Washington Vaccine Association collects and remits adequate funds from health carriers and third-party administrators for the cost of vaccines provided to certain children in Washington State. All third-party administrators conducting business on behalf of residents of Washington or Washington health care providers and facilities are required to register with the association.
Beginning March 1, 2022, and annually thereafter, each health carrier, Medicaid managed care organization, and third-party administrator with more than 50 covered lives must file a statement of covered lives with the Office of the Insurance Commissioner (OIC). For fiscal year 2023, OIC shall assess health carriers, Medicaid managed care organizations, and third-party administrators a covered lives assessment of $3.25 per member, per month.
The covered lives assessment will be $143,000,000 for fiscal year 2024 and $200,000,000 for fiscal year 2025 and beyond. Based on the number of covered lives reported, all health carriers, Medicaid managed care organizations, and third-party administrators must pay a pro rata share of the total assessment. OIC must annually, on or before July 1st, calculate and bill each health carrier, Medicaid managed care organization, and third-party administrator for its portion of the assessment, and the assessment is due by July 15th of each year.
OIC may use assessment factors from the prior year to calculate the assessment if the necessary financial records are not available for the current year. If an entity fails to pay the assessment by July 31st it must be assessed a penalty of 5 percent of the total assessment due. If an entity fails to pay the assessment within 45 days of the due date, it must be assessed a penalty of 10 percent of the total assessment due. If an entity fails to pay the assessment within 60 days of the due date, it must be assessed a penalty of 20 percent of the total assessment due. Interest will begin to accrue on the assessment due 61 days after it is due.
Assessments and penalties collected by OIC must be deposited into the Foundational Public Health Services Account.
Every third-party administrator must register with OIC by December 31, 2021, and renew its registration annually thereafter. Third-party administrators that begin administering health benefits in Washington on or after December 31, 2021, must register with OIC within 30 days of when they begin administering such benefits. OIC may fine a third-party administrator up to $5,000 per violation for failing to register or providing incomplete, misleading, incorrect, or materially untrue information. Upon request of OIC, the Secretary of Health and the Washington Vaccine Association must provide OIC with any available information maintained by the association needed to initiate third-party administrator registration.
PRO: Public health is not being fully funded and is struggling because of a lack of funding. The bill offers a sustainable and stable funding source. Funding will fully prepare us for the next pandemic. The public health system cannot prevent preventable diseases without adequate funding. Everyone deserves equitable access to services, but the system is severely limited currently. Responding quickly has been impossible and workforce has been strained. When funding was adequate services were robust. Even modest public health funding can result in large savings for future health care costs. Lack of funds directly affect the most vulnerable in society. The current funding source is unpredictable. Funding will ensure continuity of services for the whole state.
CON: There is no unique nexus between public health and health insurance. Funding should be broader than just insurance carriers, who are already heavily taxed. The cost would be a pass through to employers. Individual and small group markets are already subject to a premium tax that self-insured plans are not paying. An additional assessment would be inequitable. The source is a direct tax on union members. Employers who do not provide insurance to employees should be required to contribute. Taxing low wage employees is a regressive approach to funding public health. Every dollar has to be passed on to union members. The funding of the system should be broadly based. Taxes aimed at coverage will increase premiums. Businesses are operating slim margins and can not afford additional expenses.
OTHER: There is no consensus among health carriers, but any assessment should be equitable and broad based. The assessment will affect affordability for individuals and small business. All sectors of the economy should contribute.