In 2019, the Legislature established a universal health care work group. The work group issued its final report on January 15, 2021. It defined universal health care to mean that all Washington residents can access essential, effective, appropriate, and affordable health care services when and where they need it, and developed three coverage models. Models A and B are designed to provide coverage for all state residents, including those currently covered by federal programs, and undocumented immigrants. The models would provide coverage for essential health benefits and include no cost sharing. Model A would achieve this through a state-governed and administered program while Model B would be a state-governed, but health plan administered program. Model C would offer coverage to a segment of Washingtonians—those who do not have access to affordable coverage through a public program, an employer, or in the individual market. It is primarily designed to increase coverage for uninsured undocumented immigrants.
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 shall include the following voting members:
The Governor must appoint one of the Commission members to be the chair for no more than three years. The Commission may establish advisory committees that include members of the public who are not on the Commission. The HCA is responsible for staffing the Commission and publishing meeting dates, agendas, and meeting materials on its website.
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, and 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 HCA, however, must begin any federal application process within 60 days of its availability.
The Commission must hold its first meeting within 90 days of the effective date of the act.
Senate | 28 | 20 | |
House | 57 | 40 | (House amended) |
Senate | 28 | 21 | (Senate concurred) |
July 25, 2021