The Statewide Health Care Proposal - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

The Statewide Health Care Proposal

Description:

Four Cabinet Secretaries Education, Budget, Admin and Insurance Commissioner ... At a minimum COBRA coverage shall be provided by the board at the employee's expense ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:30
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: JayH88
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Statewide Health Care Proposal


1
The Statewide Health Care Proposal
  • What it means for local education agencies and
    consortia

2
Overview of the Legislation
  • Public School Employees Benefit Board ( 9311
    p.9)
  • Four Cabinet SecretariesEducation, Budget, Admin
    and Insurance Commissioner
  • Four Employee RepresentativesPSEA
  • Four School Board Representativesa consortium
    board member is one of the four initially
    appointed
  • Qualified majority voteat least two votes from
    each group of appointees

3
Overview of the Legislation
  • Qualified Majority Voting Provision 9335(k)
    p.44
  • Statewide plan implementation, standard benefit
    package, eligibility, major contracts, excess
    funds utilization, per employee cost, cost
    containment measures, by-laws and major internal
    operating policy and procedures.

4
Overview of the Legislation
  • School Employee Health Benefits Study and
    Evaluation ( 9321 p.15)
  • Data collection on existing health care
    arrangements covering school employees from all
    providers and employers cost is a ???
  • Cost, coverages, financial obligations for plan
    termination, claims run-off, collective
    bargaining agreement provisions on health care,
    employee cost sharing arrangements and post
    retirement coverage claims data.
  • No later than 60 days after the board is
    constituted

5
Overview of the Legislation
  • Post Retirement Benefits Study 9312 (i) p. 14
  • The board shall conduct an assessment of
    postretirement health care liability and publish
    a report detailing the scope of the liability.

6
Overview of the Legislation
  • Board Review and Election ( 9322 p.22)
  • Examine options to aggregate either statewide or
    regionally
  • Investigate creation of a statewide health
    benefits program
  • Goal improving the overall affordability
  • Cost projections predicated on a plan that
    provides a levelconsistent with those now
    provided to most school employees.

7
Overview of the Legislation
  • Election to Proceed 9322(b) p.22
  • Ten months after board is constituted
  • the board shall decide whether to implement a
    statewide programor to implement an alternative
    measures program.

8
Overview of the Legislation
  • Plan Adoption ( 9323 p.23)
  • Within three months of electing to proceed with a
    statewide plan, the board shall verify that
    implementation of statewide health care program
    will result in reduction in the statewide
    aggregate cost of the purchase of benefits or the
    rate of growth in costs
  • Qualified majority vote

9
Overview of the Legislation
  • Parameters of the Plan 9323 (b)(1) p.23
  • Eligibility for school employees/dependents
  • Definition of school employee
  • Any person regularly employed by or in a public
    school entity for which work he or she is
    receiving regular remuneration as an officer,
    administrator, employee, or long-term substitute
    excluding, however, any independent contractor,
    person compensated on a fee basis, or, unless
    otherwise determined by the board, any hourly
    school employee provided that, school employee
    shall include any employee of public school
    entity who has a position for which eligibility
    in a health care plan sponsored by the public
    school entity is offered by virtue of his or her
    employment is in effect as of the effective date
    of this part.

10
Overview of the Legislation
  • Parameters of the Plan 9323 (b)(1) p.23
  • Benefits
  • Disclosure of any cost sharingpercentage, flat
    fee with escalator, statewide or regional
  • Establishment of regions
  • The design of the statewide pool or regional
    pools for purchasing services and managing risks
  • Transition rules

11
Overview of the Legislation
  • Legislative and Public Review 9323 (e) p.25
  • Plan published in PA Bulletin and on the web
  • Three public hearings
  • Submitted to Senate and House Education
    Committees for comment within 45 days

12
Overview of the Legislation
  • Final Plan Adoption 9323 (f) p.26
  • After publication and hearings the board will
    review all testimony and comments
  • Changes by qualified majority vote
  • Final plan within 90 days of publication

13
Overview of the Legislation
  • Failure to Reach Consensus 9323 (g) p.26
  • The board can adopt an alternative measures plan
    if it fails to approve a final plan by a
    qualified majority vote
  • If no plan is adopted notice is required to the
    Governor, Senate President Pro Tem and Speaker of
    the House

14
Overview of the Legislation
  • Program Design 9322 (b) p.27)
  • Upon adoption of a statewide health plan, the
    board shall design a plan that provides a level
    of health care benefits consistent with those now
    provided to most school employees.
  • May be administered differently within each
    region as long as the standard benefit package is
    substantially equivalent in coverage.

15
Overview of the Legislation
  • Mandatory Participation ( 9332 p.29)
  • All districts, IUs, CTCs and charter schools
  • Philadelphia excluded
  • Philadelphia opts out of statewide health plan.
  • In continuing coverage from previous briefings,
    Pennsylvania's Bulletin (9/24, McCaffrey)
    reported that Philadelphia "teachers have opted
    out of participating in a state plan to reduce
    healthcare costs for Pennsylvania school
    districts." Ted Kirsch, the former president of
    the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers and now
    the president of the statewide Pennsylvania
    Federation of Teachers, announced the decision.
    State Rep. Steve Nickol (R-Hanover) "hopes to
    lure them back." Nickol said, "I hope the state
    picking up some of the healthcare increase may
    cause Philadelphia to voluntarily enter." Jack
    Steinberg, chief trustee of the Philadelphia
    Federation of Teachers (PFT) Health and Welfare
    Fund, explained, "We already have a health and
    welfare plan. ... If there were a regional
    consortium, we would dwarf it." Regarding the
    projected benefits of the statewide plan,
    Steinberg added, "We are already doing what the
    state is proposing to do and we are doing it more
    successfully."

16
Overview of the Legislation
  • Mandatory Participation ( 9332 p.29)
  • Transition plans submitted within reasonable
    period of time
  • Where collective bargaining agreements are in
    effect covering health care, participation not
    required until expiration (contract by contract)
  • Earlier if mutual agreement

17
Overview of Legislation
  • Continuation of Coverage and Transfer Employees
    ( 9333 p.32)
  • Annuitants may opt in at their own expense
  • Eligible school retirees pay the 2 admin fee
  • Others not eligible for coverage under 513 of
    the School Code can also elect to continue
    coverage by district policy or collective
    bargaining agreement
  • At a minimum COBRA coverage shall be provided by
    the board at the employees expense

18
Overview of Legislation
  • Continuation of Coverage and Transfer Employees
    9333 (c) p.34
  • If a school employee on or before January 1, 2008
    is regularly employed at a school worksite by a
    non-school employer, the employer shall pay for
    coverage in the plan.
  • School responsible for collection from employer.

19
Overview of Legislation
  • Partnership for Stable Benefits Funding
    9334(b) p.35
  • Plan costs for school employees are regionally
    determined

20
Overview of the Legislation
  • Limitation on Commonwealth Cost Share 9334(f)
    p.35
  • If the aggregate plan cost exceeds any surplus
    carryover from the previous year plus the amount
    of employee premium sharing, the board shall
    submit a request to the Secretary of the Budget.
  • The board shall request the lesser of
  • 50
  • The percent increase in the per enrollee private
    health insurance premium for all benefits as
    defined the National Health Expenditure Data
    published by the Centers for Medicare and
    Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of HHS
    (see next slide for index history)

21
Percent Change in Per Enrollee Private Health
Insurance Costs 1970-2005
22
Overview of the Legislation
  • Allocation of Commonwealth Contribution 9334(h)
    p. 35
  • The Commonwealth contribution is based on the
    public school entitys market value/ income aid
    ratio.
  • During the transition, payments by school
    entities shall be no less than the total amount
    paid in the previous year less employee cost
    sharing.

23
Overview of the Legislation
  • Applicability 9334 (l) p.39
  • Any expenditures necessary to fund participation
    in this program shall qualify as costs incurred
    under section 333(f)(2)(ix) of the Act of June
    27, 2006 (1st Sp.Sess., P.L. 1873, No. 1), known
    as the Taxpayer Relief Act.

24
Overview of Legislation
  • Collective Bargaining, Mediation and Binding
    Arbitration 9338 (e) p.54
  • This law or any other law may not permit,
    authorize or require collective bargaining,
    mediation or binding arbitration to create, alter
    or modify health benefits.
  • Any collective bargaining agreement executed
    after the effective date of the law must contain
    a will join provision
  • Schools and employees may bargain any benefits
    that are not included in the standard benefit
    package and may bargain post retirement benefits

25
Whats On the Table?
  • OFF
  • Standard Benefits Package
  • Coverage for hourly employees
  • Premium sharing
  • ON
  • Vision
  • Dental
  • The Cost of Retiree Coverage

26
Overview of Legislation
  • Alternative Measures Program (9351 p.55)
  • Largely based on Ohio consortium plan
  • Default, only after statewide approach fails
  • Formation of pools
  • Establishment of best practices

27
Overview of Legislation
  • Retirement Health Savings Plan ( 9361 p.58)
  • Required plan creation
  • Employee contributions
  • Bargainable
  • A mandatory school employee contribution may be
    established in a collective bargaining agreement
  • A mandatory school employer contribution equal to
    the public school entitys savings in FICA and
    Medicare

28
The Big Questions
  • What is the plan?
  • What is the cost?
  • Who is eligible?
  • What is the cost of a new state bureaucracy?
  • What happens to consortia?

29
Opt Out?
  • If the legislation is designed to save school
    resources shouldnt the board identify costs and
    allow an opt-out for any school employer with
    lower costs?
  • Unfortunately, we wont know until after the
    fact.

30
Governors Newsletter Health Care Solutions that
help Taxpayers, School Employees September 21,
2007 The rising cost of providing health care
to employees is one of the greatest financial
challenges facing Pennsylvanias school districts
today. This mounting burden drains precious
resources and detracts funds from the core
mission of our public school system educating
students. Statewide, school districts spend 1.5
billion on medical and prescription drug
coverage. Between 2003 and 2005, health care
premiums paid by school districts soared a
shocking 24 percent. This week, I called on the
General Assembly to adopt legislation creating a
statewide health benefits system for school
employees, similar to the system that covers
state employees. We have already proven that it
is possible to protect taxpayers while
maintaining high-quality benefits, and it is time
to replicate these results in Pennsylvanias
school districts.
31
There are several major benefits to this
approach. In addition to preserving the quality
of health benefits our educators receive and
controlling costs, adopting a statewide system
will help to eliminate a major stumbling block in
local contract negotiations. Once health care is
off the bargaining table, we hope to see a drop
in the number of strikes by teachers. The
legislation, House Bill 1841, will not affect any
existing collective bargaining agreement.
Instead, school districts would enter the
proposed statewide program after existing
contracts expire. Participation would be
mandatory for all school districts except
Philadelphia and the program would serve
approximately 230,000 school employees. My
proposal also includes first-ever state funding
to help pay for increases in school employee
health benefit costs. By leveraging the
purchasing power of all school districts and
making the state a partner, we will at a minimum
curb the rising cost of health care and at best
achieve significant savings for Pennsylvania
taxpayers. With strong bipartisan support, I
hope that the General Assembly will take action
this fall to make this statewide school employee
health benefits system a reality for Pennsylvania
taxpayers and educators. Sincerely,
                      
32
Questions and Concerns
  • The creation of PEBTF for state workers in 1988
    is not a model for school employees. Regional
    consortia which have already realized cost
    savings for schools were not in place. State
    workers have for the most part have one employer
    not more than 600!

33
Questions and Concerns
  • The transition period will be significant since
    those with longer term collective bargaining
    agreements will not be in the state plan in fact
    some schools may have some employees in and some
    out.
  • State funding is a great benefit. But the state
    share is capped. Who pays the difference?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com