Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1989
CHAPTER 327-S.F.No. 491
An act relating to health care; creating a health care
access commission; requiring an implementation plan
for a health care access program; appropriating money;
proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 62J.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. [62J.01] [FINDINGS.]
The legislature finds that substantial numbers of
Minnesotans have no health care coverage and that most of these
residents are wage earners or their dependents. One-third of
these individuals are children.
The legislature further finds that when these individuals
enter the health care system they have often foregone preventive
care and are in need of more expensive treatment that often
exceeds their financial resources. Much of the cost for these
uncompensated services to the uninsured are already in the
health care system in the form of increased insurance and
provider rates and property and income taxes.
The legislature further finds that these costs, spread
among the already insured, represent a woefully inefficient
method for providing basic preventive and acute care for the
uninsured and represent an added cost to employers now providing
health insurance to their employees.
The legislature further finds that it is necessary to
ensure basic and affordable health care to all Minnesotans while
addressing the economic pressures on the health care system as a
whole in Minnesota.
Sec. 2. [62J.02] [HEALTH CARE ACCESS COMMISSION.]
Subdivision 1. [MEMBERSHIP; COMPENSATION; CHAIR.] The
Minnesota health care access commission consists of 15 members.
Five members are appointed by the governor, one of whom must be
an experienced health care professional, one of whom must be a
representative of small business, and one of whom must be a
representative of consumers. Three members are appointed under
the rules of the senate and three members are appointed under
the rules of the house of representatives. The commissioners of
health, human services, employee relations, and commerce, or
their designated representatives are also members. The governor
shall appoint the chair of the commission from among the members
who are not agency commissioners. The terms, compensation, and
removal of the members appointed by the governor are as provided
in section 15.0575.
Subd. 2. [STAFF; OFFICE SPACE; EQUIPMENT.] The commission
shall select a director to serve at its pleasure as the chief
administrative officer of the commission. The director may hire
advisors, consultants, and employees, as authorized by the
commission, and prescribe their duties. Employees are not state
employees, but are covered by section 3.736. At the option of
the commission, the employees may participate in the following
plans for employees in the unclassified service: the state
retirement plan, the state deferred compensation plan, and the
health insurance and life insurance plans. The commissioner of
state planning shall provide to the commission, at a reasonable
cost, administrative assistance, office space, and access to
office equipment and services.
Subd. 3. [DUTIES.] The health care access commission, with
the assistance of the commissioner of state planning, shall
develop and recommend to the legislature a plan to provide
access to health care for all state residents. In developing
the plan, the commission shall:
(1) develop a system to estimate the total number of
uninsured Minnesotans by age, sex, employment status, income
level, geography, and other relevant characteristics;
(2) explore all potential insurance options including size
and makeup of risk groups;
(3) prepare a legal analysis of restrictions and other
potential legal issues of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act, United States Code, title 29, sections 1001 to
1461;
(4) study and make recommendations on insurance and health
care law changes that will improve access to health care;
(5) study and make recommendations on incentives and
disincentives to ensure that employers continue to provide
health insurance coverage;
(6) study and make recommendations regarding benefits to be
covered by health plans that would be available through the
health care access program, including preventive, well-child,
and prenatal care;
(7) identify cost savings to public programs that would
result from implementation of the health care access program;
(8) develop a cost containment policy after reviewing cost
containment methods such as hospital admission precertification,
concurrent review of hospital stays, discharge planning,
hospital bill audit prior to discharge, primary gatekeepers,
claims data analysis, a drug formulary, pharmacy data analysis,
bulk discounts, emergency room use, outpatient surgery
oversight, protocols for preventive care and common acute care,
practice data compared to peers, practitioner rewards and
penalties, and other cost containment methods;
(9) develop a system to administer the health care access
program, including recommendations for eligibility criteria,
enrollment procedures, and options for contracting with
carriers, health plans, and providers, to ensure access to
affordable health care in all geographic areas of the state;
(10) define the number, functions, and duties of
administrative staff;
(11) study alternatives for financing the state share of
the cost of the premiums in an amount sufficient to generate
one-half of the total costs of the health care access program,
but not more than $150,000,000 a year, including, but not
limited to, an actuarial analysis, a sliding fee scale analysis,
and reserve fund requirements;
(12) develop a system for collection of premium payments;
(13) examine and make recommendations on gatekeeping
mechanisms for access to health care services, different benefit
and service packages for the minimum core coverage plan, and
dollar limitations for prescription drug costs;
(14) consider limits on provider reimbursement and covered
services and make recommendations;
(15) examine the effect of different copayment levels on
access to health care for persons with low incomes and provide
recommendations based on this analysis;
(16) examine and make recommendations on maximum lifetime
benefits;
(17) develop methods to ensure representation in service
delivery by eligible practitioners, without regard to race,
color, or sex;
(18) develop methods to coordinate the health care access
program with other government-subsidized programs; and
(19) conduct other activities it considers necessary to
carry out the intent of the legislature as expressed in section
1 and this section.
Subd. 4. [REPORT.] The commission shall report to the
legislature by February 15, 1990, on its progress in developing
the plan, including preliminary data analysis and other
appropriate information. The commission shall provide a final
report and implementation plan to the legislature by January 1,
1991.
Sec. 3. [DEMONSTRATION PROJECT REPORT.]
The nine-county demonstration project for the uninsured
authorized in Minnesota Statutes, section 256B.73, shall report
to the commission by January 1, 1990, on the number and
percentage of enrollees in the project, benefits provided, and
the financial commitment of enrollees and employers.
Sec. 4. [REPEALER.]
Section 2 is repealed effective July 1, 1991.
Sec. 5. [APPROPRIATION.]
Subdivision 1. [HEALTH CARE ACCESS COMMISSION.] $800,000
is appropriated from the general fund to the health care access
commission for purposes of sections 1 and 2, to be available
until June 30, 1991.
Subd. 2. [COMMISSIONER OF HUMAN SERVICES.] (a) $50,000 is
appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of human
services to provide one-time subsidies to community-based
clinics, to be available until June 30, 1990. The commissioner
shall publish in the State Register a notice of the availability
of clinic subsidies, a request for applications from clinics
that desire a subsidy, a notice that a subsidy review committee
will be convened to allocate the subsidies, and notice that each
clinic that seeks representation on the committee must submit
the name, address, and telephone number of its designated
representative. Applications from clinics that desire a subsidy
must include detailed information about the financial condition
of the clinic, the amounts and sources of financial support
received by the clinic, and the proportion of patients who are
uninsured and for whom the clinic does not receive any
payments. The commissioner shall convene a committee consisting
of a representative of each community-based clinic meeting the
definition in this paragraph that asks to be represented on the
committee. Committee members do not receive compensation but
may be reimbursed out of the appropriation in this subdivision
for reasonable travel expenses incurred to attend committee
meetings. The committee shall determine the recipients and
amounts of the subsidies. Subsidies must be awarded to those
clinics with the greatest financial need due to the number of
uninsured patients, the inadequacy of grant support and
charitable contributions, and other factors. The committee
shall consider the extent to which the subsidy would enable the
clinic to continue effectively serving the uninsured. The
commissioner must award the subsidies according to the
recommendations of the committee. For purposes of this
paragraph, "community-based clinics" means an entity that:
(1) through its staff and supporting resources or through
its contracts or cooperative arrangements with other public or
private entities, provides primary health services for all
intended residents of its service area;
(2) was established to serve the primary health needs of
low-income population groups;
(3) uses a sliding fee scale based on ability to pay, and
does not limit access or care because of the financial
limitations of the client;
(4) has nonprofit status under Minnesota Statutes, chapter
317; and
(5) has a governing board, for which at least 51 percent of
the membership resides in the local community served by the
clinic.
(b) $175,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1990, and
$200,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1991, are
appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of human
services to provide a 20 percent increase in medical assistance
and children's health plan payments for covered services
provided by clinics enrolled as public health clinics or
community health clinics under Minnesota Rules, Parts 9505.0380
and 9505.0255.
Presented to the governor May 30, 1989
Signed by the governor June 1, 1989, 10:57 p.m.
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes