BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó




                   Senate Appropriations Committee Fiscal Summary
                            Senator Kevin de León, Chair


          AB 900 (Alejo) - Medi-Cal: distinct part nursing facilities.
          
          Amended: June 25, 2013          Policy Vote: Health 9-0
          Urgency: Yes                    Mandate: No
          Hearing Date: August 30, 2013                           
          Consultant: Brendan McCarthy    
          
          SUSPENSE FILE.
          
          
          Bill Summary: AB 900, an urgency measure, would eliminate  
          reductions in Medi-Cal payments to distinct part nursing  
          facilities adopted as part of the 2011-12 budget for services  
          provided on or after July 1, 2013.

          Fiscal Impact: 
              Annual increased costs for payments to Medi-Cal providers  
              of $60 million per year (General Fund), based on estimates  
              made by the Department of Health Care Services. This  
              increase in state costs reflects a reversal of both the  
              rollback to 2008-09 rates and the 10% provider payment  
              reduction going forward from the enactment of the bill.

          Background: The state's Medi-Cal program provides health care  
          coverage for low income children, their families, and certain  
          disabled residents of the state. Of the roughly 8.2 million  
          people enrolled in Medi-Cal, about 30% are served through the  
          fee-for-service program. In fee-for-service Medi-Cal, the  
          Department of Health Care Services pays providers, such as  
          private hospitals, for the costs of providing treatment to  
          program participants. The remaining 70% of Medi-Cal  
          beneficiaries receive coverage through manage care plans. The  
          Department negotiates capitated payments with those manage care  
          plans.

          Over the last several years, there have been a variety of  
          attempts by the state to reduce payment rates to Medi-Cal  
          providers, in an effort to reduce state spending on the program.  
          Many of those rate reductions have been enjoined by the courts  
          or repealed and replaced by different budgetary actions. 

          As part of the 2011-12 budget (AB 97, Committee on Budget,  








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          Statutes of 2011), the state imposed a 10% reduction in the  
          rates to be paid to all fee-for-service Medi-Cal providers and  
          required the capitated rates paid to managed care plans to be  
          reduced by an actuarially equivalent amount. In addition,  
          payment rates for distinct part skilled nursing facilities  
          (located on a hospital campus) were "rolled back" to the payment  
          rates in place in 2008-09 and then reduced by 10%. Rate  
          reductions were made retroactive to June 1, 2011 for all  
          fee-for-service providers. 

          The federal government has approved the proposed rate  
          reductions. However, implementation was enjoined while legal  
          challenges to the reductions proceeded. The litigants in those  
          cases appear to have exhausted their appeals, although the  
          Department of Health Care Services has not yet announced when  
          the rate reductions will go into effect.
           
          Pending federal approval and settlement of the outstanding  
          lawsuits, the Department has been paying both fee-for-service  
          and managed care providers without applying the reductions. The  
          Department of Health Care Services indicates that once legal  
          challenges to the rate reductions have been settled, it is  
          required under federal law to make the rate reductions  
          retrospective to June 1, 2011 (for fee-for-service providers).  
          Therefore the Department indicates that at the conclusion of the  
          legal challenges, it will reduce payment rates by 10% and  
          further reduce payments over several years in an amount that  
          will allow the state to recoup the savings that did not occur  
          while the rate reductions were under legal challenge. Rate  
          reductions for Medi-Cal managed care providers will be made  
          going forward, but the state will not recoup unrealized savings.

          Proposed Law: AB 900 would eliminate reductions in Medi-Cal  
          payments to distinct part nursing facilities adopted as part of  
          the 2011-12 budget, for services provided on or after July 1,  
          2013.

          Specifically, the bill would require that payments for Medi-Cal  
          fee-for-service benefits provided in distinct part skilled  
          nursing facilities to be determined without the roll back to  
          2008-09 rates and without the 10% rate reduction.

          The bill requires the Department to seek necessary federal  
          approvals and exempts implementation of the bill from the  








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          Administrative Procedure Act.

          This bill is an urgency measure.

          Related Legislation: 
              SB 640 (Lara) would eliminate the Medi-Cal fee-for-service  
              rate rollback and reductions for all Medi-Cal  
              fee-for-service providers. That bill was held on this  
              committee's Suspense File.
              SB 646 (Nielsen) would eliminate reductions in Medi-Cal  
              payments to distinct part nursing facilities, retroactive to  
              their initial enactment. That bill was held on this  
              committee's Suspense File.

          Staff Comments: According to the Department of Health Care  
          Services, federal regulations would not allow the state to undo  
          a previously approved rate reduction. Under this interpretation  
          of federal law, the state is required to reduce payment rates  
          from June 1, 2011 until a new state plan amendment has been  
          approved by the federal government. The state would only be able  
          to eliminate the previously adopted rate reductions going  
          forward, after enactment of this bill.