2018 -- H 7285  | |
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LC003273  | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND  | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY  | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2018  | |
____________  | |
A N A C T  | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH INSURANCE  | |
PROGRAM  | |
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     Introduced By: Representatives Regunberg, Bennett, Ajello, Knight, and Ranglin-  | |
Date Introduced: January 25, 2018  | |
Referred To: House Finance  | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:  | |
1  | SECTION 1. Chapter 42-14.5 of the General Laws entitled "The Rhode Island Health  | 
2  | Care Reform Act of 2004 - Health Insurance Oversight" is hereby repealed in its entirety.  | 
3  | CHAPTER 42-14.5  | 
4  | The Rhode Island Health Care Reform Act of 2004 - Health Insurance Oversight  | 
5  | 42-14.5-1. Health insurance commissioner.  | 
6  | There is hereby established, within the department of business regulation, an office of the  | 
7  | health insurance commissioner. The health insurance commissioner shall be appointed by the  | 
8  | governor, with the advice and consent of the senate. The director of business regulation shall  | 
9  | grant to the health insurance commissioner reasonable access to appropriate expert staff.  | 
10  | 42-14.5-1.1. Legislative findings.  | 
11  | The general assembly hereby finds and declares as follows:  | 
12  | (1) A substantial amount of health care services in this state are purchased for the benefit  | 
13  | of patients by health care insurers engaged in the provision of health care financing services or is  | 
14  | otherwise delivered subject to the terms of agreements between health care insurers and providers  | 
15  | of the services.  | 
16  | (2) Health care insurers are able to control the flow of patients to providers of health care  | 
17  | services through compelling financial incentives for patients in their plans to utilize only the  | 
18  | services of providers with whom the insurers have contracted.  | 
  | |
1  | (3) Health care insurers also control the health care services rendered to patients through  | 
2  | utilization review programs and other managed care tools and associated coverage and payment  | 
3  | policies.  | 
4  | (4) By incorporation or merger the power of health care insurers in markets of this state  | 
5  | for health care services has become great enough to create a competitive imbalance, reducing  | 
6  | levels of competition and threatening the availability of high quality, cost-effective health care.  | 
7  | (5) The power of health care insurers to unilaterally impose provider contract terms may  | 
8  | jeopardize the ability of physicians and other health care providers to deliver the superior quality  | 
9  | health care services that have been traditionally available in this state.  | 
10  | (6) It is the intention of the general assembly to authorize health care providers to jointly  | 
11  | discuss with health care insurers topics of concern regarding the provision of quality health care  | 
12  | through a committee established by an advisory to the health insurance commissioner.  | 
13  | 42-14.5-2. Purpose.  | 
14  | With respect to health insurance as defined in § 42-14-5, the health insurance  | 
15  | commissioner shall discharge the powers and duties of office to:  | 
16  | (1) Guard the solvency of health insurers;  | 
17  | (2) Protect the interests of consumers;  | 
18  | (3) Encourage fair treatment of health care providers;  | 
19  | (4) Encourage policies and developments that improve the quality and efficiency of  | 
20  | health care service delivery and outcomes; and  | 
21  | (5) View the health care system as a comprehensive entity and encourage and direct  | 
22  | insurers towards policies that advance the welfare of the public through overall efficiency,  | 
23  | improved health care quality, and appropriate access.  | 
24  | 42-14.5-3. Powers and duties [Contingent effective date; see effective dates under  | 
25  | this section.  | 
26  | The health insurance commissioner shall have the following powers and duties:  | 
27  | (a) To conduct quarterly public meetings throughout the state, separate and distinct from  | 
28  | rate hearings pursuant to § 42-62-13, regarding the rates, services, and operations of insurers  | 
29  | licensed to provide health insurance in the state; the effects of such rates, services, and operations  | 
30  | on consumers, medical care providers, patients, and the market environment in which such  | 
31  | insurers operate; and efforts to bring new health insurers into the Rhode Island market. Notice of  | 
32  | not less than ten (10) days of said hearing(s) shall go to the general assembly, the governor, the  | 
33  | Rhode Island Medical Society, the Hospital Association of Rhode Island, the director of health,  | 
34  | the attorney general, and the chambers of commerce. Public notice shall be posted on the  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 2 of 31  | 
1  | department's web site and given in the newspaper of general circulation, and to any entity in  | 
2  | writing requesting notice.  | 
3  | (b) To make recommendations to the governor and the house of representatives and  | 
4  | senate finance committees regarding health-care insurance and the regulations, rates, services,  | 
5  | administrative expenses, reserve requirements, and operations of insurers providing health  | 
6  | insurance in the state, and to prepare or comment on, upon the request of the governor or  | 
7  | chairpersons of the house or senate finance committees, draft legislation to improve the regulation  | 
8  | of health insurance. In making such recommendations, the commissioner shall recognize that it is  | 
9  | the intent of the legislature that the maximum disclosure be provided regarding the  | 
10  | reasonableness of individual administrative expenditures as well as total administrative costs. The  | 
11  | commissioner shall make recommendations on the levels of reserves, including consideration of:  | 
12  | targeted reserve levels; trends in the increase or decrease of reserve levels; and insurer plans for  | 
13  | distributing excess reserves.  | 
14  | (c) To establish a consumer/business/labor/medical advisory council to obtain  | 
15  | information and present concerns of consumers, business, and medical providers affected by  | 
16  | health-insurance decisions. The council shall develop proposals to allow the market for small  | 
17  | business health insurance to be affordable and fairer. The council shall be involved in the  | 
18  | planning and conduct of the quarterly public meetings in accordance with subsection (a). The  | 
19  | advisory council shall develop measures to inform small businesses of an insurance complaint  | 
20  | process to ensure that small businesses that experience rate increases in a given year may request  | 
21  | and receive a formal review by the department. The advisory council shall assess views of the  | 
22  | health-provider community relative to insurance rates of reimbursement, billing, and  | 
23  | reimbursement procedures, and the insurers' role in promoting efficient and high-quality health  | 
24  | care. The advisory council shall issue an annual report of findings and recommendations to the  | 
25  | governor and the general assembly and present its findings at hearings before the house and  | 
26  | senate finance committees. The advisory council is to be diverse in interests and shall include  | 
27  | representatives of community consumer organizations; small businesses, other than those  | 
28  | involved in the sale of insurance products; and hospital, medical, and other health-provider  | 
29  | organizations. Such representatives shall be nominated by their respective organizations. The  | 
30  | advisory council shall be co-chaired by the health insurance commissioner and a community  | 
31  | consumer organization or small business member to be elected by the full advisory council.  | 
32  | (d) To establish and provide guidance and assistance to a subcommittee ("the  | 
33  | professional-provider-health-plan work group") of the advisory council created pursuant to  | 
34  | subsection (c), composed of health-care providers and Rhode Island licensed health plans. This  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 3 of 31  | 
1  | subcommittee shall include in its annual report and presentation before the house and senate  | 
2  | finance committees the following information:  | 
3  | (1) A method whereby health plans shall disclose to contracted providers the fee  | 
4  | schedules used to provide payment to those providers for services rendered to covered patients;  | 
5  | (2) A standardized provider application and credentials-verification process, for the  | 
6  | purpose of verifying professional qualifications of participating health-care providers;  | 
7  | (3) The uniform health plan claim form utilized by participating providers;  | 
8  | (4) Methods for health maintenance organizations, as defined by § 27-41-2, and nonprofit  | 
9  | hospital or medical-service corporations, as defined by chapters 19 and 20 of title 27, to make  | 
10  | facility-specific data and other medical service-specific data available in reasonably consistent  | 
11  | formats to patients regarding quality and costs. This information would help consumers make  | 
12  | informed choices regarding the facilities and/or clinicians or physician practices at which to seek  | 
13  | care. Among the items considered would be the unique health services and other public goods  | 
14  | provided by facilities and/or clinicians or physician practices in establishing the most appropriate  | 
15  | cost comparisons;  | 
16  | (5) All activities related to contractual disclosure to participating providers of the  | 
17  | mechanisms for resolving health plan/provider disputes;  | 
18  | (6) The uniform process being utilized for confirming, in real time, patient insurance  | 
19  | enrollment status, benefits coverage, including co-pays and deductibles;  | 
20  | (7) Information related to temporary credentialing of providers seeking to participate in  | 
21  | the plan's network and the impact of said activity on health-plan accreditation;  | 
22  | (8) The feasibility of regular contract renegotiations between plans and the providers in  | 
23  | their networks; and  | 
24  | (9) Efforts conducted related to reviewing impact of silent PPOs on physician practices.  | 
25  | (e) To enforce the provisions of Title 27 and Title 42 as set forth in § 42-14-5(d).  | 
26  | (f) To provide analysis of the Rhode Island affordable health plan reinsurance fund. The  | 
27  | fund shall be used to effectuate the provisions of §§ 27-18.5-9 and 27-50-17.  | 
28  | (g) To analyze the impact of changing the rating guidelines and/or merging the individual  | 
29  | health-insurance market as defined in chapter 18.5 of title 27 and the small-employer-health-  | 
30  | insurance market as defined in chapter 50 of title 27 in accordance with the following:  | 
31  | (1) The analysis shall forecast the likely rate increases required to effect the changes  | 
32  | recommended pursuant to the preceding subsection (g) in the direct-pay market and small-  | 
33  | employer-health-insurance market over the next five (5) years, based on the current rating  | 
34  | structure and current products.  | 
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1  | (2) The analysis shall include examining the impact of merging the individual and small-  | 
2  | employer markets on premiums charged to individuals and small-employer groups.  | 
3  | (3) The analysis shall include examining the impact on rates in each of the individual and  | 
4  | small-employer-health-insurance markets and the number of insureds in the context of possible  | 
5  | changes to the rating guidelines used for small-employer groups, including: community rating  | 
6  | principles; expanding small-employer rate bonds beyond the current range; increasing the  | 
7  | employer group size in the small-group market; and/or adding rating factors for broker and/or  | 
8  | tobacco use.  | 
9  | (4) The analysis shall include examining the adequacy of current statutory and regulatory  | 
10  | oversight of the rating process and factors employed by the participants in the proposed, new  | 
11  | merged market.  | 
12  | (5) The analysis shall include assessment of possible reinsurance mechanisms and/or  | 
13  | federal high-risk pool structures and funding to support the health-insurance market in Rhode  | 
14  | Island by reducing the risk of adverse selection and the incremental insurance premiums charged  | 
15  | for this risk, and/or by making health insurance affordable for a selected at-risk population.  | 
16  | (6) The health insurance commissioner shall work with an insurance market merger task  | 
17  | force to assist with the analysis. The task force shall be chaired by the health insurance  | 
18  | commissioner and shall include, but not be limited to, representatives of the general assembly, the  | 
19  | business community, small-employer carriers as defined in § 27-50-3, carriers offering coverage  | 
20  | in the individual market in Rhode Island, health-insurance brokers, and members of the general  | 
21  | public.  | 
22  | (7) For the purposes of conducting this analysis, the commissioner may contract with an  | 
23  | outside organization with expertise in fiscal analysis of the private-insurance market. In  | 
24  | conducting its study, the organization shall, to the extent possible, obtain and use actual health-  | 
25  | plan data. Said data shall be subject to state and federal laws and regulations governing  | 
26  | confidentiality of health care and proprietary information.  | 
27  | (8) The task force shall meet as necessary and include its findings in the annual report,  | 
28  | and the commissioner shall include the information in the annual presentation before the house  | 
29  | and senate finance committees.  | 
30  | (h) To establish and convene a workgroup representing health-care providers and health  | 
31  | insurers for the purpose of coordinating the development of processes, guidelines, and standards  | 
32  | to streamline health-care administration that are to be adopted by payors and providers of health-  | 
33  | care services operating in the state. This workgroup shall include representatives with expertise  | 
34  | who would contribute to the streamlining of health-care administration and who are selected from  | 
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1  | hospitals, physician practices, community behavioral-health organizations, each health insurer,  | 
2  | and other affected entities. The workgroup shall also include at least one designee each from the  | 
3  | Rhode Island Medical Society, Rhode Island Council of Community Mental Health  | 
4  | Organizations, the Rhode Island Health Center Association, and the Hospital Association of  | 
5  | Rhode Island. The workgroup shall consider and make recommendations for:  | 
6  | (1) Establishing a consistent standard for electronic eligibility and coverage verification.  | 
7  | Such standard shall:  | 
8  | (i) Include standards for eligibility inquiry and response and, wherever possible, be  | 
9  | consistent with the standards adopted by nationally recognized organizations, such as the Centers  | 
10  | for Medicare and Medicaid Services;  | 
11  | (ii) Enable providers and payors to exchange eligibility requests and responses on a  | 
12  | system-to-system basis or using a payor-supported web browser;  | 
13  | (iii) Provide reasonably detailed information on a consumer's eligibility for health-care  | 
14  | coverage; scope of benefits; limitations and exclusions provided under that coverage; cost-sharing  | 
15  | requirements for specific services at the specific time of the inquiry; current deductible amounts;  | 
16  | accumulated or limited benefits; out-of-pocket maximums; any maximum policy amounts; and  | 
17  | other information required for the provider to collect the patient's portion of the bill;  | 
18  | (iv) Reflect the necessary limitations imposed on payors by the originator of the  | 
19  | eligibility and benefits information;  | 
20  | (v) Recommend a standard or common process to protect all providers from the costs of  | 
21  | services to patients who are ineligible for insurance coverage in circumstances where a payor  | 
22  | provides eligibility verification based on best information available to the payor at the date of the  | 
23  | request of eligibility.  | 
24  | (2) Developing implementation guidelines and promoting adoption of such guidelines  | 
25  | for:  | 
26  | (i) The use of the National Correct Coding Initiative code-edit policy by payors and  | 
27  | providers in the state;  | 
28  | (ii) Publishing any variations from codes and mutually exclusive codes by payors in a  | 
29  | manner that makes for simple retrieval and implementation by providers;  | 
30  | (iii) Use of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act standard group codes,  | 
31  | reason codes, and remark codes by payors in electronic remittances sent to providers;  | 
32  | (iv) The processing of corrections to claims by providers and payors.  | 
33  | (v) A standard payor-denial review process for providers when they request a  | 
34  | reconsideration of a denial of a claim that results from differences in clinical edits where no  | 
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1  | single, common-standards body or process exists and multiple conflicting sources are in use by  | 
2  | payors and providers.  | 
3  | (vi) Nothing in this section, nor in the guidelines developed, shall inhibit an individual  | 
4  | payor's ability to employ, and not disclose to providers, temporary code edits for the purpose of  | 
5  | detecting and deterring fraudulent billing activities. The guidelines shall require that each payor  | 
6  | disclose to the provider its adjudication decision on a claim that was denied or adjusted based on  | 
7  | the application of such edits and that the provider have access to the payor's review and appeal  | 
8  | process to challenge the payor's adjudication decision.  | 
9  | (vii) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to modify the rights or obligations of  | 
10  | payors or providers with respect to procedures relating to the investigation, reporting, appeal, or  | 
11  | prosecution under applicable law of potentially fraudulent billing activities.  | 
12  | (3) Developing and promoting widespread adoption by payors and providers of  | 
13  | guidelines to:  | 
14  | (i) Ensure payors do not automatically deny claims for services when extenuating  | 
15  | circumstances make it impossible for the provider to obtain a preauthorization before services are  | 
16  | performed or notify a payor within an appropriate standardized timeline of a patient's admission;  | 
17  | (ii) Require payors to use common and consistent processes and time frames when  | 
18  | responding to provider requests for medical management approvals. Whenever possible, such  | 
19  | time frames shall be consistent with those established by leading national organizations and be  | 
20  | based upon the acuity of the patient's need for care or treatment. For the purposes of this section,  | 
21  | medical management includes prior authorization of services, preauthorization of services,  | 
22  | precertification of services, post-service review, medical-necessity review, and benefits advisory;  | 
23  | (iii) Develop, maintain, and promote widespread adoption of a single, common website  | 
24  | where providers can obtain payors' preauthorization, benefits advisory, and preadmission  | 
25  | requirements;  | 
26  | (iv) Establish guidelines for payors to develop and maintain a website that providers can  | 
27  | use to request a preauthorization, including a prospective clinical necessity review; receive an  | 
28  | authorization number; and transmit an admission notification.  | 
29  | (4) To provide a report to the house and senate, on or before January 1, 2017, with  | 
30  | recommendations for establishing guidelines and regulations for systems that give patients  | 
31  | electronic access to their claims information, particularly to information regarding their  | 
32  | obligations to pay for received medical services, pursuant to 45 C.F.R. 164.524.  | 
33  | (i) To issue an anti-cancer medication report. Not later than June 30, 2014 and annually  | 
34  | thereafter, the office of the health insurance commissioner (OHIC) shall provide the senate  | 
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1  | committee on health and human services, and the house committee on corporations, with: (1)  | 
2  | Information on the availability in the commercial market of coverage for anti-cancer medication  | 
3  | options; (2) For the state employee's health benefit plan, the costs of various cancer-treatment  | 
4  | options; (3) The changes in drug prices over the prior thirty-six (36) months; and (4) Member  | 
5  | utilization and cost-sharing expense.  | 
6  | (j) To monitor the adequacy of each health plan's compliance with the provisions of the  | 
7  | federal Mental Health Parity Act, including a review of related claims processing and  | 
8  | reimbursement procedures. Findings, recommendations, and assessments shall be made available  | 
9  | to the public.  | 
10  | (k) To monitor the transition from fee-for-service and toward global and other alternative  | 
11  | payment methodologies for the payment for health-care services. Alternative payment  | 
12  | methodologies should be assessed for their likelihood to promote access to affordable health  | 
13  | insurance, health outcomes, and performance.  | 
14  | (l) To report annually, no later than July 1, 2014, then biannually thereafter, on hospital  | 
15  | payment variation, including findings and recommendations, subject to available resources.  | 
16  | (m) Notwithstanding any provision of the general or public laws or regulation to the  | 
17  | contrary, provide a report with findings and recommendations to the president of the senate and  | 
18  | the speaker of the house, on or before April 1, 2014, including, but not limited to, the following  | 
19  | information:  | 
20  | (1) The impact of the current, mandated health-care benefits as defined in §§ 27-18-48.1,  | 
21  | 27-18-60, 27-18-62, 27-18-64, similar provisions in chapters 19, 20 and 41, of title 27, and §§ 27-  | 
22  | 18-3(c), 27-38.2-1 et seq., or others as determined by the commissioner, on the cost of health  | 
23  | insurance for fully insured employers, subject to available resources;  | 
24  | (2) Current provider and insurer mandates that are unnecessary and/or duplicative due to  | 
25  | the existing standards of care and/or delivery of services in the health-care system;  | 
26  | (3) A state-by-state comparison of health-insurance mandates and the extent to which  | 
27  | Rhode Island mandates exceed other states benefits; and  | 
28  | (4) Recommendations for amendments to existing mandated benefits based on the  | 
29  | findings in (m)(1), (m)(2), and (m)(3) above.  | 
30  | (n) On or before July 1, 2014, the office of the health insurance commissioner, in  | 
31  | collaboration with the director of health and lieutenant governor's office, shall submit a report to  | 
32  | the general assembly and the governor to inform the design of accountable care organizations  | 
33  | (ACOs) in Rhode Island as unique structures for comprehensive health-care delivery and value-  | 
34  | based payment arrangements, that shall include, but not be limited to:  | 
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1  | (1) Utilization review;  | 
2  | (2) Contracting; and  | 
3  | (3) Licensing and regulation.  | 
4  | (o) On or before February 3, 2015, the office of the health insurance commissioner shall  | 
5  | submit a report to the general assembly and the governor that describes, analyzes, and proposes  | 
6  | recommendations to improve compliance of insurers with the provisions of § 27-18-76 with  | 
7  | regard to patients with mental-health and substance-use disorders.  | 
8  | 42-14.5-4. Actuary and subject matter experts.  | 
9  | The health insurance commissioner may contract with an actuary and/or other subject  | 
10  | matter experts to assist him or her in conducting the study required under subsection 42-14.5-  | 
11  | 3(g). The actuary or other expert shall serve under the direction of the health insurance  | 
12  | commissioner. Health insurance companies doing business in this state, including, but not limited  | 
13  | to, nonprofit hospital service corporations and nonprofit medical service corporations established  | 
14  | pursuant to chapters 27-19 and 27-20, and health maintenance organizations established pursuant  | 
15  | to chapter 27-41, shall be assessed according to a schedule of their direct writing of health  | 
16  | insurance in this state to pay for the compensation of the actuary. The amount assessed to all  | 
17  | health insurance companies doing business in this state for the study conducted under subsection  | 
18  | 42-14.5-3(g) shall not exceed a total of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000).  | 
19  | SECTION 2. Chapter 42-157 of the General Laws entitled "Rhode Island Health Benefit  | 
20  | Exchange" is hereby repealed in its entirety.  | 
21  | CHAPTER 42-157  | 
22  | Rhode Island Health Benefit Exchange  | 
23  | 42-157-1. Establishment of exchange.  | 
24  | Purpose. The department of administration is hereby authorized to establish the Rhode  | 
25  | Island health benefit exchange, to be known as HealthSource RI, to exercise the powers and  | 
26  | authority of a state-based exchange which shall meet the minimum requirements of the federal  | 
27  | act.  | 
28  | 42-157-2. Definitions.  | 
29  | As used in this section, the following words and terms shall have the following meanings,  | 
30  | unless the context indicates another or different meaning or intent:  | 
31  | (1) "Director" means the director of the department of administration.  | 
32  | (2) "Federal act" means the Federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Public  | 
33  | Law 111-148), as amended by the Federal Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010  | 
34  | (Public Law 111-152), and any amendments to, or regulations or guidance issued under, those  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 9 of 31  | 
1  | acts.  | 
2  | (3) "Health plan" and "qualified health plan" have the same meanings as those terms are  | 
3  | defined in § 1301 of the Federal Act.  | 
4  | (4) "Insurer" means every medical service corporation, hospital service corporation,  | 
5  | accident and sickness insurer, dental service corporation, and health maintenance organization  | 
6  | licensed under title 27, or as defined in § 42-62-4.  | 
7  | (5) "Secretary" means the secretary of the Federal Department of Health and Human  | 
8  | Services.  | 
9  | (6) "Qualified dental plan" means a dental plan as described in § 1311(d)(2)(B)(ii) of the  | 
10  | Federal Act [42 U.S.C. § 18031].  | 
11  | (7) "Qualified individuals" and "qualified employers" shall have the same meaning as  | 
12  | defined in federal law.  | 
13  | 42-157-3. General requirements.  | 
14  | (a) The exchange shall make qualified health plans available to qualified individuals and  | 
15  | qualified employers. The exchange shall not make available any health benefit plan that has not  | 
16  | been certified by the exchange as a qualified health plan in accordance with federal law.  | 
17  | (b) The exchange shall allow an insurer to offer a plan that provides limited scope dental  | 
18  | benefits meeting the requirements of § 9832(c)(2)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986  | 
19  | through the exchange, either separately or in conjunction with a qualified health plan, if the plan  | 
20  | provides pediatric dental benefits meeting the requirements of § 1302(b)(1)(J) of the Federal Act  | 
21  | [42 U.S.C. § 18022].  | 
22  | (c) Any health plan that delivers a benefit plan on the exchange that covers abortion  | 
23  | services, as defined in 45 C.F.R. § 156.280(d)(1), shall comply with segregation of funding  | 
24  | requirements, as well as an annual assurance statement to the Office of the Health Insurance  | 
25  | Commissioner, in accordance with 45 C.F.R. §§ 156.680(e)(3) and (5).  | 
26  | (d) At least one plan variation for individual market plan designs offered on the exchange  | 
27  | at each level of coverage, as defined by section 1302(d)(1) of the federal act [42 U.S.C. § 18022],  | 
28  | at which the carrier is offering a plan or plans, shall exclude coverage for abortion services as  | 
29  | defined in 45 C.F.R. § 156.280(d)(1). If the health plan proposes different rates for such plan  | 
30  | variations, each listed plan design shall include the associated rate. Except for Religious  | 
31  | Employers (as defined in Section 6033(a)(3)(A)(i) of the Internal Revenue Code), employers  | 
32  | selecting a plan under this religious exemption subsection may not designate it as the single plan  | 
33  | for employees, but shall offer their employees full-choice of small employer plans on the  | 
34  | exchange, using the employer-selected plan as the base plan for coverage. The employer is not  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 10 of 31  | 
1  | responsible for payment that exceeds that designated for the employer-selected plan.  | 
2  | (e) Health plans that offer a plan variation that excludes coverage for abortion services as  | 
3  | defined in 45 C.F.R. § 156.280(d)(l) for a religious exemption variation in the small group market  | 
4  | shall treat such a plan as a separate plan offering with a corresponding rate.  | 
5  | (f) An employer who elects a religious exemption variation shall provide written notice to  | 
6  | prospective enrollees prior to enrollment that the plan excludes coverage for abortion services as  | 
7  | defined in 45 C.F.R. § 156.280(d)(1). The carrier must include notice that the plan excludes  | 
8  | coverage for abortion services as part of the Summary of Benefits and Coverage required by 42  | 
9  | U.S.C. § 300gg-15.  | 
10  | 42-157-4. Financing.  | 
11  | (a) The department is authorized to assess insurers offering qualified health plans and  | 
12  | qualified dental plans. The revenue raised in accordance with this subsection shall not exceed the  | 
13  | revenue able to be raised through the federal government assessment and shall be established in  | 
14  | accordance and conformity with the federal government assessment upon those insurers offering  | 
15  | products on the Federal Health Benefit exchange. Revenues from the assessment shall be  | 
16  | deposited in a restricted receipt account for the sole use of the exchange and shall be exempt from  | 
17  | the indirect cost recovery provisions of § 35-4-27 of the general laws.  | 
18  | (b) The general assembly may appropriate general revenue to support the annual budget  | 
19  | for the exchange in lieu of or to supplement revenues raised from the assessment under § 42-157-  | 
20  | 4(a).  | 
21  | (c) If the director determines that the level of resources obtained pursuant to § 42-157-  | 
22  | 4(a) will be in excess of the budget for the exchange, the department shall provide a report to the  | 
23  | governor, the speaker of the house and the senate president identifying the surplus and detailing  | 
24  | how the assessment established pursuant to § 42-157-4(a) may be offset in a future year to  | 
25  | reconcile with impacted insurers and how any future supplemental or annual budget submission  | 
26  | to the general assembly may be revised accordingly.  | 
27  | 42-157-5. Regional purchasing, efficiencies, and innovation.  | 
28  | To take advantage of economies of scale and to lower costs, the exchange is hereby  | 
29  | authorized to pursue opportunities to jointly negotiate, procure or otherwise purchase exchange  | 
30  | services with or partner with another state or multiple states and to pursue a Federal Affordable  | 
31  | Care Act 1332 Waiver.  | 
32  | 42-157-6. Audit.  | 
33  | (a) Annually, the exchange shall cause to have a financial and/or performance audit of its  | 
34  | functions and operations performed in compliance with the generally accepted governmental  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 11 of 31  | 
1  | auditing standards and conducted by the state office of internal audit or a certified public  | 
2  | accounting firm qualified in performance audits.  | 
3  | (b) If the audit is not directly performed by the state office of internal audit, the selection  | 
4  | of the auditor and the scope of the audit shall be subject to the approval of the state office of  | 
5  | internal audit.  | 
6  | (c) The results of the audit shall be made public upon completion, posted on the  | 
7  | department's website and otherwise made available for public inspection.  | 
8  | 42-157-7. Exchange advisory board.  | 
9  | The exchange shall maintain an advisory board which shall be appointed by the director.  | 
10  | The director shall consider the expertise of the members of the board and make appointments so  | 
11  | that the board's composition reflects a range and diversity of skills, backgrounds and stakeholder  | 
12  | perspectives.  | 
13  | 42-157-8. Reporting.  | 
14  | HealthSource RI shall provide a monthly report to the chairpersons of the house finance  | 
15  | committee and the senate finance committee by the fifteenth day of each month beginning in July  | 
16  | 2015. The report shall include, but not be limited to, the following information: actual enrollment  | 
17  | data by market and insurer, total new and renewed customers, number of paid customers, actual  | 
18  | average premium costs by market and insurer, number of enrollees receiving financial assistance  | 
19  | as defined in the Federal Act, as well as the number of inbound calls and the number of walk-ins  | 
20  | received. The data on inbound calls shall be segregated by type of call.  | 
21  | 42-157-9. Relation to other laws.  | 
22  | Nothing in this chapter, and no action taken by the exchange pursuant to this chapter.  | 
23  | shall be construed to preempt or supersede the authority of the health insurance commissioner to  | 
24  | regulate the business of insurance within this state, the director of the department of health to  | 
25  | oversee the licensure of health care providers, the certification of health plans under chapter 17.13  | 
26  | of title 23, or the licensure of utilization review agents wider chapter 17.13 of title 23, or the  | 
27  | director of the department of human services to oversee the provision of medical assistance under  | 
28  | chapter 8 of title 40. In addition to the provisions of this chapter, all insurers offering qualified  | 
29  | health plans or qualified dental plans in this state shall comply fully with all applicable health  | 
30  | insurance laws and regulations of this state.  | 
31  | 42-157-10. Severability.  | 
32  | The provisions of this chapter are severable, and if any provision hereof shall be held  | 
33  | invalid in any circumstances, any invalidity shall not affect any other provisions or  | 
34  | circumstances. This chapter shall be construed in all respects so as to meet any constitutional  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 12 of 31  | 
1  | requirements. In carrying out the purposes and provisions of this chapter, all steps shall be taken  | 
2  | which are necessary to meet constitutional requirements.  | 
3  | SECTION 3. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby  | 
4  | amended by adding thereto the following chapter:  | 
5  | CHAPTER 95  | 
6  | THE RHODE ISLAND COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM  | 
7  | 23-95-1. Legislative findings.  | 
8  | (a) The general assembly finds the following:  | 
9  | (1) Rising health care costs are a major economic threat to Rhode Islanders:  | 
10  | (i) Between 1991 and 2014, health care spending in Rhode Island per person rose by over  | 
11  | 250% – rising much faster than income and greatly reducing disposable income; and  | 
12  | (ii) It is estimated that by 2025, the cost of health insurance for an average family of four  | 
13  | (4) will equal about one-half (1/2) of their annual income; and  | 
14  | (iv) In the U.S., about two-thirds (2/3) of personal bankruptcies have been medical cost-  | 
15  | related and of these, about three-fourths (3/4) of those bankrupted had health insurance; and  | 
16  | (v) Rhode Island private businesses bear most of the costs of employee health insurance  | 
17  | coverage and spend significant time and money choosing from a confusing array of increasingly  | 
18  | expensive plans which do not provide comprehensive coverage; and  | 
19  | (vi) Rhode Island employees and retirees are losing significant wages and pensions as  | 
20  | they are forced to pay higher amounts of health insurance and health care costs; and  | 
21  | (vii) The state and its municipalities face enormous other post employment benefits  | 
22  | (OPEB) unfunded liabilities mostly due to health insurance costs.  | 
23  | (b) Although Rhode Island significantly expanded health care coverage for its citizens  | 
24  | under the federal Affordable Care Act (ACA), it is not enough:  | 
25  | (1) Currently, about forty-seven thousand (47,000) Rhode Islanders remain uninsured,  | 
26  | and even fully implemented, the ACA would leave forty-two thousand (42,000) Rhode Islanders  | 
27  | four percent (4%) uninsured and many more underinsured - resulting in many excess deaths; and  | 
28  | (2) Efforts at the federal level to repeal or defund the ACA severely threaten the health  | 
29  | and welfare of Rhode Island citizens.  | 
30  | (c) The U.S. has hundreds of health insurance providers (i.e., multiple "payers") who  | 
31  | make our health care system unjustifiably expensive and ineffective:  | 
32  | (1) Every industrialized nation in the world, except the United States, offers universal  | 
33  | health care to its citizens under a "single payer" program and enjoys better health outcomes for  | 
34  | about one-half (1/2) the cost; and  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 13 of 31  | 
1  | (2) About one-third (1/3) of every health care dollar spent in the U.S. goes towards  | 
2  | administrative costs (e.g., paperwork, overhead, CEO salaries, and profits) rather than on actual  | 
3  | health care.  | 
4  | (d) The solution is for Rhode Island to institute an improved Medicare-for-all style single  | 
5  | payer program:  | 
6  | (1) Health care is rationed under our current multi-payer system, despite the fact that  | 
7  | Rhode Islanders already pay enough money to have comprehensive and universal health  | 
8  | insurance under a single-payer system; and  | 
9  | (2) Single payer health care would establish a true "free market" system where doctors  | 
10  | compete for patients rather than health insurance companies dictating which patients are able to  | 
11  | see which doctors and setting reimbursement rates; and  | 
12  | (3) The high costs of medical care could be lowered significantly if the state could  | 
13  | negotiate on behalf of all its residents for bulk purchasing, as well as gain access to usage and  | 
14  | price information currently kept confidential by private health insurers as "proprietary  | 
15  | information;" and  | 
16  | (4) In 1962, Canada's successful single payer program began in the province of  | 
17  | Saskatchewan (with approximately the same population as Rhode Island) and became a national  | 
18  | program within ten (10) years; and  | 
19  | (5) Single payer would provide comprehensive coverage that will include vision, hearing  | 
20  | and dental care, mental health and substance abuse services, as well as prescription medications,  | 
21  | medical equipment, supplies, diagnostics and treatments; and  | 
22  | (6) Health care providers will spend significantly less time with administrative work  | 
23  | caused by multiple health insurance company requirements and barriers to care delivery and will  | 
24  | spend significantly less for overhead costs because of streamlined billing.  | 
25  | (e) Rhode Island must act because there are currently no effective state or federal laws  | 
26  | that can adequately control rising premiums, co-pays, deductibles and medical costs, or prevent  | 
27  | private insurance companies from continuing to limit available providers and coverage.  | 
28  | 23-95-2. Legislative purpose.  | 
29  | It is the intent of the general assembly that this act establish a universal, comprehensive,  | 
30  | affordable single-payer health care insurance program that will help control health care costs  | 
31  | which shall be referred to as, "the Rhode Island comprehensive health insurance program"  | 
32  | (RICHIP). The program will be paid for by consolidating government and private payments to  | 
33  | multiple insurance carriers into a more economical and efficient improved Medicare-for-all style  | 
34  | single payer program and substituting lower progressive taxes for higher health insurance  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 14 of 31  | 
1  | premiums, co-pays, deductibles and costs in excess of caps. This program will save Rhode  | 
2  | Islanders from the current overly expensive, inefficient and unsustainable multi-payer health  | 
3  | insurance system that unnecessarily prevents access to medically necessary health care.  | 
4  | 23-95-3. Definitions.  | 
5  | As used in this chapter:  | 
6  | (1) "Affordable Care Act" or "ACA" means the federal Patient Protection and Affordable  | 
7  | Care Act (Public Law 111-148), as amended by the federal Health Care and Education  | 
8  | Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Public Law 111-152), and any amendments to, or regulations or  | 
9  | guidance issued under, those acts.  | 
10  | (2) "Carrier" means either a private health insurer authorized to sell health insurance in  | 
11  | Rhode Island or a health care service plan, i.e., any person who undertakes to arrange for the  | 
12  | provision of health care services to subscribers or enrollees, or to pay for or to reimburse any part  | 
13  | of the cost for those services, in return for a prepaid or periodic charge paid by or on behalf of the  | 
14  | subscribers or enrollees, or any person, whether located within or outside of this state, who  | 
15  | solicits or contracts with a subscriber or enrollee in this state to pay for or reimburse any part of  | 
16  | the cost of, or who undertakes to arrange or arranges for, the provision of health care services that  | 
17  | are to be provided wholly or in part in a foreign country in return for a prepaid or periodic charge  | 
18  | paid by or on behalf of the subscriber or enrollee.  | 
19  | (3) "Dependent" has the same definition as set forth in federal tax law (26 U.S.C. § 152).  | 
20  | (4) "Emergency and urgently needed services" has the same definition as set forth in the  | 
21  | federal Medicare law (42 CFR 422.113).  | 
22  | (5) "Federally matched public health program" means the state's Medicaid program under  | 
23  | Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396 et seq.) and the state's  | 
24  | Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) under Title XXI of the federal Social Security Act  | 
25  | (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1397aa et seq.).  | 
26  | (6) "For-profit provider" means any health care professional or health care institution that  | 
27  | provides payments, profits or dividends to investors or owners who do not directly provide health  | 
28  | care.  | 
29  | (7) "Medicaid" or "medical assistance" means a program that is one of the following:  | 
30  | (i) The state's Medicaid program under Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act (42  | 
31  | U.S.C. Sec. 1396 et seq.); or  | 
32  | (ii) The state's Children's Health Insurance Program under Title XXI of the federal Social  | 
33  | Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1397aa et seq.).  | 
34  | (8) "Medically necessary" means medical, surgical or other services or goods (including  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 15 of 31  | 
1  | prescription drugs) required for the prevention, diagnosis, cure, or treatment of a health-related  | 
2  | condition including any such services that are necessary to prevent a detrimental change in either  | 
3  | medical or mental health status. Medically necessary services must be provided in a cost-effective  | 
4  | and appropriate setting and must not be provided solely for the convenience of the patient or  | 
5  | service provider. "Medically necessary" does not include services or goods that are primarily for  | 
6  | cosmetic purposes; and does not include services or goods that are experimental, unless approved  | 
7  | pursuant to § 23-95-6(b).  | 
8  | (9) "Medicare" means Title XVIII of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1395  | 
9  | et seq.) and the programs thereunder.  | 
10  | (10) "Qualified health care provider" means any individual who meets requirements set  | 
11  | out in § 24-95-7(a)(1).  | 
12  | (11) "Qualified Rhode Island resident" means any individual who is a "resident" as  | 
13  | defined by §§ 44-30-5(a)(1) and (a)(2) or a dependent of that resident.  | 
14  | (12) "RICHIP" or "Rhode Island comprehensive health insurance program" means the  | 
15  | affordable, comprehensive and effective health insurance program as set forth in this chapter.  | 
16  | (13) "RICHIP participant" means qualified Rhode Island residents who are enrolled in  | 
17  | RICHIP (and not disenrolled or disqualified) at the time they seek health care.  | 
18  | 23-95-4. Rhode Island health insurance program.  | 
19  | (a) Organization. This chapter creates the Rhode Island comprehensive health insurance  | 
20  | program (RICHIP), an independent state government agency.  | 
21  | (b) Director. A director shall be appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent  | 
22  | of the senate, to lead RICHIP and serve a term of four (4) years, subject to oversight by an  | 
23  | executive board and input from an advisory committee, as set forth below. The director shall be  | 
24  | compensated in accordance with the job title and job classification established by the division of  | 
25  | human resources and approved by the general assembly. The duties of the director shall include:  | 
26  | (1) Employ staff and authorize reasonable expenditures, as necessary, from the RICHIP  | 
27  | trust fund, to pay program expenses and to administer the program, including creation and  | 
28  | oversight of RICHIP budgets;  | 
29  | (2) Oversee management of the RICHIP trust fund set forth in § 23-95-12(a) to ensure the  | 
30  | operational well-being and fiscal solvency of the program, including ensuring that all available  | 
31  | funds from all appropriate sources are collected and placed into the trust fund;  | 
32  | (3) Work with the executive board and an advisory committee of health care  | 
33  | professionals and other stakeholders pursuant to section §§ 23-95-4(c) and 23-95-4(d) to carry out  | 
34  | the provisions of this act;  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 16 of 31  | 
1  | (4) Annually establish a RICHIP benefits package for participants, including a formulary  | 
2  | and a list of other medically necessary goods, as well as a procedure for handling complaints and  | 
3  | appeals relating to the benefits package, pursuant to § 23-95-6;  | 
4  | (5) Establish RICHIP provider reimbursement and a procedure for handling provider  | 
5  | complaints and appeals as set forth in § 23-95-9;  | 
6  | (6) Implement standardized claims and reporting procedures;  | 
7  | (7) Provide for timely payments to participating providers through a structure that is well  | 
8  | organized and that eliminates unnecessary administrative costs, i.e., coordinate with the state  | 
9  | comptroller to facilitate billing from and payments to providers using the state's computerized  | 
10  | financial system, the Rhode Island financial and accounting network system (RIFANS);  | 
11  | (8) Coordinate with federal health care programs, including Medicare and Medicaid, to  | 
12  | obtain necessary waivers and streamline federal funding and reimbursement;  | 
13  | (9) Monitor billing and reimbursements to detect inappropriate behavior by providers and  | 
14  | patients and create prohibitions and penalties regarding bad faith or criminal RICHIP  | 
15  | participation, and procedures by which they will be enforced;  | 
16  | (10) Support the development of an integrated health care database for health care  | 
17  | planning and quality assurance and ensure the legally required confidentiality of all health records  | 
18  | it contains;  | 
19  | (11) Determine eligibility for RICHIP and establish procedures for enrollment,  | 
20  | disenrollment and disqualification from RICHIP, as well as procedures for handling complaints  | 
21  | and appeals from affected individuals, as set forth in § 29-95-5;  | 
22  | (12) Create RICHIP expenditure, status, and assessment reports, including, but not  | 
23  | limited to, annual reports with the following:  | 
24  | (i) Performance of the program;  | 
25  | (ii) Fiscal condition of the program;  | 
26  | (iii) Recommendations for statutory changes;  | 
27  | (iv) Receipt of payments from the federal government;  | 
28  | (v) Whether current year goals and priorities were met; and  | 
29  | (vi) Future goals and priorities.  | 
30  | (13) Review RICHIP collections and disbursements on at least a quarterly basis and  | 
31  | recommend adjustments needed to achieve budgetary targets and permit adequate access to care;  | 
32  | (14) Review budget proposals from providers pursuant to § 23-84-11(b);  | 
33  | (15) Develop procedures for accommodating:  | 
34  | (i) Employer retiree health benefits for people who have been members of RICHIP but go  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 17 of 31  | 
1  | to live as retirees out of the state;  | 
2  | (ii) Employer retiree health benefits for people who earned or accrued those benefits  | 
3  | while residing in the state prior to the implementation of RICHIP and live as retirees out of the  | 
4  | state; and  | 
5  | (iii) RICHIP coverage of health care services currently covered under the workers'  | 
6  | compensation system, including whether and how to continue funding for those services under  | 
7  | that system and whether and how to incorporate an element of experience rating.  | 
8  | (16) No later than two (2) years after the effective date of this section, develop a  | 
9  | proposal, consistent with the principles of this chapter, for provision and funding by the program  | 
10  | of long-term care coverage.  | 
11  | (c) Executive board. There shall be an executive board that provides oversight of the  | 
12  | RICHIP director.  | 
13  | (1) The members of the executive board shall be as follows:  | 
14  | (i) The governor, or designee;  | 
15  | (ii) The treasurer, or designee;  | 
16  | (iii) The president of the senate, or designee;  | 
17  | (iv) The speaker of the house of representatives, or designee;  | 
18  | (v) The secretary of the executive office of health and human services, or designee;  | 
19  | (vi) The director of the Rhode Island department of health, or designee; and  | 
20  | (vii) The Rhode Island state controller, or designee.  | 
21  | All designees shall have significant experience or familiarity with health insurance policy  | 
22  | or finance.  | 
23  | (2) Duties. The executive board shall exercise oversight over the director to ensure that  | 
24  | the provisions of this title are properly executed and may remove or replace the director.  | 
25  | Meetings shall be convened at least quarterly by the governor. The executive board shall consider  | 
26  | recommendations of the advisory committee and ensure the director responds appropriately. All  | 
27  | decisions of the executive board shall be made by a majority vote of all members.  | 
28  | (d) Advisory Committee.  | 
29  | (1) Members. The members of the advisory committee shall be as follows:  | 
30  | (i) Three (3) physicians, all of whom shall be board certified in their fields, and two (2) of  | 
31  | whom shall be primary care providers, to be appointed by the executive board;  | 
32  | (ii) Three (3) representatives of the community who represent diverse populations (e.g.,  | 
33  | the elderly, children, etc.), to be appointed by the executive board;  | 
34  | (iii) A professor of economics familiar with health care finance, to be appointed by the  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 18 of 31  | 
1  | executive board;  | 
2  | (iii) The Medicaid director of the Rhode Island executive office of health and human  | 
3  | services, or designee;  | 
4  | (iv) The behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities, and hospitals director of the  | 
5  | Rhode Island executive office of health and human services, or designee;  | 
6  | (v) The executive director of the Rhode Island Dental Association, or designee;  | 
7  | (vi) The president of the Rhode Island chapter of Physicians for a National Health  | 
8  | Program, or designee:  | 
9  | (vii) The executive director of the Rhode Island State Nurses Association, or designee;  | 
10  | (viii) The president of the Hospital Association of Rhode Island, or designee;  | 
11  | (ix) The CEO of Lifespan, or designee;  | 
12  | (x) The president of the Mental Health Association of Rhode Island, or designee;  | 
13  | (xi) The dean of the URI college of pharmacy, or designee;  | 
14  | (xii) A representative of organized labor, to be appointed by the executive board;  | 
15  | (xiii) A representative of small business, which is a business that employs less than fifty  | 
16  | (50) people, to be appointed by the executive board; and  | 
17  | (xiv) A representative of large business, which is a business that employs more than fifty  | 
18  | (50) people, to be appointed by the executive board.  | 
19  | (2) Duties. The advisory committee shall provide analyses and recommendations to the  | 
20  | executive board and director concerning any issues relating to the execution of this chapter, and  | 
21  | shall collect general concerns of RICHIP participants and providers. The committee shall prepare  | 
22  | a report after each committee meeting summarizing major issues presented and recommendations  | 
23  | for their resolution.  | 
24  | (3) Procedures. The committee shall adopt and publish its policies and procedures no  | 
25  | later than one hundred eighty (180) days after the first meeting. In addition:  | 
26  | (i) The director shall set the time, place and date for the initial meeting of the committee.  | 
27  | The initial meeting shall be scheduled not sooner than thirty (30) days nor later than ninety (90)  | 
28  | days after the appointment of the chairperson. Subsequent meetings shall occur as determined by  | 
29  | the committee, but not less than four (4) times annually.  | 
30  | (ii) The advisory committee shall elect a chair from among its members. The chairperson  | 
31  | may call additional meetings.  | 
32  | (iii) A quorum shall be at least one more than half (1/2) the number of the advisory  | 
33  | committee members. Vacancies shall not be counted when calculating the number needed for a  | 
34  | quorum.  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 19 of 31  | 
1  | (iv) Advisory committee members shall not receive a salary, but shall be reimbursed for  | 
2  | all necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their duties.  | 
3  | (v) The committee is subject to the open meetings act, chapter 46 of title 42;  | 
4  | (vi) A committee member shall be deemed to have abandoned office upon failure to  | 
5  | attend at least seventy-five percent (75%) of the committee meetings in one year, without excuse  | 
6  | approved by resolution of the committee.  | 
7  | (vii) Decisions at meetings of the committee shall be reached by majority vote of those  | 
8  | present in person and those present by electronic or telephonic means which permit, at a  | 
9  | minimum, audio-video communication. Participation in a meeting pursuant to this paragraph shall  | 
10  | constitute presence at the meeting.  | 
11  | (4) Terms.  | 
12  | (i) The terms of the members shall be four (4) years from the date of appointment or until  | 
13  | a successor has been appointed.  | 
14  | (ii) Of the initial members of the advisory committee: One-half (1/2) of the members  | 
15  | shall serve initial terms of four (4) years; and one-half (1/2) of the members shall serve initial  | 
16  | terms of two (2) years. The executive board will designate which members shall initially serve  | 
17  | two (2) year terms.  | 
18  | (iii) After the initial terms, advisory committee members shall serve for a term of four (4)  | 
19  | years.  | 
20  | (iv) Each vacancy on the committee shall be filled for the unexpired term by appointment  | 
21  | in like manner as in case of expiration of the term of a member of the committee. A vacancy shall  | 
22  | be filled by a representative from the same constituent group as the new member's predecessor.  | 
23  | 23-95-5. Coverage.  | 
24  | (a) All qualified Rhode Island residents may participate in RICHIP. The director shall  | 
25  | establish procedures to determine eligibility, enrollment, disenrollment and disqualification,  | 
26  | including criteria and procedures by which RICHIP can:  | 
27  | (1) Identify, automatically enroll, and provide a RICHIP card to qualified Rhode Island  | 
28  | residents;  | 
29  | (2) Process applications from individuals seeking to obtain RICHIP coverage for  | 
30  | dependents after the implementation date;  | 
31  | (3) Ensure eligible residents are knowledgeable and aware of their rights to health care;  | 
32  | (4) Determine whether an individual should be disenrolled (e.g., for leaving the state);  | 
33  | (5) Determine whether an individual should be disqualified (e.g., for fraudulent receipt of  | 
34  | benefits or reimbursements);  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 20 of 31  | 
1  | (6) Determine appropriate actions that should be taken with respect to individuals who  | 
2  | are disenrolled or disqualified (including civil and criminal penalties); and  | 
3  | (7) Permit individuals to request review and appeal decisions to disenroll or disqualify  | 
4  | them.  | 
5  | (b) Medicare and Medicaid eligible coverage under RICHIP shall be as follows:  | 
6  | (1) If all necessary federal waivers are obtained, qualified Rhode Island residents eligible  | 
7  | for federal Medicare ("Medicare eligible residents") shall continue to pay required fees to the  | 
8  | federal government. RICHIP shall establish procedures to ensure that Medicare eligible residents  | 
9  | shall have such amounts deducted from what they owe to RICHIP under § 23-95-12(h). RICHIP  | 
10  | shall become the equivalent of qualifying coverage under Medicare part D and Medicare  | 
11  | advantage programs, and as such shall be the vendor for coverage to RICHIP participants.  | 
12  | RICHIP shall provide Medicare eligible residents benefits equal to those available to all other  | 
13  | RICHIP participants and equal to or greater than those available through the federal Medicare  | 
14  | program. To streamline the process, RICHIP shall seek to receive federal reimbursements for  | 
15  | services and goods to Medicare eligible residents and administer all Medicare funds.  | 
16  | (2) If all necessary federal waivers are obtained, RICHIP shall become the state's sole  | 
17  | Medicaid provider. RICHIP shall create procedures to enroll all qualified Rhode Island residents  | 
18  | eligible for Medicaid ("Medicaid eligible residents") in the federal Medicaid program to ensure a  | 
19  | maximum amount of federal Medicaid funds go to the RICHIP trust fund. RICHIP shall provide  | 
20  | benefits to Medicaid eligible residents equal to those available to all other RICHIP participants.  | 
21  | (3) If all necessary federal waivers are not granted from the Medicaid or Medicare  | 
22  | programs operated under Title XVIII or XIX of the Social Security Act, the Medicaid or  | 
23  | Medicare program for which a waiver is not granted shall act as the primary insurer for those  | 
24  | eligible for such coverage, and RICHIP shall serve as the secondary or supplemental plan of  | 
25  | health insurance coverage. Until such time as a waiver is granted, the plan shall not pay for  | 
26  | services for persons otherwise eligible for the same health care benefits under the Medicaid or  | 
27  | Medicare program. The director shall establish procedures for determining amounts owed by  | 
28  | Medicare and Medicaid eligible residents for supplemental RICHIP coverage and the extent of  | 
29  | such coverage.  | 
30  | (4) The director may require Rhode Island residents to provide information necessary to  | 
31  | determine whether the resident is eligible for a federally matched public health program or for  | 
32  | Medicare, or any program or benefit under Medicare.  | 
33  | (5) As a condition of eligibility or continued eligibility for health care services under  | 
34  | RICHIP, a qualified Rhode Island resident who is eligible for benefits under Medicare shall enroll  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 21 of 31  | 
1  | in Medicare, including Parts A, B, and D.  | 
2  | (c) Veterans. RICHIP shall serve as the secondary or supplemental plan of health  | 
3  | insurance coverage for military veterans. The director shall establish procedures for determining  | 
4  | amounts owed by military veterans who are qualified residents for such supplemental RICHIP  | 
5  | coverage and the extent of such coverage.  | 
6  | (d) This chapter does not create any employment benefit, nor require, prohibit, or limit  | 
7  | the providing of any employment benefit.  | 
8  | (e) This chapter does not affect or limit collective action or collective bargaining on the  | 
9  | part of a health care provider with their employer or any other lawful collective action or  | 
10  | collective bargaining.  | 
11  | 23-95-6. Benefits.  | 
12  | (a) This chapter shall provide insurance coverage for services and goods (including  | 
13  | prescription drugs) deemed medically necessary by a qualified health care provider and that is  | 
14  | currently covered under:  | 
15  | (1) The federal Medicare program (Social Security Act title XVIII) parts A, B and D;  | 
16  | (2) The federal Medicaid program except that long-term care shall be available only to  | 
17  | those who currently qualify for Medicaid coverage;  | 
18  | (3) The state's Children's Health Insurance Program; and  | 
19  | (4) All essential health benefits mandated by the Affordable Care Act as of January 1,  | 
20  | 2017, including, services and goods within the following categories:  | 
21  | (i) Primary and preventive care;  | 
22  | (ii) Approved dietary and nutritional therapies;  | 
23  | (iii) Inpatient care;  | 
24  | (iv) Outpatient care;  | 
25  | (v) Emergency and urgently needed care;  | 
26  | (vi) Prescription drugs and medical devices;  | 
27  | (vii) Laboratory and diagnostic services;  | 
28  | (viii) Palliative care;  | 
29  | (ix) Mental health services;  | 
30  | (x) Oral health, including dental services, periodontics, oral surgery, and endodontics;  | 
31  | (xi) Substance abuse treatment services;  | 
32  | (xii) Physical therapy and chiropractic services;  | 
33  | (xiii) Vision care and vision correction;  | 
34  | (xiv) Hearing services, including coverage of hearing aids;  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 22 of 31  | 
1  | (xv) Podiatric care;  | 
2  | (xvi) Comprehensive family planning, reproductive, maternity, and newborn care; and  | 
3  | (xvii) Short-term rehabilitative services and devices.  | 
4  | (b) Additional coverage. The director shall create a procedure in consultation with the  | 
5  | RICHIP advisory committee that may permit additional medically necessary goods and services  | 
6  | beyond that provided by federal laws cited herein and within the areas set forth in § 23-95-5, if  | 
7  | the coverage is for services and goods deemed medically necessary based on credible scientific  | 
8  | evidence published in peer-reviewed medical literature generally recognized by the relevant  | 
9  | medical community, physician specialty society recommendations, and the views of physicians  | 
10  | practicing in relevant clinical areas and any other relevant factors. The director shall create  | 
11  | procedures for handling complaints and appeals concerning the benefits package.  | 
12  | (c) Restrictions shall not apply. In order for RICHIP participants to be able to receive  | 
13  | medically necessary goods and services, this chapter shall override any state law that restricts the  | 
14  | provision or use of state funds for any medically necessary goods or services, including those  | 
15  | related to family planning and reproductive health care.  | 
16  | (d) Medically necessary goods:  | 
17  | (1) Prescription drug formulary:  | 
18  | (i) In general. The director shall work with the executive office of health and human  | 
19  | services (EOHHS) Rhode Island pharmacy & therapeutics committee to establish a prescription  | 
20  | drug formulary system, which shall comply with § 24-95-6(a)(4)(i) through (a)(4)(xvii) and  | 
21  | encourage best-practices in prescribing and discourage the use of ineffective, dangerous, or  | 
22  | excessively costly medications when better alternatives are available.  | 
23  | (ii) Promotion of generics. The formulary under this subsection shall promote the use of  | 
24  | generic medications to the greatest extent possible.  | 
25  | (iii) Formulary updates and petition rights. The formulary under this subsection shall be  | 
26  | updated frequently and the director shall create a procedure for patients and providers to make  | 
27  | requests and appeal denials to add new pharmaceuticals or to remove ineffective or dangerous  | 
28  | medications from the formulary.  | 
29  | (iv) Use of off-formulary medications. The director shall promulgate rules regarding the  | 
30  | use of off-formulary medications which allow for patient access but do not compromise the  | 
31  | formulary.  | 
32  | (v) Approved devices and equipment. The director shall work with the executive office of  | 
33  | health and human services (EOHHS) Rhode Island pharmacy & therapeutics committee to  | 
34  | promulgate a list of medically necessary goods that shall be covered by RICHIP and comply  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 23 of 31  | 
1  | with§ 24-95-6(a)(4)(i) through (a)(4)(xvii).  | 
2  | (vi) Bulk purchasing. The director shall seek and implement ways to obtain goods at the  | 
3  | lowest possible cost, including bulk purchasing agreements.  | 
4  | 23-95-7. Providers.  | 
5  | (a) Rhode Island providers.  | 
6  | (1) Licensing. Participating providers must meet state licensing requirements in order to  | 
7  | participate in RICHIP. No provider whose license is under suspension or has been revoked may  | 
8  | participate in the program.  | 
9  | (2) Participation. All providers may participate in RICHIP by providing items on the  | 
10  | RICHIP benefits list for which they are licensed. Providers may elect either to participate fully, or  | 
11  | not at all, in the program.  | 
12  | (3) For-profit providers. For-profit providers may continue to offer services and goods in  | 
13  | Rhode Island, but are prohibited from charging patients more than RICHIP reimbursement rates  | 
14  | for covered services and goods and must notify qualified Rhode Island residents when the  | 
15  | services and goods they offer will not be reimbursed fully under RICHIP.  | 
16  | (b) Out-of-state providers. Except for emergency and urgently needed service, as set forth  | 
17  | in § 23-95-7(d), RICHIP shall not pay for health care services obtained outside of Rhode Island  | 
18  | unless the following requirements are met:  | 
19  | (1) The patient secures a written referral from a qualified Rhode Island physician prior to  | 
20  | seeking such services; and  | 
21  | (2) The referring physician determines that the services are not available in the state or  | 
22  | cannot be performed within the state at the level of expertise that would provide medically  | 
23  | necessary care.  | 
24  | (c) Out-of-state provider reimbursement. The program shall pay out-of-state health care  | 
25  | providers an amount not to exceed RICHIP rates as set forth in § 23-95-9(a). RICHIP participants  | 
26  | are responsible for paying out-of-state providers for costs in excess of RICHIP reimbursements.  | 
27  | The RICHIP participant is responsible for paying all costs of out-of-state services that fail to meet  | 
28  | the requirements of §§ 23-95-7(b)(1) and (b)(2).  | 
29  | (d) Out-of-state emergency provider reimbursement. The program shall pay for  | 
30  | emergency and urgently needed services and goods that are obtained by the RICHIP participant  | 
31  | anywhere outside of Rhode Island to the same extent allowed if such services or goods were  | 
32  | provided in Rhode Island in accordance with § 23-95-9. RICHIP participants are responsible for  | 
33  | paying out-of-state emergency providers for costs in excess of RICHIP reimbursements.  | 
34  | (e) Out-of-state residents.  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 24 of 31  | 
1  | (1) In general. Rhode Island providers who provide any services to individuals who are  | 
2  | not RICHIP participants shall not be reimbursed by RICHIP and must seek reimbursement from  | 
3  | those individuals or other sources.  | 
4  | (2) Emergency care exception. Nothing in this chapter shall prevent any individual from  | 
5  | receiving or any provider from providing emergency health care services and goods in Rhode  | 
6  | Island. The director shall adopt rules to provide reimbursement; however, the rules shall  | 
7  | reasonably limit reimbursement to protect the fiscal integrity of RICHIP. The director shall  | 
8  | implement procedures to secure reimbursement from any appropriate third-party funding source  | 
9  | or from the individual to whom the emergency services were rendered.  | 
10  | 23-95-8. Cross-border employees.  | 
11  | (a) State residents employed out-of-state. If an individual is employed out-of-state by an  | 
12  | employer that is subject to Rhode Island state law, the employer and employee shall be required  | 
13  | to pay the payroll taxes as to that employee as if the employment were in the state. If an  | 
14  | individual is employed out-of-state by an employer that is not subject to Rhode Island state law,  | 
15  | the employee health coverage provided by the out-of-state employer to a resident working out-of-  | 
16  | state shall serve as the employee's primary plan of health coverage, and RICHIP shall serve as the  | 
17  | employee's secondary plan of health coverage. The director shall establish procedures for  | 
18  | determining amounts owed by residents employed out-of-state for such supplemental secondary  | 
19  | RICHIP coverage and the extent of such coverage.  | 
20  | (b) Out-of-state residents employed in the state. The payroll tax set forth in § 23-95-12(i)  | 
21  | shall apply to any out-of-state resident who is employed or self-employed in the state. However,  | 
22  | such out-of-state residents shall be able to take a credit for amounts they spend on health benefits  | 
23  | for themselves that would otherwise be covered by RICHIP if the individual were a RICHIP  | 
24  | participant. The out-of-state resident's employer shall be able to take a credit against such payroll  | 
25  | taxes regardless of the form of the health benefit (e.g., health insurance, a self-insured plan, direct  | 
26  | services, or reimbursement for services), to ensure that the revenue proposal does not relate to  | 
27  | employment benefits in violation of the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act  | 
28  | ("ERISA") law. For non-employment-based spending by individuals, the credit shall be available  | 
29  | for and limited to spending for health coverage (not out-of-pocket health spending). The credit  | 
30  | shall be available without regard to how little is spent or how sparse the benefit. The credit may  | 
31  | only be taken against the payroll taxes set forth in § 23-95-12(i). Any excess amount may not be  | 
32  | applied to other tax liability. For employment-based health benefits, the credit shall be distributed  | 
33  | between the employer and employee in the same proportion as the spending by each for the  | 
34  | benefit. The employer and employee may each apply their respective portion of the credit to their  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 25 of 31  | 
1  | respective portion of the payroll taxes set forth in § 23-95-12(i). If any provision of this clause or  | 
2  | any application of it shall be ruled to violate ERISA, the provision or the application of it shall be  | 
3  | null and void and the ruling shall not affect any other provision or application of this section or  | 
4  | this chapter.  | 
5  | 23-95-9. Provider reimbursement.  | 
6  | (a) Rates for services. RICHIP reimbursements to providers shall match the highest  | 
7  | reimbursement rates offered by Medicare or Medicaid to Rhode Island qualified residents that are  | 
8  | in effect at the time services and goods are provided. If the director determines that there are no  | 
9  | such federal reimbursement rates or that such rates are significantly different from those in  | 
10  | neighboring states, the director shall set additional or alternative rates in consultation with the  | 
11  | RICHIP advisory committee such that rates of reimbursement are fair and reasonable. The  | 
12  | director in consultation with the RICHIP advisory committee shall review the rates at least  | 
13  | annually and shall establish procedures by which complaints about reimbursement rates may be  | 
14  | reviewed and appealed.  | 
15  | (b) Rates for goods. The prices to be paid to providers for medically necessary goods  | 
16  | (e.g., prescription drugs, approved devices and equipment) shall be established annually by the  | 
17  | director in consultation with the advisory committee.  | 
18  | (c) Billing and payments. Providers shall submit billing for services to RICHIP  | 
19  | participants in the form of electronic invoices entered into RIFANS, the state's computerized  | 
20  | financial system. The director shall coordinate the manner of processing and payment with the  | 
21  | office of accounts and control and the RIFANS support team within the division of information  | 
22  | technology. Payments shall be made by check or electronic funds transfer in accordance with  | 
23  | terms and procedures coordinated by the director and the office of accounts and control and  | 
24  | consistent with the fiduciary management of the RICHIP trust fund.  | 
25  | (d) Provider restrictions. Providers who accept any payment from RICHIP may not bill  | 
26  | any patient for any covered benefit. Providers cannot use any of their operating budgets for  | 
27  | expansion, profit, excessive executive income, marketing, or major capital purchases or leases.  | 
28  | 23-95-10. Private insurance companies.  | 
29  | (a) Non-duplication. It is unlawful for a private health insurer to sell health insurance  | 
30  | coverage to qualified Rhode Island residents that duplicates the benefits provided under this  | 
31  | chapter. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as prohibiting the sale of health insurance  | 
32  | coverage for any additional benefits not covered by this chapter, including additional benefits that  | 
33  | an employer may provide to employees or their dependents, or to former employees or their  | 
34  | dependents (e.g., multiemployer plans can continue to provide wrap-around coverage for any  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 26 of 31  | 
1  | benefits not provided by RICHIP).  | 
2  | (b) Displaced employees. Re-education and job placement of persons employed in Rhode  | 
3  | Island-located enterprises who have lost their jobs as a result of this chapter shall be managed by  | 
4  | the Rhode Island department of labor and training or an appropriate federal retraining program.  | 
5  | The director may provide funds from RICHIP or funds otherwise appropriated for this purpose  | 
6  | for retraining and assisting job transition for individuals employed or previously employed in the  | 
7  | fields of health insurance, health care service plans, and other third-party payments for health care  | 
8  | or those individuals providing services to health care providers to deal with third-party payers for  | 
9  | health care, whose jobs may be or have been ended as a result of the implementation of the  | 
10  | program, consistent with applicable laws.  | 
11  | 23-95-11. Budgeting.  | 
12  | (a) Operating budget. Annually, the director shall create an operating budget for the  | 
13  | program that includes the costs for all benefits set forth in § 23-95-5 and the costs for RICHIP  | 
14  | administration. The director shall determine appropriate reimbursement rates for benefits  | 
15  | pursuant to § 23-95-9(a). The operating budget shall be reviewed by the advisory committee and  | 
16  | approved by the executive board prior to submission to the governor and general assembly.  | 
17  | (b) Capital expenditures. The director shall work with the advisory committee,  | 
18  | representatives from state entities involved with provider capital expenditures (e.g., the Rhode  | 
19  | Island department of administration office of capital projects, the Rhode Island Health and  | 
20  | Educational Building Corporation, etc.), and providers to help ensure that capital expenditures  | 
21  | proposed by providers, including amounts to be spent on construction and renovation of health  | 
22  | facilities and major equipment purchases, will address health care needs of RICHIP participants.  | 
23  | To the extent that providers are seeking to use RICHIP funds for capital expenditures, the director  | 
24  | shall have the authority to approve or deny such expenditures.  | 
25  | (c) Prohibition against co-mingling operations and capital improvement funds. It is  | 
26  | prohibited to use funds under this chapter that are earmarked:  | 
27  | (1) For operations for capital expenditures; or  | 
28  | (2) For capital expenditures for operations.  | 
29  | 23-95-12. Financing.  | 
30  | (a) RICHIP trust fund. There shall be established a RICHIP trust fund into which funds  | 
31  | collected pursuant to this chapter are deposited and from which funds are distributed. All money  | 
32  | collected and received shall be used exclusively to finance RICHIP. The governor or general  | 
33  | assembly may provide funds to the RICHIP trust fund, but may not remove or borrow funds from  | 
34  | the RICHIP trust fund.  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 27 of 31  | 
1  | (b) Revenue proposal. After consulting with the RICHIP advisory committee and gaining  | 
2  | approval of the RICHIP executive board, the director shall submit to the governor and the general  | 
3  | assembly a revenue plan and, if required, legislation (referred to collectively in this section as the  | 
4  | "revenue proposal") to provide the revenue necessary to finance RICHIP. The initial revenue  | 
5  | proposal shall be submitted for the fiscal year commencing the year after this this chapter is  | 
6  | enacted and annually, thereafter. The basic structure of the initial revenue proposal will be based  | 
7  | on a consideration of:  | 
8  | (1) Anticipated savings from a single payer program;  | 
9  | (2) Government funds available for health care;  | 
10  | (3) Private funds available for health care; and  | 
11  | (4) Replacing current regressive health insurance payments made to multiple health  | 
12  | insurance carriers with progressive contributions to a single payer (RICHIP) in order to make  | 
13  | health care insurance affordable and remove unnecessary barriers to health care access.  | 
14  | Subsequent proposals shall adjust the RICHIP contributions, based on projections from the total  | 
15  | RICHIP costs in the previous year, and shall include a five (5) year plan for adjusting RICHIP  | 
16  | contributions to best meet the goals set forth in this section and § 23-95-2.  | 
17  | (c) Anticipated savings. It is anticipated that RICHIP will lower health care costs by:  | 
18  | (1) Eliminating payments to private health insurance carriers;  | 
19  | (2) Reducing paperwork and administrative expenses for both providers and payers  | 
20  | created by the marketing, sales, eligibility checks, network contract management, issues  | 
21  | associated multiple benefit packages, and other administrative waste associated with the current  | 
22  | multi-payer private health insurance system;  | 
23  | (3) Allowing the planning and delivery of a public health strategy for the entire  | 
24  | population of Rhode Island;  | 
25  | (4) Improving access to preventive health care; and  | 
26  | (5) Negotiating on behalf of the state for bulk purchasing of medical supplies and  | 
27  | pharmaceuticals.  | 
28  | (d) Federal funds. The director shall seek and obtain waivers and other approvals relating  | 
29  | to Medicaid, the Children's Health Insurance Program, Medicare, the ACA, and any other  | 
30  | relevant federal programs so that:  | 
31  | (1) Federal funds and other subsidies for health care that would otherwise be paid to the  | 
32  | state and its residents and health care providers, would be paid by the federal government to the  | 
33  | state and deposited into the RICHIP trust fund,  | 
34  | (2) Programs would be waived and such funding from federal programs in Rhode Island  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 28 of 31  | 
1  | would be replaced or merged into RICHIP so it can operate as a single payer program;  | 
2  | (3) Maximum federal funding for health care is sought even if any necessary waivers or  | 
3  | approvals are not obtained and multiple sources of funding with RICHIP trust fund monies are  | 
4  | pooled, so that RICHIP can act as much as possible like a single payer program to maximize  | 
5  | benefits to Rhode Islanders; and  | 
6  | (4) Federal financial participation in the programs that are incorporated into RICHIP are  | 
7  | not jeopardized.  | 
8  | (e) State funds. State funds that would otherwise be appropriated to any governmental  | 
9  | agency, office, program, instrumentality, or institution for services and benefits covered under  | 
10  | RICHIP shall be directed into the RICHIP trust fund. Payments to the fund pursuant to this  | 
11  | section shall be in an amount equal to the money appropriated for those purposes in the fiscal  | 
12  | year beginning immediately preceding the effective date of this chapter.  | 
13  | (f) Private funds. Private grants (e.g., from nonprofit corporations) and other funds  | 
14  | specifically ear-marked for health care (e.g., from litigation against tobacco companies, opioid  | 
15  | manufacturers, etc.), shall also be put into the RICHIP trust fund.  | 
16  | (g) Assignments from RICHIP participants. Receipt of health care services under the plan  | 
17  | shall be deemed an assignment by the RICHIP participant of any right to payment for services  | 
18  | from a policy of insurance, a health benefit plan or other source. The other source of health care  | 
19  | benefits shall pay to the fund all amounts it is obligated to pay to, or on behalf of, the RICHIP  | 
20  | participant for covered health care services. The director may commence any action necessary to  | 
21  | recover the amounts due.  | 
22  | (h) Replacing current health insurance payments with progressive contributions. Instead  | 
23  | of making health insurance payments to multiple carriers (i.e., for premiums, co-pays,  | 
24  | deductibles, and costs in excess of caps) for limited coverage, individuals and entities subject to  | 
25  | Rhode Island taxation pursuant to § 44-30-1 shall pay progressive contributions to the RICHIP  | 
26  | trust fund (referred to collectively in this section as the "RICHIP contributions") for  | 
27  | comprehensive coverage. These RICHIP contributions shall be set and adjusted over time to an  | 
28  | appropriate level to:  | 
29  | (1) Cover the actual cost of the program;  | 
30  | (2) Ensure that higher brackets of income subject to specified taxes shall be assessed at a  | 
31  | higher marginal rate than lower brackets; and  | 
32  | (3) Protect the economic welfare of small businesses, low-income earners and working  | 
33  | families through tax credits or exemptions.  | 
34  | (i) Contributions based on earned income. The amounts currently paid by employers and  | 
  | LC003273 - Page 29 of 31  | 
1  | employees for health insurance shall initially be replaced by a ten percent (10%) payroll tax,  | 
2  | based on the projected average payroll of employees over three (3) previous calendar years. The  | 
3  | employer shall pay eighty percent (80%) and the employee shall pay twenty percent (20%) of this  | 
4  | payroll tax, except that an employer may agree to pay all or part of the employee's share. Self-  | 
5  | employed individuals shall initially pay one-hundred percent (100%) of the payroll tax. The ten  | 
6  | percent (10%) initial rate will be adjusted by the director so that higher brackets of income  | 
7  | subject to these taxes shall be assessed at a higher marginal rate than lower brackets and so that  | 
8  | small businesses and lower income earners receive a credit or exemption.  | 
9  | (j) Contributions based on unearned income. There shall be a progressive contribution  | 
10  | based on unearned income, i.e., capital gains, dividends, interest, profits, and rents. Initially, the  | 
11  | unearned income RICHIP contributions shall be equal to ten percent (10%) of such unearned  | 
12  | income. The ten percent (10%) initial rate may be adjusted by the director to allow for a  | 
13  | graduated progressive exemption or credit for individuals with lower unearned income levels.  | 
14  | 23-95-13. Implementation.  | 
15  | (a) State laws and regulations.  | 
16  | (1) In general. The director shall work with the executive board and receive such  | 
17  | assistance as may be necessary from other state agencies and entities to examine state laws and  | 
18  | regulations and to make recommendations necessary to conform such laws and regulations to  | 
19  | properly implement the RICHIP program. The director shall report recommendations to the  | 
20  | governor and the general assembly.  | 
21  | (2) Anti-trust laws. The intent of this chapter is to exempt activities provided for under  | 
22  | this chapter from state antitrust laws and to provide immunity from federal antitrust laws through  | 
23  | the state action doctrine.  | 
24  | (b) Severability. If any provision or application of this chapter shall be held to be invalid,  | 
25  | or to violate or be inconsistent with any applicable federal law or regulation, that shall not affect  | 
26  | other provisions or applications of this chapter which can be given effect without that provision  | 
27  | or application; and to that end, the provisions and applications of this chapter are severable.  | 
28  | (c) The director shall complete an implementation plan to provide health care coverage  | 
29  | for qualified residents in accordance with this chapter within six (6) months of the effective date.  | 
30  | SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage.  | 
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  | LC003273 - Page 30 of 31  | 
EXPLANATION  | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL  | |
OF  | |
A N A C T  | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH INSURANCE  | |
PROGRAM  | |
***  | |
1  | This act would repeal the "Rhode Island Health Care Reform Act of 2004 – Health  | 
2  | Insurance Oversight" as well as the "Rhode Island Health Benefit Exchange." This act would also  | 
3  | establish a universal, comprehensive, affordable single-payer health care insurance program and  | 
4  | help control health care costs, which shall be referred to as, "the Rhode Island Comprehensive  | 
5  | Health Insurance Program" (RICHIP). The program will be paid for by consolidating government  | 
6  | and private payments to multiple insurance carriers into a more economical and efficient  | 
7  | improved Medicare-for-all style single payer program and substituting lower progressive taxes  | 
8  | for higher health insurance premiums, co-pays, deductibles and costs due to caps. This program  | 
9  | will save Rhode Islanders from the current overly expensive, inefficient and unsustainable multi-  | 
10  | payer health insurance system that unnecessarily prevents access to medically necessary health  | 
11  | care.  | 
12  | This act would take effect upon passage.  | 
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  | LC003273 - Page 31 of 31  |