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CT legislature considers trade association health plans

Chris DiPentima of the 海角换妻 Business and Industry Association, along with a bipartisan group of lawmakers and representatives from several trade groups, spoke in support of H.B. 6710 on Feb. 21, 2023.
ERICA E. PHILLIPS
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CT MIRROR
Chris DiPentima of the 海角换妻 Business and Industry Association, along with a bipartisan group of lawmakers and representatives from several trade groups, spoke in support of H.B. 6710 on Feb. 21, 2023.

海角换妻鈥檚 small businesses and nonprofit organizations could see lower health insurance costs under a proposed bill that would allow trade associations to offer large group health plans to their members.

But patient advocates say they鈥檙e concerned about language in the legislation, , that could allow plans to charge higher rates to companies employing people who get sick or injured.

More than three dozen legislators, trade group representatives, patient advocates and individuals submitted testimony for a public hearing on the bill slated for Tuesday afternoon. Ahead of that hearing, a bipartisan group of lawmakers held a press conference calling for its adoption.

鈥淭his coalition here is forming a new option of plans for small businesses, plans that are unique and affordable and that will help create more competition in the market,鈥 said Rep. Kerry Wood, D-Rocky Hill, who co-chairs the Insurance and Real Estate Committee.

鈥淲e need to stand behind those campaign promises and pass this bill that will expand and make health insurance more affordable for small businesses across the state,鈥 said Rep. Cara Pavalock-D鈥橝mato, R-Bristol.

Association health plans are currently available to businesses in roughly a dozen states, but there is some uncertainty over between state and federal law governing them.

海角换妻鈥檚 H.B. 6710 would allow established trade associations that meet certain membership requirements to purchase fully funded health plans from insurance companies as a group, or they could offer what are known as 鈥渟elf-funded鈥 insurance plans, where a large employer 鈥 in this case the trade group 鈥 pays claims directly. (In 海角换妻, about half of privately insured people are covered by , which are regulated by the federal Labor Department rather than the state Department of Insurance.)

Small organizations currently have to shop for their own fully funded insurance plans in the marketplace each year. Many who want to offer benefits to their employees say have made that nearly untenable. And the recent from the state鈥檚 fully funded health insurance marketplace has raised further concerns about health insurance accessibility and affordability.

Bruce Adams, president of the Credit Union League of 海角换妻, which counts about 60 member organizations, said association health plans would open up more affordable options for many organizations.

鈥淚f our 60 members all signed on to one plan, we would have a couple thousand people in our group, so clearly we could obtain health insurance at a cheaper rate,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淭hat helps level the playing field among the financial services industry, because banks are bigger than credit unions, and it allows for the small business in 海角换妻 to thrive.鈥

Still, advocacy groups such as the American Cancer Society, the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and Health Equity Solutions opposed the legislation. In testimony before the General Assembly鈥檚 Insurance and Real Estate Committee, they expressed concerns that the plans would favor healthy people.

Ernie Davis of LLS highlighted a section of the bill, Sec. 2(b)(6), that he argued would allow self-funded plans to 鈥渁djust the premiums charged to any single member-employer within the association based on that employer鈥檚 claims experience.鈥

In other words, Davis wrote, if a company has an employee who is diagnosed with blood cancer and needs treatment, the following year the health plan could raise that company鈥檚 premiums 鈥 potentially rendering the AHP an unaffordable option, 鈥渕eaning they will lose the benefit of joining the association in the first place,鈥 Davis wrote.

He likened AHPs to 鈥,鈥 nonprofit religious organizations that pool their members鈥 contributions with the intent of paying out medical bills, though there is often no guarantee of coverage.

鈥淚 appreciate that folks are out there looking for new ways to provide affordable health benefits,鈥 said State Health Care Advocate Ted Doolittle. 鈥淏ut as it鈥檚 currently constituted, I do have concerns.鈥

Doolittle said if AHPs wind up favoring companies with healthier employees, that could raise the risk pool for people who seek insurance on the public exchange. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 bad for 海角换妻, because if all the healthy small businesses in 海角换妻 go into an AHP and all the unhealthy ones go on the exchange, then premiums go up.鈥

But proponents pointed out that unlike the self-funded plans currently used by many large employers, which are regulated at the federal level, association health plans would be subject to state regulation under the bill.

鈥淎ll of these issues can be addressed in statute. The state has the ability to design this however they want,鈥 said Wyatt Bosworth, a lobbyist with the 海角换妻 Business and Industry Association, which supports the bill.

Companies with healthier employees might pay lower rates in AHPs, 鈥渂ut the question is what will the swing be,鈥 Bosworth said. 鈥淭he state has the power to say you can鈥檛 vary rates by more than some percentage.鈥

Rev. Josh Pawelek, who leads the Unitarian Universalist Society: East in Manchester, was in the Legislative Office Building cafeteria Tuesday morning, waiting to testify at another public hearing. He said he wasn鈥檛 aware of the AHP legislation but he shared some of the concerns of those who opposed it.

UUS:E , but its current plan has covered the costs of major illnesses, Pawelek said. If a plan were to charge more based on his organization鈥檚 health experience, 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 a nonstarter for us,鈥 he said.

Doolittle, the state Health Care Advocate, said making health insurance affordable is important, but it takes more than just a new health plan option.

鈥淚 want health insurers to come up with innovative plans that achieve affordability by tackling the internationally abnormal medical and drug prices that are the cause of unaffordable health premiums and out-of-pocket costs,鈥 Doolittle said.

鈥淢aking health insurance cheaper for healthy people and more expensive for sicker people is a Band-Aid that ignores the real source of the American health spending crisis,鈥 he said.

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