96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2009 and 2010
HB1081

 

Introduced 2/11/2009, by Rep. Kathleen A. Ryg

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Creates the Illinois Family and Employers Health Care Act. Creates the Illinois Guaranteed Option Act to make health insurance plans and HMOs affordable and accessible. Creates the Illinois Guaranteed Option Premium Assistance Program Act to provide for health insurance premium assistance. Amends the Illinois Insurance Code and other Acts; creates the Office of Patient Protection within the Division of Insurance of the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. Creates the Comprehensive Healthcare Workforce Planning Act to provide an ongoing assessment of health care workforce trends and other matters. Amends the Loan Repayment Assistance for Physicians Act; changes the short title to the Loan Repayment Assistance for Physicians, Dentists, and Allied Health Professionals Act and adds provisions to cover dentists and allied health professionals. Creates the Community Health Provider Targeted Expansion Act to establish a program of grants for community health providers. Creates the Illinois Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment Initiative Act to develop a 5-year strategic plan in connection with health care services for chronic conditions. Creates the Illinois Shared Responsibility and Shared Opportunity Assessment Act; imposes on employers a tax on the wages paid to Illinois employees; makes the tax applicable to wages paid on or after January 1, 2010, and requires payment of the tax beginning July 1, 2011.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB1081 LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1     AN ACT in relation to health.
 
2     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3 represented in the General Assembly:
 
4
ARTICLE 1. SHORT TITLE; LEGISLATIVE INTENT

 
5     Section 1-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
6 Illinois Family and Employers Health Care Act.
 
7     Section 1-5. Legislative intent. The General Assembly
8 finds that, for the economic and social benefit of all
9 residents of the State, it is important to enable all
10 Illinoisans to access affordable health insurance that
11 provides comprehensive coverage and emphasizes preventive
12 healthcare. Therefore, the General Assembly established the
13 Adequate Healthcare Taskforce to develop a comprehensive plan
14 to provide all Illinoisans with access to comprehensive, high
15 quality, affordable healthcare. The taskforce through
16 extensive research and town hall meetings across the state
17 found that not only are many working families uninsured but
18 numerous others struggle with the high cost of healthcare. In
19 2007, the average cost of providing employees with health
20 benefits was $7,983 before factoring in out of pocket costs for
21 the employee and their family members. Costs for small
22 businesses and individuals for comparable comprehensive

 

 

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1 coverage were even higher. It is, therefore, the intent of this
2 legislation to provide access to affordable, comprehensive
3 health insurance to all Illinoisans in a cost-effective manner
4 maximizing federal support.
 
5
ARTICLE 10. AFFORDABLE HEALTHCARE FOR ALL SMALL BUSINESSES AND
6
INDIVIDUALS

 
7     Section 10-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
8 Illinois Guaranteed Option Act. All references in this Article
9 to "this Act" mean this Article.
 
10     Section 10-5. Purpose. The General Assembly recognizes
11 that small businesses and individuals struggle every day to pay
12 the costs of meaningful health insurance coverage. Individuals
13 with healthcare needs are frequently denied coverage or offered
14 coverage they cannot afford. Small businesses too receive
15 unaffordable offers of coverage, and always pay more for
16 coverage than larger firms. Even small businesses that struggle
17 to pay health insurance premiums for years can quickly be
18 priced out of the market -- premiums skyrocket after just one
19 small business employee gets sick. In essence, the Illinois
20 health insurance market for small businesses and individuals
21 provides affordable coverage for those who need healthcare
22 services the least. Businesses and individuals who need
23 healthcare the most can no longer afford it or are denied

 

 

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1 coverage. The General Assembly acknowledges that the high cost
2 of health care for individuals and small groups can be driven
3 by unpredictable and high cost catastrophic medical events.
4 Therefore, the General Assembly, in order to provide access to
5 affordable health insurance for every Illinoisan, seeks to
6 reduce the impact of high-cost medical events by enacting this
7 Act.
 
8     Section 10-10. Definitions. In this Act:
9     "Department" means the Department of Healthcare and Family
10 Services.
11     "Division" means the Division of Insurance within the
12 Department of Financial and Professional Regulation.
13     "Federal poverty level" means the federal poverty level
14 income guidelines updated periodically in the Federal Register
15 by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under
16 authority of 42 U.S.C. 9902(2).
17     "Full-time employee" means a full-time employee as defined
18 by Section 5-5 of the Economic Development for a Growing
19 Economy Tax Credit Act.
20     "Health maintenance organization" means commercial health
21 maintenance organizations as defined by Section 1-2 of the
22 Health Maintenance Organization Act and shall not include
23 health maintenance organizations which participate solely in
24 government-sponsored programs.
25     "Illinois Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan" means the

 

 

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1 Illinois Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan established by
2 the Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan Act.
3     "Illinois Guaranteed Option" means the program established
4 under this Act.
5     "Individual market" means the individual market as defined
6 by the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and
7 Accountability Act.
8     "Insurer" means any insurance company authorized to sell
9 group or individual policies of hospital, surgical, or major
10 medical insurance coverage, or any combination thereof, that
11 contains agreements or arrangements with providers relating to
12 health care services that may be rendered to beneficiaries as
13 defined by the Health Care Reimbursement Reform Act of 1985 in
14 Sections 370f and following of the Illinois Insurance Code (215
15 ILCS 5/370f and following) and its accompanying regulation (50
16 Illinois Administrative Code 2051). The term "insurer" does not
17 include insurers that sell only policies of hospital indemnity,
18 accidental death and dismemberment, workers' compensation,
19 credit accident and health, short-term accident and health,
20 accident only, long term care, Medicare supplement, student
21 blanket, stand-alone policies, dental, vision care,
22 prescription drug benefits, disability income, specified
23 disease, or similar supplementary benefits.
24     "Illinois Guaranteed Option entity" means any health
25 maintenance organization or insurer, as those terms are defined
26 in this Section, whose gross Illinois premium equals or exceeds

 

 

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1 1% of the applicable market share.
2     "Risk-based capital" means the minimum amount of required
3 capital or net worth to be maintained by an insurer or Illinois
4 Guaranteed Option entity as prescribed by Article IIA of the
5 Insurance Code (215 ILCS 5/35A-1 and following).
6     "Small employer", for purposes of the Illinois Guaranteed
7 Option Act only, means an employer that employs not more than
8 25 employees who receive compensation for at least 25 hours of
9 work per week.
10     "Small group market" means small group market as defined by
11 the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
12 Act.
 
13     Section 10-15. Illinois Guaranteed Option plans for
14 eligible small employers and individuals.
15     (a) The State hereby establishes a program for the purpose
16 of making health insurance plans and health maintenance
17 organizations affordable and accessible to small employers and
18 individuals as defined in this Section. The program is designed
19 to encourage small employers to offer affordable health
20 insurance to employees and to make affordable health insurance
21 available to eligible Illinoisans, including veterans and
22 individuals whose employers do not offer or sponsor group
23 health insurance.
24     (b) Participation in this program is limited to Illinois
25 Guaranteed Option entities as defined by Section 10-10 of this

 

 

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1 Act. Participation by all insurers and health maintenance
2 organizations in the Illinois Guaranteed Option program is
3 mandatory. On July 1, 2010, all insurers and health maintenance
4 organizations offering health insurance coverage in the small
5 group market shall offer one or more group Illinois Guaranteed
6 Option plans to eligible small employers as defined in
7 subsection (c) of this Section. All insurers and health
8 maintenance organizations offering health insurance coverage
9 in the individual market shall offer one or more individual
10 Illinois Guaranteed Option plans. For purposes of this Section
11 and Section 10-20 of this Act, all Illinois Guaranteed Option
12 entities that comply with the program requirements shall be
13 eligible for reimbursement from the stop loss funds created
14 pursuant to Section 10-20 of this Act.
15     (c) For purposes of this Act, an eligible small employer is
16 a small employer that:
17         (1) employs not more than 25 eligible employees; and
18         (2) contributes towards the group health insurance
19     plan at least 50% of an individual employee's premium and
20     at least 50% of an employee's family premium; and
21         (3) uses Illinois as its principal place of business,
22     management, and administration. For purposes of small
23     employer eligibility, there shall be no income limit,
24     except for limitations made necessary by the funds
25     appropriated and available in the "Illinois Shared
26     Responsibility and Shared Opportunities Trust Fund" for

 

 

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1     this purpose.
2     (d) For purposes of this Section, "eligible employee" shall
3 include any individual who receives compensation from the
4 eligible employer for at least 25 hours of work per week.
5     (e) An Illinois Guaranteed Option entity may enter into an
6 agreement with an employer to offer an Illinois Guaranteed
7 Option plan pursuant to this Section only if that employer
8 offers that plan to all eligible employees.
9     (f) The pro-rated employer premium contribution levels for
10 non-full-time employees shall be based upon employer premium
11 contribution levels required by subdivision (c)(2) of this
12 Section. An eligible small employer shall contribute at least
13 the pro-rated premium contribution amount towards an
14 individual part-time employee's premium. An eligible small
15 employer shall contribute at least the pro-rated premium
16 contribution amount towards an individual part-time employee's
17 family premium. The pro-rated premium contribution must be the
18 same percentage for all similarly situated employees and may
19 not vary based on class of employee.
20     (g) Illinois-based chambers of commerce may be eligible to
21 participate in Illinois Guaranteed Option policies subject to
22 approval by the Department and limitations made necessary by
23 the funds appropriated and available in the Illinois Shared
24 Responsibility and Shared Opportunities Fund.
25     (h) An eligible small employer shall elect whether to make
26 coverage under the Illinois Guaranteed Option plan available to

 

 

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1 dependents of employees. Any employee or dependent who is
2 enrolled in Medicare is ineligible for coverage, unless
3 required by federal law. Dependents of an employee who is
4 enrolled in Medicare shall be eligible for dependent coverage
5 provided the dependent is not also enrolled in Medicare.
6     (i) An Illinois Guaranteed Option plan must provide the
7 benefits set forth in subsection (r) of this Section. The
8 contract, independently or in combination with other group
9 Illinois Guaranteed Option plans, must insure not less than 50%
10 of the eligible employees.
11     (j) For purposes of this Act, an eligible individual is an
12 individual:
13         (1) who is unemployed, not an eligible employee as
14     defined by subsection (d) of Section 10-15, or solely
15     self-employed, or whose employer does not sponsor group
16     health insurance and has not sponsored group health
17     insurance with benefits on an expense-reimbursed or
18     prepaid basis covering employees in effect during the
19     12-month period prior to the individual's application for
20     health insurance under the program established by this
21     Section;
22         (2) who for the first year of operation of the program
23     resides in a household having a household income at or
24     below 400% of the federal poverty level; thereafter, there
25     shall be no income limit for eligible individuals;
26         (3) who is ineligible for Medicare or medical

 

 

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1     assistance, except that the Department may determine that
2     it shall require an individual who is eligible under
3     subdivision 2(b) of Section 5-2 of the Illinois Public Aid
4     Code to participate as an eligible individual; and
5         (4) who is a resident of Illinois.
6     (l) The requirements set forth in subdivision (j)(1) of
7 this Section shall not be applicable to individuals who had
8 health insurance coverage terminated due to:
9         (1) death of a family member that results in
10     termination of coverage under a health insurance contract
11     under which the individual is covered;
12         (2) change of residence so that no employer-based
13     health insurance with benefits on an expense-reimbursed or
14     prepaid basis is available; or
15         (3) legal separation, dissolution of marriage, or
16     declaration of invalidity of marriage that results in
17     termination of coverage under a health insurance contract
18     under which the individual is covered.
19     (m) The 12-month period set forth in item (1) of subsection
20 (j) of this Section may be adjusted by the Division from 12
21 months to an alternative duration if the Healthcare Justice
22 Commission determines that the alternative period sufficiently
23 prevents inappropriate substitution.
24     (o) The contracts issued pursuant to this Section by
25 participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entities and approved
26 by the Department shall provide for a distinct product known as

 

 

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1 "Guaranteed Option". The insurance product will provide for
2 major medical, mental health, dental and vision benefits that
3 contains in and out of network benefits.
4     (p) Illinois Guaranteed Option entities shall propose the
5 following for approval by the Department:
6         (1) Benefit designs provided in plans created for this
7     Section.
8         (2) Co-pays and deductible amounts applicable to
9     plans, which shall not exceed the maximum allowable amount
10     under the Illinois Insurance Code.
11     (q) Under the Guaranteed Option product hospitals shall be
12 reimbursed by Illinois Guaranteed Option entities in an amount
13 that equals 110 percent of Medicare for Critical Access
14 hospitals and equals the actuarial equivalent of 135 percent of
15 Medicare for all other hospitals as prescribed for the
16 hospital's designated region. "All other hospitals" includes
17 Sole Community Hospitals, Medicare Dependent Hospitals and
18 Rural Referral Centers. "Medicare" refers to the appropriate,
19 Medicare federal standardized rate which is adjusted for the
20 individual DRG weighting factors used by Medicare, the
21 hospital's specific area wage index, capital costs, outlier
22 payments, disproportionate share hospital payments, direct and
23 indirect medical education payments, the costs of nursing and
24 allied health education programs, and organ procurement costs.
25 For hospital services provided for which a Medicare rate is not
26 prescribed or cannot be calculated, the hospital shall be

 

 

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1 reimbursed 90% of the lowest rate paid by the applicable
2 insurer under its contract with that hospital for that same
3 type of product and applicable service.
4     (r) On and after January 1, 2010, all providers that
5 contract with an insurer or health maintenance organization
6 must participate as a network provider under the same Illinois
7 Guaranteed Option entity's Guaranteed Option product.
8     (s) Nothing in this Act shall be used by any private or
9 public Illinois Guaranteed Option entity as a basis for
10 reducing the Illinois Guaranteed Option entity's rates or
11 policies with any hospital. Illinois Guaranteed Option
12 entities are prohibited from using contractual provisions in
13 provider contracts that would require the provider or providers
14 to accept the rates under subsection (c) as the payment rates
15 for any other type of product or service of the Illinois
16 Guaranteed Option entity. Notwithstanding any other provision
17 of law, rates authorized under this Act shall not be used by
18 any private or public Illinois Guaranteed Option entities to
19 determine a hospital's usual and customary charges for any
20 health care service.
21     (t) Other non-hospital providers shall be reimbursed 90% of
22 the lowest rate paid by the applicable insurer under its
23 contract with that hospital for that same type of product and
24 applicable service.
25     (u) No Illinois Guaranteed Option entity shall issue a
26 group Illinois Guaranteed Option plan or individual Illinois

 

 

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1 Guaranteed Option plan until the plan has been certified as
2 such by the Department.
3     (v) A participating Illinois Guaranteed Option plan shall
4 obtain from the employer or individual, on forms approved by
5 the Department or in a manner prescribed by the Department,
6 written certification at the time of initial application and
7 annually thereafter 90 days prior to the contract renewal date
8 that the employer or individual meets and expects to continue
9 to meet the requirements of an eligible small employer or an
10 eligible individual pursuant to this Section. A participating
11 Illinois Guaranteed Option plan may require the submission of
12 appropriate documentation in support of the certification,
13 including proof of income status.
14     (w) Applications to enroll in group Illinois Guaranteed
15 Option plans and individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans
16 must be received and processed from any eligible individual and
17 any eligible small employer during the open enrollment period
18 each year. This provision does not restrict open enrollment
19 guidelines set by Illinois Guaranteed Option plan contracts,
20 but every such contract must include standard employer group
21 open enrollment guidelines.
22     (x) All coverage under group Illinois Guaranteed Option
23 plans and individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans must be
24 subject to a pre-existing condition limitation provision,
25 including the crediting requirements thereunder. Pre-existing
26 conditions may be evaluated and considered by the Department

 

 

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1 when determining appropriate co-pay amounts, deductible
2 levels, and benefit levels. Prenatal care shall be available
3 without consideration of pregnancy as a preexisting condition.
4 Waiver of deductibles and other cost-sharing payments by
5 insurer may be made for individuals participating in chronic
6 care management or wellness and prevention programs.
7     (y) In order to arrive at the actual premium charged to any
8 particular group or individual, a participating Illinois
9 Guaranteed Option entity may adjust its base rate.
10         (1) Adjustments to base rates may be made using only
11     the following factors:
12             (A) geographic area;
13             (B) age;
14             (C) smoking or non-smoking status; and
15             (D) participation in wellness or chronic disease
16         management activities.
17         (2) The adjustment for age in item (1) of this
18     subsection may not use age brackets smaller than 5-year
19     increments, which shall begin with age 20 and end with age
20     65. Eligible individuals, sole proprietors, and employees
21     under the age of 20 shall be treated as those age 20.
22         (3) Permitted rates for any age group shall not exceed
23     the rate for any other age group by more than 25%.
24         (4) If geographic rating areas are utilized, such
25     geographic areas must be reasonable and in a given case may
26     include a single county. The geographic areas utilized must

 

 

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1     be the same for the contracts issued to eligible small
2     employers and to eligible individuals. The Division shall
3     not require the inclusion of any specific geographic region
4     within the proposed region selected by the participating
5     Illinois Guaranteed Option entity, but the participating
6     Illinois Guaranteed Option entity's proposed regions shall
7     not contain configurations designed to avoid or segregate
8     particular areas within a county covered by the
9     participating Illinois Guaranteed Option plan's community
10     rates. Rates from one geographic region to another may not
11     vary by more than 30% and must be actuarially supported.
12         (5) Permitted rates for any small employer shall not
13     exceed the rate for any other small employer by more than
14     25%.
15         (6) A discount of up to 10% for participation in
16     wellness or chronic disease management activities shall be
17     permitted if based upon actuarially justified differences
18     in utilization or cost attributed to such programs.
19         (7) Claims experience under contracts issued to
20     eligible small employers and to eligible individuals must
21     be combined for rate setting purposes.
22         (8) Rate-based provisions in this subsection may be
23     modified due to claims experience and subject to
24     limitations made necessary by funds appropriated and
25     available in the Illinois Shared Opportunity and Shared
26     Responsibility Trust Fund.

 

 

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1     (z) Participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entities
2 shall submit reports to the Department in such form and such
3 media as the Department shall prescribe. The reports shall be
4 submitted at times as may be reasonably required by the
5 Department to evaluate the operations and results of Illinois
6 Guaranteed Option plans established by this Section. The
7 Department shall make such reports available to the Division.
8     (aa) The Department shall conduct public education and
9 outreach to facilitate enrollment of small employers, eligible
10 employees, and eligible individuals in the Program.
 
11     Section 10-20. Stop loss funding for Illinois Guaranteed
12 Option contracts issued to eligible small employers and
13 eligible individuals.
14     (a) The Department shall provide a claims reimbursement
15 program for participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entities
16 and shall annually seek appropriations to support the program.
17     (b) The claims reimbursement program, also known as
18 "Illinois Stop Loss Protection", shall operate as a stop loss
19 program for participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entities
20 and shall reimburse participating Illinois Guaranteed Option
21 entities for a certain percentage of health care claims above a
22 certain attachment amount or within certain attachment
23 amounts. The stop loss attachment amount or amounts shall be
24 determined by the Division consistent with the purpose of the
25 Illinois Program and subject to limitations made necessary by

 

 

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1 the amount appropriated and available in the Illinois Shared
2 Opportunity and Shared Responsibility Trust Fund.
3     (c) Commencing on July 1, 2010, participating Illinois
4 Guaranteed Option entities shall be eligible to receive
5 reimbursement for 80% of claims paid in a calendar year in
6 excess of the attachment point for any member covered under a
7 contract issued pursuant to Section 10-15 of this Act after the
8 participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entity pays claims
9 for that same member in the same calendar year. Based on
10 pre-determined attachment amounts, verified claims paid for
11 members covered under group and individual Illinois Guaranteed
12 Option plans shall be reimbursable from the Illinois Stop Loss
13 Protection Program. For purposes of this Section, claims shall
14 include health care claims paid by or on behalf of a covered
15 member pursuant to such contracts.
16     (d) Consistent with the purpose of Illinois Act and subject
17 to limitations made necessary by the amount appropriated and
18 available in the Illinois Shared Opportunity and Shared
19 Responsibility Trust Fund, the Department shall set forth
20 procedures for operation of the Illinois Stop Loss Protection
21 Program and distribution of monies therefrom.
22     (e) Claims shall be reported and funds shall be distributed
23 by the Department on a calendar year basis. Claims shall be
24 eligible for reimbursement only for the calendar year in which
25 the claims are paid.
26     (f) Each participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entity

 

 

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1 shall submit a request for reimbursement from the Illinois Stop
2 Loss Protection Program on forms prescribed by the Department.
3 Each request for reimbursement shall be submitted no later than
4 April 1 following the end of the calendar year for which the
5 reimbursement requests are being made. In connection with
6 reimbursement requests, the Department may require
7 participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entities to submit
8 such claims data deemed necessary to enable proper distribution
9 of funds and to oversee the effective operation of the Illinois
10 Stop Loss Protection Program. The Department may require that
11 such data be submitted on a per-member, aggregate, or
12 categorical basis, or any combination of those. Data shall be
13 reported separately for group Illinois Guaranteed Option plans
14 and individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans issued
15 pursuant to Section 10-15 of this Act.
16     (f-5) In each request for reimbursement from the Illinois
17 Stop Loss Protection Program, Illinois Guaranteed Option
18 entities shall certify that provider reimbursement rates are
19 consistent with the reimbursement rates as defined by
20 subdivision (r)(3) of Section 10-15 of this Act. The
21 Department, in collaboration with the Division, shall audit, as
22 necessary, claims data submitted pursuant to subsection (f) of
23 this Section to ensure that reimbursement rates paid by
24 Illinois Guaranteed Option entities are consistent with
25 reimbursement rates as defined by subsection (m) of Section
26 10-15.

 

 

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1     (g) At all times, the Illinois Stop Loss Protection Program
2 shall be implemented and operated subject to the limitations
3 made necessary by the funds appropriated and available in the
4 Illinois Shared Opportunity and Shared Responsibility Trust
5 Fund. The Department shall calculate the total claims
6 reimbursement amount for all participating Illinois Guaranteed
7 Option entities for the calendar year for which claims are
8 being reported. In the event that the total amount requested
9 for reimbursement for a calendar year exceeds appropriations
10 available for distribution for claims paid during that same
11 calendar year, the Department shall provide for the pro-rata
12 distribution of the available funds. Each participating
13 Illinois Guaranteed Option entity shall be eligible to receive
14 only such proportionate amount of the available appropriations
15 as the individual participating Illinois Guaranteed Option
16 entity's total eligible claims paid bears to the total eligible
17 claims paid by all participating Illinois Guaranteed Option
18 entities.
19     (h) Each participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entity
20 shall provide the Department with monthly reports of the total
21 enrollment under the group Illinois Guaranteed Option plans and
22 individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans issued pursuant to
23 Section 10-15 of this Act. The reports shall be in a form
24 prescribed by the Department.
25     (i) The Department shall separately estimate the per member
26 annual cost of total claims reimbursement from each stop loss

 

 

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1 program for group Illinois Guaranteed Option plans and
2 individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans based upon
3 available data and appropriate actuarial assumptions. Upon
4 request, each participating Illinois Guaranteed Option plan
5 shall furnish to the Department claims experience data for use
6 in such estimations.
7     (j) Every participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entity
8 shall file with the Division the base rates and rating
9 schedules it uses to provide group Illinois Guaranteed Option
10 plans and individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans. All
11 rates proposed for Illinois Guaranteed Option plans are subject
12 to the prior regulatory review of the Division and shall be
13 effective only upon approval by the Division. The Division has
14 authority to approve, reject, or modify the proposed base rate
15 subject to the following:
16         (1) Rates for Illinois Guaranteed Option plans must
17     account for the availability of reimbursement pursuant to
18     this Section.
19         (2) Rates must not be excessive or inadequate nor shall
20     the rates be unfairly discriminatory.
21         (3) Consideration shall be given, to the extent
22     applicable and among other factors, to the Illinois
23     Guaranteed Option entity's past and prospective medical
24     loss experience within the State for the product for which
25     the base rate is proposed, to past and prospective expenses
26     both countrywide and those especially applicable to this

 

 

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1     State, and to all other factors, including judgment
2     factors, deemed relevant within and outside the State.
3         (4) Consideration shall be given to the Illinois
4     Guaranteed Option entity's actuarial support, enrollment
5     levels, premium volume, risk-based capital, and the ratio
6     of incurred claims to earned premiums.
7     (k) If the Department deems it appropriate for the proper
8 administration of the program, the Department shall be
9 authorized to purchase stop loss insurance or reinsurance, or
10 both, from an insurance company licensed to write such type of
11 insurance in Illinois.
12     (k-5) Nothing in this Section 10-20 shall require
13 modification of stop loss provisions of an existing contract
14 between the Illinois Guaranteed Option entity and a healthcare
15 provider.
16     (l) The Division shall assess insurers as defined in
17 Section 12 of the Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan Act in
18 accordance with the provisions of this subsection:
19         (1) By March 1, 2010, the Illinois Comprehensive Health
20     Insurance Plan shall report to the Division the total
21     assessment paid pursuant to subsection d of Section 12 of
22     the Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan Act for fiscal
23     years 2005 through 2009. By March 1, 2010, the Division
24     shall determine the total direct Illinois premiums for
25     calendar years 2005 through 2009 for the kinds of business
26     described in clause (b) of Class 1 or clause (a) of Class 2

 

 

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1     of Section 4 of the Illinois Insurance Code, and direct
2     premium income of a health maintenance organization or a
3     voluntary health services plan, except that it shall not
4     include credit health insurance as defined in Article IX
5     1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code. The Division shall
6     create a fraction, the numerator of which equals the total
7     assessment as reported by the Illinois Comprehensive
8     Health Insurance Plan pursuant to this subsection, and the
9     denominator of which equals the total direct Illinois
10     premiums determined by the Division pursuant to this
11     subsection. The resulting percentage shall be the
12     "baseline percentage assessment".
13         (2) For purposes of the program, and to the extent that
14     in any fiscal year the Illinois Comprehensive Health
15     Insurance Plan does not collect an amount equal to or
16     greater than the equivalent dollar amount of the baseline
17     percentage assessment to cover deficits established
18     pursuant to subsection d of Section 12 of the Comprehensive
19     Health Insurance Plan Act, the Division shall impose the
20     "baseline assessment" in accordance with paragraph (3) of
21     this subsection.
22         (3) An insurer's assessment shall be determined by
23     multiplying the equivalent dollar amount of the baseline
24     percentage assessment, as determined by paragraph (1), by a
25     fraction, the numerator of which equals that insurer's
26     direct Illinois premiums during the preceding calendar

 

 

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1     year and the denominator of which equals the total of all
2     insurers' direct Illinois premiums for the preceding
3     calendar year. The Division may exempt those insurers whose
4     share as determined under this subsection would be so
5     minimal as to not exceed the estimated cost of levying the
6     assessment.
7         (4) The Division shall charge and collect from each
8     insurer the amounts determined to be due under this
9     subsection.
10         (5) The difference between the total assessments paid
11     pursuant to imposition of the baseline assessment and the
12     total assessments paid to cover deficits established
13     pursuant to subsection d of Section 12 of the Comprehensive
14     Health Insurance Plan Act shall be paid to the Illinois
15     Shared Opportunity and Shared Responsibility Trust Fund.
16         (6) When used in this subsection (l), "insurer" means
17     "insurer" as defined in Section 2 of the Comprehensive
18     Health Insurance Plan Act.
 
19     Section 10-25. Program publicity duties of Illinois
20 Guaranteed Option entities and Department.
21     (a) In conjunction with the Department, all Illinois
22 Guaranteed Option entities shall participate in and share the
23 cost of annually publishing and disseminating a consumer's
24 shopping guide or guides for group Illinois Guaranteed Option
25 plans and individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans issued

 

 

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1 pursuant to Section 10-15 of this Act. The contents of all
2 consumer shopping guides published pursuant to this Section
3 shall be subject to review and approval by the Department.
4     (b) Participating Illinois Guaranteed Option entities may
5 distribute additional sales or marketing brochures describing
6 group Illinois Guaranteed Option plans and individual Illinois
7 Guaranteed Option plans subject to review and approval by the
8 Department.
9     (c) Commissions available to insurance producers from
10 Illinois Guaranteed Option entities for sales of plans under
11 the Illinois Program shall not be less than those available for
12 sale of plans other than plans issued pursuant to the Illinois
13 Guaranteed Option Program. Information on such commissions
14 shall be reported to the Division in the rate approval process.
 
15     Section 10-30. Data reporting.
16     (a) The Department, in consultation with the Division and
17 other State agencies, shall report on the program established
18 pursuant to Sections 10-15 and 10-20 of this Act. The report
19 shall examine:
20         (1) employer and individual participation, including
21     an income profile of covered employees and individuals and
22     an estimate of the per-member annual cost of total claims
23     reimbursement as required by subsection (i) of Section
24     10-20 of this Act;
25         (2) claims experience and the program's projected

 

 

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1     costs through December 31, 2016;
2         (3) the impact of the program on the uninsured
3     population in Illinois and the impact of the program on
4     health insurance rates paid by Illinois residents; and
5         (4) the amount of funds in the Illinois Shared
6     Opportunity and Shared Responsibility Trust Fund generated
7     by the Illinois Shared Opportunity and Shared
8     Responsibility Assessment Act, by category of employer.
9     (b) The study shall be completed and a report submitted by
10 October 1, 2011 to the Governor, the President of the Senate,
11 and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
 
12     Section 10-35. Duties assigned to the Department. Unless
13 otherwise specified, all duties assigned to the Department by
14 this Act shall be carried out in consultation with the
15 Division.
 
16     Section 10-40. Applicability of other Illinois Insurance
17 Code provisions. Unless otherwise specified in this Section,
18 policies for all group Illinois Guaranteed Option plans and
19 individual Illinois Guaranteed Option plans must meet all other
20 applicable provisions of the Illinois Insurance Code.
 
21
ARTICLE 15. HELPING FAMILIES AFFORD HEALTH INSURANCE

 
22     Section 15-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the

 

 

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1 Illinois Guaranteed Option Premium Assistance Program Act. All
2 references in this Article to "this Act" mean this Article.
 
3     Section 15-80. Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
4 adding Sections 1-12 and 1-13 as follows:
 
5     (305 ILCS 5/1-12 new)
6     Sec. 1-12. Premium Assistance.
7     (a) Subject to the availability of funds, the Department
8 may provide premium assistance for eligible persons under this
9 Section to assist such persons or families in affording
10 qualified private health insurance including
11 employer-sponsored health insurance for themselves or their
12 family members. Such premium assistance will be based on
13 financial need with greater levels of assistance being provided
14 to those with lowest income. Based on the availability of
15 funding, the Department in consultation with the Illinois
16 Health Care Justice Commission will determine the level of
17 premium assistance available to individuals and families. If
18 necessary to maximize receipt of federal matching funds, the
19 Department may by rule make modifications to the premium
20 assistance program.
21     (b) To be eligible for premium assistance, a person must:
22         (1) be a resident of Illinois,
23         (2) reside legally in the United States, and
24         (3) have family income at or below the level set by the

 

 

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1     Department based on the availability of funds but in no
2     instance will such income threshold be above 400% of the
3     federal poverty income guidelines.
4     (c) Premium assistance payments will commence only after a
5 person is actually enrolled in qualified health insurance.
6     (d) The Department shall coordinate eligibility for
7 premium assistance with eligibility for other public
8 healthcare benefit programs.
9     (e) The following definitions shall apply to this Section:
10         (1) "Department" means the Department of Healthcare
11     and Family Services.
12         (2) "Employer-sponsored health insurance" means health
13     insurance obtained as a benefit of employment.
14         (3) "Illinois Health Care Justice Commission" means a
15     bipartisan commission that shall consist of 29 voting
16     members appointed as follows: 5 shall be appointed by the
17     Governor; 6 shall be appointed by the President of the
18     Senate; 6 shall be appointed by the Minority Leader of the
19     Senate; 6 shall be appointed by the Speaker of the House of
20     Representatives; and 6 shall be appointed by the Minority
21     Leader of the House of Representatives. Appointed members
22     shall include representatives from state healthcare
23     associations, advocacy organizations, providers, organized
24     labor, and businesses with a primary focus that includes
25     chronic disease prevention, public health delivery,
26     medicine, mental health, health care and disease

 

 

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1     management, consumer advocacy or community health,
2     minority healthcare, and quality healthcare improvement.
3     The Commission shall have a chairperson and a
4     vice-chairperson who shall be elected by the voting members
5     at the first meeting of the Commission. The Director of the
6     Department of Healthcare and Family Services or his or her
7     designee, the Director of the Department of Public Health
8     or his or her designee, the Director of Aging or his or her
9     designee, the Director of Insurance or his or her designee,
10     and the Secretary of the Department of Human Services or
11     his or her designee shall represent their respective
12     departments and shall be invited to attend Commission
13     meetings, but shall not be voting members of the
14     Commission. The members of the Commission shall be
15     appointed within 30 days after the effective date of this
16     Act. The departments of State government represented on the
17     Commission shall work cooperatively to provide
18     administrative support for the Commission; the Department
19     of Healthcare and Family Services shall be the primary
20     agency in providing that administrative support.
21         (4) "Qualified health insurance" means any health
22     insurance coverage as defined in Section 2 of the
23     Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan Act.
24         (5) "Premium assistance" means payments made on behalf
25     of an individual to offset the costs of paying premiums to
26     secure qualified health insurance for that individual or

 

 

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1     that individual's family under family coverage.
2     (f) The Department may promulgate rules to implement this
3 Section.
 
4     (305 ILCS 5/1-13 new)
5     Sec. 1-13. Exchange of information. The Director of Revenue
6 may exchange information with the Department of Healthcare and
7 Family Services and the Department of Human Services for the
8 purpose of determining eligibility for health benefit programs
9 administered by those departments, for verifying sources and
10 amounts of income, and for other purposes directly connected
11 with the administration of those programs.
 
12
ARTICLE 18. CONSUMER PROTECTIONS FROM ABUSIVE HEALTH INSURANCE
13
PRACTICES

 
14     Section 18-5. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
15 changing Sections 359a and 370c, by adding Section 352b, and by
16 adding the heading of Article XLV and Sections 1500-5, 1500-10,
17 1500-15, 1500-20, 1500-25, and 1500-30 as follows:
 
18     (215 ILCS 5/352b new)
19     Sec. 352b. Group health plan non-discrimination
20 requirement. On and after June 1, 2010, no group policy or
21 certificate of accident and health insurance otherwise subject
22 to applicable provisions of this Code shall be delivered or

 

 

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1 issued for delivery to an employer group in this State unless
2 such policy or certificate is offered by that employer to all
3 full-time employees who live in Illinois; provided, however,
4 the employer shall not make a smaller health insurance premium
5 contribution percentage amount to an employee than the employer
6 makes to any other employee who receives an equal or greater
7 total hourly or annual salary for each policy or certificate of
8 accident and health insurance for all employees.
9 Notwithstanding any provision of this Section, an insurer may
10 deliver or issue a group policy or certificate of accident and
11 health insurance to an employer group that establishes separate
12 contribution percentages for employees covered by collective
13 bargaining agreements as negotiated in those agreements.
 
14     (215 ILCS 5/359a)  (from Ch. 73, par. 971a)
15     Sec. 359a. Application.
16     (1) No On and after June 1, 2010, no individual or group
17 policy or certificate of insurance except an Industrial
18 Accident and Health Policy provided for by this article shall
19 be issued, except upon the signed application of the person or
20 persons sought to be insured. Any information or statement of
21 the applicant shall plainly appear upon such application in the
22 form of interrogatories by the insurer and answers by the
23 applicant. The insured shall not be bound by any statement made
24 in an application for any policy, including an Industrial
25 Accident and Health Policy, unless a copy of such application

 

 

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1 is attached to or endorsed on the policy when issued as a part
2 thereof. If any such policy delivered or issued for delivery to
3 any person in this state shall be reinstated or renewed, and
4 the insured or the beneficiary or assignee of such policy shall
5 make written request to the insurer for a copy of the
6 application, if any, for such reinstatement or renewal, the
7 insurer shall within fifteen days after the receipt of such
8 request at its home office or any branch office of the insurer,
9 deliver or mail to the person making such request, a copy of
10 such application. If such copy shall not be so delivered or
11 mailed, the insurer shall be precluded from introducing such
12 application as evidence in any action or proceeding based upon
13 or involving such policy or its reinstatement or renewal. On
14 and after June 1, 2010, all individual and group applications
15 for insurance that require health information or questions
16 shall comply with the following standards:
17         (A) Insurers may ask diagnostic questions on
18     applications for insurance.
19         (B) Application questions shall be formed in a manner
20     designed to elicit specific medical information and not
21     other inferential information.
22         (C) Questions which are vague, subjective, unfairly
23     discriminatory, or so technical as to inhibit a clear
24     understanding by the applicant are prohibited.
25         (D) Questions that ask an applicant to verify diagnosis
26     or treatment for specific diseases or conditions must

 

 

HB1081 - 31 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1     stipulate that such diagnoses must have been made and such
2     treatment must have been performed by an appropriately
3     licensed health care service provider.
4         (E) All underwriting shall be based on individual
5     review of specific health information furnished on the
6     application, any reports provided as a result of medical
7     examinations performed at the company's request, medical
8     record information obtained from the applicant's health
9     care providers, or any combination of the foregoing.
10     Adverse underwriting decisions shall not be based on
11     ambiguous responses to application questions.
12         (F) Preexisting condition exclusions imposed based
13     solely on responses to an application question may exclude
14     only a condition that was specifically elicited in the
15     application and may not be broadened to similar, but
16     separate conditions that were not specifically identified
17     by an application question.
18     (2) No alteration of any written application for any such
19 policy shall be made by any person other than the applicant
20 without his written consent, except that insertions may be made
21 by the insurer, for administrative purposes only, in such
22 manner as to indicate clearly that such insertions are not to
23 be ascribed to the applicant.
24     (3) On and after June 1, 2010, the falsity of any statement
25 in the application for any policy covered by this Act may not
26 bar the right to recovery thereunder unless such false

 

 

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1 statement has actually contributed to the contingency or event
2 on which the policy is to become due and payable and unless
3 such false statement materially affected either the acceptance
4 of the risk or the hazard assumed by the insurer. Provided,
5 however, that any recovery resulting from the operation of this
6 Section shall not bar the right to render the policy void in
7 accordance with its provisions. The falsity of any statement in
8 the application for any policy covered by this act may not bar
9 the right to recovery thereunder unless such false statement
10 materially affected either the acceptance of the risk or the
11 hazard assumed by the insurer.
12 (Source: Laws 1951, p. 611.)
 
13     (215 ILCS 5/370c)  (from Ch. 73, par. 982c)
14     Sec. 370c. Mental and emotional disorders.
15     (a) (1) On and after the effective date of this Section,
16 every insurer which delivers, issues for delivery or renews or
17 modifies group A&H policies providing coverage for hospital or
18 medical treatment or services for illness on an
19 expense-incurred basis shall offer to the applicant or group
20 policyholder subject to the insurers standards of
21 insurability, coverage for reasonable and necessary treatment
22 and services for mental, emotional or nervous disorders or
23 conditions, other than serious mental illnesses as defined in
24 item (2) of subsection (b), up to the limits provided in the
25 policy for other disorders or conditions, except (i) the

 

 

HB1081 - 33 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1 insured may be required to pay up to 50% of expenses incurred
2 as a result of the treatment or services, and (ii) the annual
3 benefit limit may be limited to the lesser of $10,000 or 25% of
4 the lifetime policy limit.
5     (2) Each insured that is covered for mental, emotional or
6 nervous disorders or conditions shall be free to select the
7 physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches,
8 licensed clinical psychologist, licensed clinical social
9 worker, licensed clinical professional counselor, or licensed
10 marriage and family therapist of his choice to treat such
11 disorders, and the insurer shall pay the covered charges of
12 such physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
13 branches, licensed clinical psychologist, licensed clinical
14 social worker, licensed clinical professional counselor, or
15 licensed marriage and family therapist up to the limits of
16 coverage, provided (i) the disorder or condition treated is
17 covered by the policy, and (ii) the physician, licensed
18 psychologist, licensed clinical social worker, licensed
19 clinical professional counselor, or licensed marriage and
20 family therapist is authorized to provide said services under
21 the statutes of this State and in accordance with accepted
22 principles of his profession.
23     (3) Insofar as this Section applies solely to licensed
24 clinical social workers, licensed clinical professional
25 counselors, and licensed marriage and family therapists, those
26 persons who may provide services to individuals shall do so

 

 

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1 after the licensed clinical social worker, licensed clinical
2 professional counselor, or licensed marriage and family
3 therapist has informed the patient of the desirability of the
4 patient conferring with the patient's primary care physician
5 and the licensed clinical social worker, licensed clinical
6 professional counselor, or licensed marriage and family
7 therapist has provided written notification to the patient's
8 primary care physician, if any, that services are being
9 provided to the patient. That notification may, however, be
10 waived by the patient on a written form. Those forms shall be
11 retained by the licensed clinical social worker, licensed
12 clinical professional counselor, or licensed marriage and
13 family therapist for a period of not less than 5 years.
14     (b) (1) An insurer that provides coverage for hospital or
15 medical expenses under a group policy of accident and health
16 insurance or health care plan amended, delivered, issued, or
17 renewed after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
18 92nd General Assembly shall provide coverage under the policy
19 for treatment of serious mental illness under the same terms
20 and conditions as coverage for hospital or medical expenses
21 related to other illnesses and diseases. The coverage required
22 under this Section must provide for same durational limits,
23 amount limits, deductibles, and co-insurance requirements for
24 serious mental illness as are provided for other illnesses and
25 diseases. This subsection does not apply to coverage provided
26 to employees by employers who have 50 or fewer employees.

 

 

HB1081 - 35 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1     (2) "Serious mental illness" means the following
2 psychiatric illnesses as defined in the most current edition of
3 the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) published by the
4 American Psychiatric Association:
5         (A) schizophrenia;
6         (B) paranoid and other psychotic disorders;
7         (C) bipolar disorders (hypomanic, manic, depressive,
8     and mixed);
9         (D) major depressive disorders (single episode or
10     recurrent);
11         (E) schizoaffective disorders (bipolar or depressive);
12         (F) pervasive developmental disorders;
13         (G) obsessive-compulsive disorders;
14         (H) depression in childhood and adolescence;
15         (I) panic disorder;
16         (J) post-traumatic stress disorders (acute, chronic,
17     or with delayed onset); and
18         (K) anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.
19     (3) (Blank). Upon request of the reimbursing insurer, a
20 provider of treatment of serious mental illness shall furnish
21 medical records or other necessary data that substantiate that
22 initial or continued treatment is at all times medically
23 necessary. An insurer shall provide a mechanism for the timely
24 review by a provider holding the same license and practicing in
25 the same specialty as the patient's provider, who is
26 unaffiliated with the insurer, jointly selected by the patient

 

 

HB1081 - 36 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1 (or the patient's next of kin or legal representative if the
2 patient is unable to act for himself or herself), the patient's
3 provider, and the insurer in the event of a dispute between the
4 insurer and patient's provider regarding the medical necessity
5 of a treatment proposed by a patient's provider. If the
6 reviewing provider determines the treatment to be medically
7 necessary, the insurer shall provide reimbursement for the
8 treatment. Future contractual or employment actions by the
9 insurer regarding the patient's provider may not be based on
10 the provider's participation in this procedure. Nothing
11 prevents the insured from agreeing in writing to continue
12 treatment at his or her expense. When making a determination of
13 the medical necessity for a treatment modality for serous
14 mental illness, an insurer must make the determination in a
15 manner that is consistent with the manner used to make that
16 determination with respect to other diseases or illnesses
17 covered under the policy, including an appeals process.
18     (4) A group health benefit plan:
19         (A) shall provide coverage based upon medical
20     necessity for the following treatment of mental illness in
21     each calendar year:
22             (i) 45 days of inpatient treatment; and
23             (ii) beginning on June 26, 2006 (the effective date
24         of Public Act 94-921), 60 visits for outpatient
25         treatment including group and individual outpatient
26         treatment; and

 

 

HB1081 - 37 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1             (iii) for plans or policies delivered, issued for
2         delivery, renewed, or modified after July 1, 2010
3         January 1, 2007 (the effective date of Public Act
4         94-906), 20 additional outpatient visits for speech
5         therapy for treatment of pervasive developmental
6         disorders that will be in addition to speech therapy
7         provided pursuant to item (ii) of this subparagraph
8         (A);
9         (B) may not include a lifetime limit on the number of
10     days of inpatient treatment or the number of outpatient
11     visits covered under the plan; and
12         (C) shall include the same amount limits, deductibles,
13     copayments, and coinsurance factors for serious mental
14     illness as for physical illness.
15     (5) An issuer of a group health benefit plan may not count
16 toward the number of outpatient visits required to be covered
17 under this Section an outpatient visit for the purpose of
18 medication management and shall cover the outpatient visits
19 under the same terms and conditions as it covers outpatient
20 visits for the treatment of physical illness.
21     (6) An issuer of a group health benefit plan may provide or
22 offer coverage required under this Section through a managed
23 care plan.
24     (7) This Section shall not be interpreted to require a
25 group health benefit plan to provide coverage for treatment of:
26         (A) an addiction to a controlled substance or cannabis

 

 

HB1081 - 38 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1     that is used in violation of law; or
2         (B) mental illness resulting from the use of a
3     controlled substance or cannabis in violation of law.
4     (8) (Blank).
5     (c)(1) On and after June 1, 2010, coverage for the
6 treatment of mental and emotional disorders as provided by
7 subsections (a) and (b) shall not be denied under the policy
8 provided that services are medically necessary as determined by
9 the insured's treating physician. For purposes of this
10 subsection, "medically necessary" means health care services
11 appropriate, in terms of type, frequency, level, setting, and
12 duration, to the enrollee's diagnosis or condition, and
13 diagnostic testing and preventive services. Medically
14 necessary care must be consistent with generally accepted
15 practice parameters as determined by health care providers in
16 the same or similar general specialty as typically manages the
17 condition, procedure, or treatment at issue and must be
18 intended to either help restore or maintain the enrollee's
19 health or prevent deterioration of the enrollee's condition.
20 Upon request of the reimbursing insurer, a provider of
21 treatment of serious mental illness shall furnish medical
22 records or other necessary data that substantiate that initial
23 or continued treatment is at all times medically necessary.
24     (2) On and after January 1, 2011, all of the provisions for
25 the treatment of and services for mental, emotional, or nervous
26 disorders or conditions, including the treatment of serious

 

 

HB1081 - 39 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1 mental illness, contained in subsections (a) and (b), and the
2 requirements relating to determinations based on medical
3 necessity contained in subdivision (c)(1) of this Section must
4 be contained in all group and individual Illinois Guaranteed
5 Option plans as defined by the Illinois Guaranteed Option Act.
6 (Source: P.A. 94-402, eff. 8-2-05; 94-584, eff. 8-15-05;
7 94-906, eff. 1-1-07; 94-921, eff. 6-26-06; 95-331, eff.
8 8-21-07; 95-972, eff. 9-22-08; 95-973, eff. 1-1-09; revised
9 10-14-08.)
 
10     (215 ILCS 5/Art. XLV heading new)
11
ARTICLE XLV.

 
12     (215 ILCS 5/1500-5 new)
13     Sec. 1500-5. Office of Patient Protection. There is hereby
14 established within the Division of Insurance an Office of
15 Patient Protection to ensure that persons covered by health
16 insurance companies are provided the benefits due them under
17 this Code and related statutes and are protected from health
18 insurance company actions or policy provisions that are unjust,
19 unfair, inequitable, ambiguous, misleading, inconsistent,
20 deceptive, or contrary to law or to the public policy of this
21 State or that unreasonably or deceptively affect the risk
22 purported to be assumed.
 
23     (215 ILCS 5/1500-10 new)

 

 

HB1081 - 40 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1     Sec. 1500-10. Powers of Office of Patient Protection.
2 Acting under the authority of the Director, the Office of
3 Patient Protection shall:
4     (1) have the power as established by Section 401 of this
5 Code to institute such actions or other lawful proceedings as
6 may be necessary for the enforcement of this Code; and
7     (2) oversee the responsibilities of the Office of Consumer
8 Health, including, but not limited to, responding to consumer
9 questions relating to health insurance.
 
10     (215 ILCS 5/1500-15 new)
11     Sec. 1500-15. Responsibility of Office of Patient
12 Protection. The Office of Patient Protection shall assist
13 health insurance company consumers with respect to the exercise
14 of the grievance and appeals rights established by Section 45
15 of the Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights Act.
 
16     (215 ILCS 5/1500-20 new)
17     Sec. 1500-20. Health insurance oversight. The
18 responsibilities of the Office of Patient Protection shall
19 include, but not be limited to, the oversight of health
20 insurance companies with respect to:
21     (1) Improper claims practices (Sections 154.5 and 154.6 of
22 this Code).
23     (2) Emergency services.
24     (3) Compliance with the Managed Care Reform and Patient

 

 

HB1081 - 41 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1 Rights Act.
2     (4) Requiring health insurance companies to pay claims when
3 internal appeal time frames exceed requirements established by
4 the Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights Act.
5     (5) Ensuring coverage for mental health treatment,
6 including insurance company procedures for internal and
7 external review of denials for mental health coverage as
8 provided by Section 370c of this Code.
9     (6) Reviewing health insurance company eligibility,
10 underwriting, and claims practices.
 
11     (215 ILCS 5/1500-25 new)
12     Sec. 1500-25. Powers of the Director.
13     (a) The Director, in his or her discretion, may issue a
14 Notice of Hearing requiring a health insurance company to
15 appear at a hearing for the purpose of determining the health
16 insurance company's compliance with the duties and
17 responsibilities listed in Section 1500-15.
18     (b) Nothing in this Article XLV shall diminish or affect
19 the powers and authority of the Director of Insurance otherwise
20 set forth in this Code.
 
21     (215 ILCS 5/1500-30 new)
22     Sec. 1500-30. Operative date. This Article XLV is operative
23 on and after January 1, 2010.
 

 

 

HB1081 - 42 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1     Section 18-10. The Health Maintenance Organization Act is
2 amended by changing Section 5-3 as follows:
 
3     (215 ILCS 125/5-3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1411.2)
4     (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 95-958)
5     Sec. 5-3. Insurance Code provisions.
6     (a) Health Maintenance Organizations shall be subject to
7 the provisions of Sections 133, 134, 137, 140, 141.1, 141.2,
8 141.3, 143, 143c, 147, 148, 149, 151, 152, 153, 154, 154.5,
9 154.6, 154.7, 154.8, 155.04, 355.2, 356m, 356v, 356w, 356x,
10 356y, 356z.2, 356z.4, 356z.5, 356z.6, 356z.8, 356z.9, 356z.10,
11 356z.13 356z.11, 356z.14, 359a, 364.01, 367.2, 367.2-5, 367i,
12 368a, 368b, 368c, 368d, 368e, 370c, 401, 401.1, 402, 403, 403A,
13 408, 408.2, 409, 412, 444, and 444.1, paragraph (c) of
14 subsection (2) of Section 367, and Articles IIA, VIII 1/2, XII,
15 XII 1/2, XIII, XIII 1/2, XXV, and XXVI of the Illinois
16 Insurance Code.
17     (b) For purposes of the Illinois Insurance Code, except for
18 Sections 444 and 444.1 and Articles XIII and XIII 1/2, Health
19 Maintenance Organizations in the following categories are
20 deemed to be "domestic companies":
21         (1) a corporation authorized under the Dental Service
22     Plan Act or the Voluntary Health Services Plans Act;
23         (2) a corporation organized under the laws of this
24     State; or
25         (3) a corporation organized under the laws of another

 

 

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1     state, 30% or more of the enrollees of which are residents
2     of this State, except a corporation subject to
3     substantially the same requirements in its state of
4     organization as is a "domestic company" under Article VIII
5     1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code.
6     (c) In considering the merger, consolidation, or other
7 acquisition of control of a Health Maintenance Organization
8 pursuant to Article VIII 1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code,
9         (1) the Director shall give primary consideration to
10     the continuation of benefits to enrollees and the financial
11     conditions of the acquired Health Maintenance Organization
12     after the merger, consolidation, or other acquisition of
13     control takes effect;
14         (2)(i) the criteria specified in subsection (1)(b) of
15     Section 131.8 of the Illinois Insurance Code shall not
16     apply and (ii) the Director, in making his determination
17     with respect to the merger, consolidation, or other
18     acquisition of control, need not take into account the
19     effect on competition of the merger, consolidation, or
20     other acquisition of control;
21         (3) the Director shall have the power to require the
22     following information:
23             (A) certification by an independent actuary of the
24         adequacy of the reserves of the Health Maintenance
25         Organization sought to be acquired;
26             (B) pro forma financial statements reflecting the

 

 

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1         combined balance sheets of the acquiring company and
2         the Health Maintenance Organization sought to be
3         acquired as of the end of the preceding year and as of
4         a date 90 days prior to the acquisition, as well as pro
5         forma financial statements reflecting projected
6         combined operation for a period of 2 years;
7             (C) a pro forma business plan detailing an
8         acquiring party's plans with respect to the operation
9         of the Health Maintenance Organization sought to be
10         acquired for a period of not less than 3 years; and
11             (D) such other information as the Director shall
12         require.
13     (d) The provisions of Article VIII 1/2 of the Illinois
14 Insurance Code and this Section 5-3 shall apply to the sale by
15 any health maintenance organization of greater than 10% of its
16 enrollee population (including without limitation the health
17 maintenance organization's right, title, and interest in and to
18 its health care certificates).
19     (e) In considering any management contract or service
20 agreement subject to Section 141.1 of the Illinois Insurance
21 Code, the Director (i) shall, in addition to the criteria
22 specified in Section 141.2 of the Illinois Insurance Code, take
23 into account the effect of the management contract or service
24 agreement on the continuation of benefits to enrollees and the
25 financial condition of the health maintenance organization to
26 be managed or serviced, and (ii) need not take into account the

 

 

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1 effect of the management contract or service agreement on
2 competition.
3     (f) Except for small employer groups as defined in the
4 Small Employer Rating, Renewability and Portability Health
5 Insurance Act and except for medicare supplement policies as
6 defined in Section 363 of the Illinois Insurance Code, a Health
7 Maintenance Organization may by contract agree with a group or
8 other enrollment unit to effect refunds or charge additional
9 premiums under the following terms and conditions:
10         (i) the amount of, and other terms and conditions with
11     respect to, the refund or additional premium are set forth
12     in the group or enrollment unit contract agreed in advance
13     of the period for which a refund is to be paid or
14     additional premium is to be charged (which period shall not
15     be less than one year); and
16         (ii) the amount of the refund or additional premium
17     shall not exceed 20% of the Health Maintenance
18     Organization's profitable or unprofitable experience with
19     respect to the group or other enrollment unit for the
20     period (and, for purposes of a refund or additional
21     premium, the profitable or unprofitable experience shall
22     be calculated taking into account a pro rata share of the
23     Health Maintenance Organization's administrative and
24     marketing expenses, but shall not include any refund to be
25     made or additional premium to be paid pursuant to this
26     subsection (f)). The Health Maintenance Organization and

 

 

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1     the group or enrollment unit may agree that the profitable
2     or unprofitable experience may be calculated taking into
3     account the refund period and the immediately preceding 2
4     plan years.
5     The Health Maintenance Organization shall include a
6 statement in the evidence of coverage issued to each enrollee
7 describing the possibility of a refund or additional premium,
8 and upon request of any group or enrollment unit, provide to
9 the group or enrollment unit a description of the method used
10 to calculate (1) the Health Maintenance Organization's
11 profitable experience with respect to the group or enrollment
12 unit and the resulting refund to the group or enrollment unit
13 or (2) the Health Maintenance Organization's unprofitable
14 experience with respect to the group or enrollment unit and the
15 resulting additional premium to be paid by the group or
16 enrollment unit.
17     In no event shall the Illinois Health Maintenance
18 Organization Guaranty Association be liable to pay any
19 contractual obligation of an insolvent organization to pay any
20 refund authorized under this Section.
21 (Source: P.A. 94-906, eff. 1-1-07; 94-1076, eff. 12-29-06;
22 95-422, eff. 8-24-07; 95-520, eff. 8-28-07; 95-876, eff.
23 8-21-08; 95-978, eff. 1-1-09; 95-1005, eff. 12-12-08; revised
24 12-15-08.)
 
25     (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 95-958)

 

 

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1     Sec. 5-3. Insurance Code provisions.
2     (a) Health Maintenance Organizations shall be subject to
3 the provisions of Sections 133, 134, 137, 140, 141.1, 141.2,
4 141.3, 143, 143c, 147, 148, 149, 151, 152, 153, 154, 154.5,
5 154.6, 154.7, 154.8, 155.04, 355.2, 356m, 356v, 356w, 356x,
6 356y, 356z.2, 356z.4, 356z.5, 356z.6, 356z.8, 356z.9, 356z.10,
7 356z.11, 356z.12, 356z.13 356z.11, 356z.14, 359a, 364.01,
8 367.2, 367.2-5, 367i, 368a, 368b, 368c, 368d, 368e, 370c, 401,
9 401.1, 402, 403, 403A, 408, 408.2, 409, 412, 444, and 444.1,
10 paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of Section 367, and Articles
11 IIA, VIII 1/2, XII, XII 1/2, XIII, XIII 1/2, XXV, and XXVI of
12 the Illinois Insurance Code.
13     (b) For purposes of the Illinois Insurance Code, except for
14 Sections 444 and 444.1 and Articles XIII and XIII 1/2, Health
15 Maintenance Organizations in the following categories are
16 deemed to be "domestic companies":
17         (1) a corporation authorized under the Dental Service
18     Plan Act or the Voluntary Health Services Plans Act;
19         (2) a corporation organized under the laws of this
20     State; or
21         (3) a corporation organized under the laws of another
22     state, 30% or more of the enrollees of which are residents
23     of this State, except a corporation subject to
24     substantially the same requirements in its state of
25     organization as is a "domestic company" under Article VIII
26     1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code.

 

 

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1     (c) In considering the merger, consolidation, or other
2 acquisition of control of a Health Maintenance Organization
3 pursuant to Article VIII 1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code,
4         (1) the Director shall give primary consideration to
5     the continuation of benefits to enrollees and the financial
6     conditions of the acquired Health Maintenance Organization
7     after the merger, consolidation, or other acquisition of
8     control takes effect;
9         (2)(i) the criteria specified in subsection (1)(b) of
10     Section 131.8 of the Illinois Insurance Code shall not
11     apply and (ii) the Director, in making his determination
12     with respect to the merger, consolidation, or other
13     acquisition of control, need not take into account the
14     effect on competition of the merger, consolidation, or
15     other acquisition of control;
16         (3) the Director shall have the power to require the
17     following information:
18             (A) certification by an independent actuary of the
19         adequacy of the reserves of the Health Maintenance
20         Organization sought to be acquired;
21             (B) pro forma financial statements reflecting the
22         combined balance sheets of the acquiring company and
23         the Health Maintenance Organization sought to be
24         acquired as of the end of the preceding year and as of
25         a date 90 days prior to the acquisition, as well as pro
26         forma financial statements reflecting projected

 

 

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1         combined operation for a period of 2 years;
2             (C) a pro forma business plan detailing an
3         acquiring party's plans with respect to the operation
4         of the Health Maintenance Organization sought to be
5         acquired for a period of not less than 3 years; and
6             (D) such other information as the Director shall
7         require.
8     (d) The provisions of Article VIII 1/2 of the Illinois
9 Insurance Code and this Section 5-3 shall apply to the sale by
10 any health maintenance organization of greater than 10% of its
11 enrollee population (including without limitation the health
12 maintenance organization's right, title, and interest in and to
13 its health care certificates).
14     (e) In considering any management contract or service
15 agreement subject to Section 141.1 of the Illinois Insurance
16 Code, the Director (i) shall, in addition to the criteria
17 specified in Section 141.2 of the Illinois Insurance Code, take
18 into account the effect of the management contract or service
19 agreement on the continuation of benefits to enrollees and the
20 financial condition of the health maintenance organization to
21 be managed or serviced, and (ii) need not take into account the
22 effect of the management contract or service agreement on
23 competition.
24     (f) Except for small employer groups as defined in the
25 Small Employer Rating, Renewability and Portability Health
26 Insurance Act and except for medicare supplement policies as

 

 

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1 defined in Section 363 of the Illinois Insurance Code, a Health
2 Maintenance Organization may by contract agree with a group or
3 other enrollment unit to effect refunds or charge additional
4 premiums under the following terms and conditions:
5         (i) the amount of, and other terms and conditions with
6     respect to, the refund or additional premium are set forth
7     in the group or enrollment unit contract agreed in advance
8     of the period for which a refund is to be paid or
9     additional premium is to be charged (which period shall not
10     be less than one year); and
11         (ii) the amount of the refund or additional premium
12     shall not exceed 20% of the Health Maintenance
13     Organization's profitable or unprofitable experience with
14     respect to the group or other enrollment unit for the
15     period (and, for purposes of a refund or additional
16     premium, the profitable or unprofitable experience shall
17     be calculated taking into account a pro rata share of the
18     Health Maintenance Organization's administrative and
19     marketing expenses, but shall not include any refund to be
20     made or additional premium to be paid pursuant to this
21     subsection (f)). The Health Maintenance Organization and
22     the group or enrollment unit may agree that the profitable
23     or unprofitable experience may be calculated taking into
24     account the refund period and the immediately preceding 2
25     plan years.
26     The Health Maintenance Organization shall include a

 

 

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1 statement in the evidence of coverage issued to each enrollee
2 describing the possibility of a refund or additional premium,
3 and upon request of any group or enrollment unit, provide to
4 the group or enrollment unit a description of the method used
5 to calculate (1) the Health Maintenance Organization's
6 profitable experience with respect to the group or enrollment
7 unit and the resulting refund to the group or enrollment unit
8 or (2) the Health Maintenance Organization's unprofitable
9 experience with respect to the group or enrollment unit and the
10 resulting additional premium to be paid by the group or
11 enrollment unit.
12     In no event shall the Illinois Health Maintenance
13 Organization Guaranty Association be liable to pay any
14 contractual obligation of an insolvent organization to pay any
15 refund authorized under this Section.
16 (Source: P.A. 94-906, eff. 1-1-07; 94-1076, eff. 12-29-06;
17 95-422, eff. 8-24-07; 95-520, eff. 8-28-07; 95-876, eff.
18 8-21-08; 95-958, eff. 6-1-09; 95-978, eff. 1-1-09; 95-1005,
19 eff. 12-12-08; revised 12-15-08.)
 
20     Section 18-15. The Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights
21 Act is amended by changing Section 45 as follows:
 
22     (215 ILCS 134/45)
23     Sec. 45. Health care services appeals, complaints, and
24 external independent reviews.

 

 

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1     (a) A health insurance care plan shall establish and
2 maintain an appeals procedure as outlined in this Act.
3 Compliance with this Act's appeals procedures shall satisfy a
4 health insurance care plan's obligation to provide appeal
5 procedures under any other State law or rules. All appeals of a
6 health insurance care plan's administrative determinations and
7 complaints regarding its administrative decisions shall be
8 handled as required under Section 50.
9     (b) Internal appeals.
10         (1) When an appeal concerns a decision or action by a
11     health insurance care plan, its employees, or its
12     subcontractors that relates to (i) health care services,
13     including, but not limited to, procedures or treatments,
14     for an enrollee with an ongoing course of treatment ordered
15     by a health care provider, the denial of which could
16     significantly increase the risk to an enrollee's health, or
17     (ii) a treatment referral, service, procedure, or other
18     health care service, the denial of which could
19     significantly increase the risk to an enrollee's health,
20     the health insurance care plan must allow for the filing of
21     an appeal either orally or in writing.
22         (2) On and after June 1, 2010, a health plan must
23     prominently display a brief summary of its appeal
24     requirements as established by this Section, including the
25     manner in which an enrollee may initiate such appeals, in
26     all of its printed material sent to the enrollee as well as

 

 

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1     on its website.
2         (3) Upon submission of the appeal, a health insurance
3     care plan must notify the party filing the appeal, as soon
4     as possible, but in no event more than 24 hours after the
5     submission of the appeal, of all information that the plan
6     requires to evaluate the appeal.
7         (4) The health insurance care plan shall render a
8     decision on the appeal within 24 hours after receipt of the
9     required information.
10         (5) The health insurance care plan shall notify the
11     party filing the appeal and the enrollee, enrollee's
12     primary care physician, and any health care provider who
13     recommended the health care service involved in the appeal
14     of its decision orally followed-up by a written notice of
15     the determination.
16         (6) For all denials of treatment for mental and
17     emotional disorders on and after June 1, 2010, the
18     following requirements shall apply:
19             (A) A plan's determination that care rendered or to
20         be rendered is inappropriate shall not be made until
21         the plan has communicated with the enrollee's
22         attending mental health professional concerning that
23         medical care. The review shall be made prior to or
24         concurrent with the treatment.
25             (B) A determination that care rendered or to be
26         rendered is inappropriate shall include the written

 

 

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1         evaluation and findings of the mental health
2         professional whose training and expertise is at least
3         comparable to that of the treating clinician.
4             (C) Any determination regarding services rendered
5         or to be rendered for the treatment of mental and
6         emotional disorders for an enrollee which may result in
7         a denial of reimbursement or a denial of
8         pre-certification for that service shall, at the
9         request of the affected enrollee or provider as defined
10         by Section 370c of the Illinois Insurance Code, include
11         the specific review criteria, the procedures and
12         methods used in evaluating proposed or delivered
13         mental health care services, and the credentials of the
14         peer reviewer.
15             (D) In making any communication, a plan shall
16         ensure that all applicable State and federal laws to
17         protect the confidentiality of individual mental
18         health records are followed.
19             (E) A plan shall ensure that it provides
20         appropriate notification to and receives concurrence
21         from enrollees and their attending mental health
22         professional before any enrollee interviews are
23         conducted by the plan.
24         (7) On and after June 1, 2010, if the enrollee, the
25     enrollee's treating physician, and the health insurance
26     plan agree, or if the Office of Patient Protection

 

 

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1     established under Section 1500-5 of the Illinois Insurance
2     Code explicitly allows, the claim determination may be
3     appealed directly to the external independent review as
4     described under subsection (f).
5         (8) On and after June 1, 2010, except as provided in
6     paragraph (7), an enrollee must exhaust the internal appeal
7     process prior to requesting an external independent
8     review.
9     (c) For all appeals related to health care services
10 including, but not limited to, procedures or treatments for an
11 enrollee and not covered by subsection (b) above, the health
12 care plan shall establish a procedure for the filing of such
13 appeals. Upon submission of an appeal under this subsection, a
14 health insurance care plan must notify the party filing an
15 appeal, within 3 business days, of all information that the
16 plan requires to evaluate the appeal. The health insurance care
17 plan shall render a decision on the appeal within 15 business
18 days after receipt of the required information. The health
19 insurance care plan shall notify the party filing the appeal,
20 the enrollee, the enrollee's primary care physician, and any
21 health care provider who recommended the health care service
22 involved in the appeal orally of its decision followed-up by a
23 written notice of the determination.
24     (d) An appeal under subsection (b) or (c) may be filed by
25 the enrollee, the enrollee's designee or guardian, the
26 enrollee's primary care physician, or the enrollee's health

 

 

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1 care provider. A health insurance care plan shall designate a
2 clinical peer to review appeals, because these appeals pertain
3 to medical or clinical matters and such an appeal must be
4 reviewed by an appropriate health care professional. No one
5 reviewing an appeal may have had any involvement in the initial
6 determination that is the subject of the appeal. The written
7 notice of determination required under subsections (b) and (c)
8 shall include (i) clear and detailed reasons for the
9 determination, (ii) the medical or clinical criteria for the
10 determination, which shall be based upon sound clinical
11 evidence and reviewed on a periodic basis, and (iii) in the
12 case of an adverse determination, the procedures for requesting
13 an external independent review under subsection (f).
14     (e) If an appeal filed under subsection (b) or (c) is
15 denied for a reason including, but not limited to, the service,
16 procedure, or treatment is not viewed as medically necessary,
17 denial of specific tests or procedures, denial of referral to
18 specialist physicians or denial of hospitalization requests or
19 length of stay requests, and on and after June 1, 2010, if the
20 amount of the denial exceeds $250, any involved party may
21 request an external independent review under subsection (f) of
22 the adverse determination.
23     (f) External independent review.
24         (1) The party seeking an external independent review
25     shall so notify the health insurance care plan. The health
26     insurance care plan shall seek to resolve all external

 

 

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1     independent reviews in the most expeditious manner and
2     shall make a determination and provide notice of the
3     determination no more than 24 hours after the receipt of
4     all necessary information when a delay would significantly
5     increase the risk to an enrollee's health or when extended
6     health care services for an enrollee undergoing a course of
7     treatment prescribed by a health care provider are at
8     issue.
9         (2) On and after June 1, 2010, within 180 Within 30
10     days after the enrollee receives written notice of an
11     adverse determination, if the enrollee decides to initiate
12     an external independent review, the enrollee shall send to
13     the health insurance care plan a written request for an
14     external independent review, including any information or
15     documentation to support the enrollee's request for the
16     covered service or claim for a covered service.
17         (3) Within 30 days after the health insurance care plan
18     receives a request for an external independent review from
19     an enrollee, the health insurance care plan shall:
20             (A) provide a mechanism for joint selection of an
21         external independent reviewer by the enrollee, the
22         enrollee's physician or other health care provider,
23         and the health insurance care plan; and
24             (B) forward to the independent reviewer all
25         medical records and supporting documentation
26         pertaining to the case, a summary description of the

 

 

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1         applicable issues including a statement of the health
2         care plan's decision, the criteria used, and the
3         medical and clinical reasons for that decision.
4         (4) Within 5 days after receipt of all necessary
5     information, the independent reviewer shall evaluate and
6     analyze the case and render a decision that is based on
7     whether or not the health care service or claim for the
8     health care service is medically appropriate. The decision
9     by the independent reviewer is final. If the external
10     independent reviewer determines the health care service to
11     be medically appropriate, the health insurance care plan
12     shall pay for the health care service. On and after June 1,
13     2010, an external independent review decision may be
14     appealed to the Office of Patient Protection established
15     under Section 1500-5 of the Illinois Insurance Code. In
16     cases in which the Division finds the external independent
17     review determination to have been arbitrary and
18     capricious, the Division, through the Office of Patient
19     Protection, may reverse the external independent review
20     determination.
21         (5) The health insurance care plan shall be solely
22     responsible for paying the fees of the external independent
23     reviewer who is selected to perform the review.
24         (6) An external independent reviewer who acts in good
25     faith shall have immunity from any civil or criminal
26     liability or professional discipline as a result of acts or

 

 

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1     omissions with respect to any external independent review,
2     unless the acts or omissions constitute wilful and wanton
3     misconduct. For purposes of any proceeding, the good faith
4     of the person participating shall be presumed.
5         (7) Future contractual or employment action by the
6     health insurance care plan regarding the patient's
7     physician or other health care provider shall not be based
8     solely on the physician's or other health care provider's
9     participation in this procedure.
10         (8) For the purposes of this Section, an external
11     independent reviewer shall:
12             (A) be a clinical peer;
13             (B) have no direct financial interest in
14         connection with the case; and
15             (C) have not been informed of the specific identity
16         of the enrollee.
17     (g) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to require a
18 health insurance care plan to pay for a health care service not
19 covered under the enrollee's certificate of coverage or policy.
20 (Source: P.A. 91-617, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
21
ARTICLE 20. BUILDING HEALTHCARE CAPACITY THROUGH COMPREHENSIVE
22
HEALTHCARE WORKFORCE PLANNING

 
23     Section 20-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
24 Comprehensive Healthcare Workforce Planning Act. All

 

 

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1 references in this Article to "this Act" mean this Article.
 
2     Section 20-5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
3         "Council" means the State Healthcare Workforce Council
4     created by this Act.
5         "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
6         "Executive Committee" means the Executive Committee of
7     the State Healthcare Workforce Council, which shall
8     consist of 13 members of the State Healthcare Workforce
9     Council: the Chair, the Vice-Chair, a representative of the
10     Governor's Office, the Director of Commerce and Economic
11     Opportunity or his or her designee, the Director of
12     Insurance or his or her designee, the Secretary of Human
13     Services or his or her designee, the Director of Healthcare
14     and Family Services or his or her designee, and 6 health
15     care workforce experts from the State Healthcare Workforce
16     Council as designated by the Governor.
17         "Interagency Subcommittee" means the Interagency
18     Subcommittee of the State Healthcare Workforce Council,
19     which shall consist of the following members or their
20     designees: the Director of the Department; a
21     representative of the Governor's Office; the Secretary of
22     Human Services; the Secretary of Financial and
23     Professional Regulation; the Directors of the Departments
24     of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, Employment Security,
25     and Healthcare and Family Services; and the executive

 

 

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1     director of the Illinois Board of Higher Education, the
2     President of the Illinois Community College Board, and the
3     State Superintendent of Education.
 
4     Section 20-10. Purpose. The State Healthcare Workforce
5 Council is hereby established to provide an ongoing assessment
6 of health care workforce trends, training issues, and financing
7 policies, and to recommend appropriate State government and
8 private sector efforts to address identified needs. The work of
9 the Council shall focus on: health care workforce supply and
10 distribution; cultural competence and minority participation
11 in health professions education; primary care training and
12 practice; and data evaluation and analysis.
 
13     Section 20-15. Members.
14     (a) The following 10 persons or their designees shall be
15 members of the Council: the Director of the Department; a
16 representative of the Governor's Office; the Secretary of Human
17 Services; the Secretary of Financial and Professional
18 Regulation; the Directors of the Departments of Commerce and
19 Economic Opportunity, Employment Security, and Healthcare and
20 Family Services; and the executive director of the Illinois
21 Board of Higher Education, the President of the Illinois
22 Community College Board, and the State Superintendent of
23 Education.
24     (b) The Governor shall appoint 16 additional members, who

 

 

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1 shall be health care workforce experts, including
2 representatives of practicing physicians, nurses, and
3 dentists, State and local health professions organizations,
4 schools of medicine and osteopathy, nursing, dental, allied
5 health, and public health; public and private teaching
6 hospitals; health insurers; business; and labor. The Speaker of
7 the Illinois House of Representatives, the President of the
8 Illinois Senate, the Minority Leader of the Illinois House of
9 Representatives, and the Minority Leader of the Illinois Senate
10 may each appoint one representative to the Council. Members
11 appointed under this subsection (b) shall serve 4-year terms
12 and may be reappointed.
13     (c) The Director of the Department shall serve as Chair of
14 the Council. The Governor shall appoint a health care workforce
15 expert from the non-governmental sector to serve as Vice-Chair.
 
16     Section 20-20. Five-year comprehensive health care
17 workforce plan.
18     (a) Every 5 years, the State of Illinois shall prepare a
19 comprehensive healthcare workforce plan.
20     (b) The comprehensive healthcare workforce plan shall
21 include, but need not be limited to, the following:
22         (1) 25-year projections of the demand and supply of
23     health professionals to meet the needs of healthcare within
24     the State.
25         (2) The identification of all funding sources for which

 

 

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1     the State has administrative control that are available for
2     health professions training.
3         (3) Recommendations on how to rationalize and
4     coordinate the State-supported programs for health
5     professions training.
6         (4) Recommendations on actions needed to meet the
7     projected demand for health professionals over the 25 years
8     of the plan.
9     (c) The Interagency Subcommittee, with staff support and
10 coordination assistance from the Department, shall develop the
11 Comprehensive Healthcare Workforce Plan. The State Healthcare
12 Workforce Council shall provide advice and guidance to the
13 Interagency Subcommittee in developing the plan. The
14 Interagency Subcommittee shall deliver the Comprehensive
15 Healthcare Workforce Plan to the Healthcare Justice
16 Commission, the Governor, and the General Assembly by July 1 of
17 each fifth year, beginning July 1, 2010, or the first business
18 day thereafter.
19     (d) Each year in which a comprehensive healthcare workforce
20 plan is not due, the Department, on behalf of the Interagency
21 Subcommittee, shall prepare a report by July 1 of that year to
22 the Governor and the General Assembly on the progress made
23 toward achieving the projected goals of the current
24 comprehensive healthcare workforce plan during the previous
25 calendar year.
26     (e) The Department shall provide staffing to the

 

 

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1 Interagency Subcommittee, the Council, and the Executive
2 Committee of the Council. It shall also provide the staff
3 support needed to help coordinate the implementation of the
4 comprehensive healthcare workforce plan.
 
5     Section 20-25. Executive Committee. The Executive
6 Committee shall:
7         (1) oversee and structure the operations of the
8     Council;
9         (2) create necessary subcommittees and appoint
10     subcommittee members, with the advice of the Council and
11     the Interagency Subcommittee, as the Executive Committee
12     deems necessary;
13         (3) ensure adequate public input into the
14     comprehensive healthcare workforce plan;
15         (4) involve, to the extent possible, appropriate
16     representatives of the federal government, local
17     governments, municipalities, and education; and
18         (5) have input into the development of the
19     comprehensive healthcare workforce plan and the annual
20     report prepared by the Department before the Department
21     submits them to the Council.     
 
22     Section 20-30. Interagency Subcommittee. The Interagency
23 Subcommittee and its member agencies shall:
24         (1) be responsible for providing the information

 

 

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1     needed to develop the comprehensive healthcare workforce
2     plan as well as the plan reports;
3         (2) develop the comprehensive healthcare workforce
4     plan; and
5         (3) oversee the implementation of the plan by
6     coordinating, streamlining, and prioritizing the
7     allocation of resources.
 
8     Section 20-35. Reimbursement. The members of the Council
9 shall receive no compensation but shall be entitled to
10 reimbursement for any necessary expenses incurred in
11 connection with the performance of their duties.
 
12
ARTICLE 25. AMENDATORY PROVISIONS

 
13     Section 25-5. The Loan Repayment Assistance for Physicians
14 Act is amended by changing the title of the Act and Sections 1,
15 5, 10, 15, 25, 30, and 35 as follows:
 
16     (110 ILCS 949/Act title)
17 An Act concerning loan repayment assistance for
18 physicians, dentists, and allied healthcare professionals.
 
19     (110 ILCS 949/1)
20     Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Loan
21 Repayment Assistance for Physicians, Dentists, and Allied

 

 

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1 Health Professionals Act.
2 (Source: P.A. 94-368, eff. 7-29-05.)
 
3     (110 ILCS 949/5)
4     Sec. 5. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to establish a
5 program in the Department of Public Health to increase the
6 total number of healthcare professionals physicians in this
7 State serving targeted populations by providing educational
8 loan repayment assistance grants to physicians, dentists, and
9 allied health professionals.
10 (Source: P.A. 94-368, eff. 7-29-05.)
 
11     (110 ILCS 949/10)
12     Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act, unless the context
13 otherwise requires:
14     "Allied health professional" means a clinician who works in
15 a healthcare team to make the healthcare system function. An
16 allied health professional must adhere to national training and
17 education standards.
18     "Dentist" means a person who has received a general license
19 pursuant to paragraph (a) of Section 11 of the Illinois Dental
20 Practice Act, who may perform any intraoral and extraoral
21 procedure required in the practice of dentistry, and to whom is
22 reserved the responsibilities specified in Section 17 of the
23 Illinois Dental Practice Act.
24     "Department" means the Department of Public Health.

 

 

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1     "Educational loans" means higher education student loans
2 that a person has incurred in attending a registered
3 professional physician education program, a registered
4 professional dentist education program, or other registered
5 allied health professional programs..
6     "Medical payments" means compensation provided to
7 healthcare professionals for services rendered under
8 means-tested healthcare programs administered by the
9 Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
10     "Medically underserved area" means an urban or rural area
11 designated by the Secretary of the United States Department of
12 Health and Human Services as an area with a shortage of
13 personal health services or as otherwise designated by the
14 Department of Public Health.
15     "Medically underserved population" means (i) the
16 population of an urban or rural area designated by the
17 Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human
18 Services as an area with a shortage of personal health services
19 or (ii) a population group designated by the Secretary as
20 having a shortage of those services or as otherwise designated
21 by the Department of Public Health.
22     "Physician" means a person licensed under the Medical
23 Practice Act of 1987 to practice medicine in all of its
24 branches.
25     "Program" means the educational loan repayment assistance
26 program for physicians, dentists, and other allied health

 

 

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1 professionals established by the Department under this Act.
2     "Targeted populations" means one or more of the following:
3 the medically underserved population, persons in a medically
4 underserved area, the uninsured population of this State, and
5 persons enrolled in means-tested healthcare programs
6 administered by the Department of Healthcare and Family
7 Services.
8     "Uninsured population" means persons who do not own private
9 health care insurance, are not part of a group insurance plan,
10 and are not enrolled in any State or federal
11 government-sponsored means-tested healthcare program.
12 (Source: P.A. 94-368, eff. 7-29-05.)
 
13     (110 ILCS 949/15)
14     Sec. 15. Establishment of program. The Department shall
15 establish an educational loan repayment assistance program for
16 physicians, dentists, and allied health professionals who
17 practice in Illinois and serve targeted populations. The
18 Department shall administer the program and make all necessary
19 and proper rules not inconsistent with this Act for the
20 program's effective implementation. The Department may use up
21 to 5% of the appropriation for this program for administration
22 and promotion of physician incentive programs.
23     (b) The Department shall consult with the Department of
24 Healthcare and Family Services and the Department of Human
25 Services to identify geographic areas of the State in need of

 

 

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1 health care services, including dental services, for one or
2 more targeted populations. The Department may target grants to
3 physicians and dentists in accordance with those identified
4 needs, with respect to geographic areas, categories of services
5 or quantity of service to targeted populations.
6 (Source: P.A. 94-368, eff. 7-29-05.)
 
7     (110 ILCS 949/25)
8     Sec. 25. Eligibility. To be eligible for assistance under
9 the program, an applicant must meet all of the following
10 qualifications:
11         (1) He or she must be a citizen or permanent resident
12     of the United States.
13         (2) He or she must be a resident of Illinois.
14         (3) He or she must be practicing full-time in Illinois
15     as a physician, dentist, or allied health professional.
16         (4) He or she must currently be repaying educational
17     loans.
18         (5) He or she must agree to continue full-time practice
19     in Illinois for 3 years serving targeted populations.
20         (6) He or she must accept medical payments as defined
21     in this Act.
22 (Source: P.A. 94-368, eff. 7-29-05.)
 
23     (110 ILCS 949/30)
24     Sec. 30. The award of grants. Under the program, for each

 

 

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1 year that a qualified applicant practices full-time in Illinois
2 as a physician, dentist, or other allied health professional
3 serving targeted populations, the Department shall, subject to
4 appropriation, award a grant to that person in an amount not to
5 exceed equal to the amount in educational loans that the person
6 must repay that year. However, the total amount in grants that
7 a person may be awarded under the program shall not exceed
8 $25,000. The Department shall require recipients to use the
9 grants to pay off their educational loans.
10 (Source: P.A. 94-368, eff. 7-29-05.)
 
11     (110 ILCS 949/35)
12     Sec. 35. Penalty for failure to fulfill obligation. Loan
13 repayment recipients who fail to practice full-time in Illinois
14 for 3 years and meet the grant requirement of serving targeted
15 populations shall repay the Department a sum equal to 3 times
16 the amount received under the program.
17 (Source: P.A. 94-368, eff. 7-29-05.)
 
18
ARTICLE 30. BUILDING HEALTHCARE CAPACITY THROUGH COMMUNITY
19
HEALTH PROVIDER TARGETED EXPANSION

 
20     Section 30-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
21 Community Health Provider Targeted Expansion Act. All
22 references in this Article to "this Act" mean this Article.
 

 

 

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1     Section 30-5. Definitions. In this Act:
2     "Community health provider site" means a site where a
3 community health provider provides or will provide primary
4 health care services (and, if applicable, specialty health care
5 services) to targeted populations.
6     "Medically underserved area" means an urban or rural area
7 designated by the Secretary of the United States Department of
8 Health and Human Services as an area with a shortage of
9 personal health services or as otherwise designated by the
10 Department of Public Health.
11     "Medically underserved population" means (i) the
12 population of an urban or rural area designated by the
13 Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human
14 Services as an area with a shortage of personal health services
15 or (ii) a population group designated by the Secretary as
16 having a shortage of those services or as otherwise designated
17 by the Department of Public Health.
18     "Primary health care services" means the following:
19         (1) Basic health services consisting of the following:
20             (A) Health services related to family medicine,
21         internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics, or
22         gynecology that are furnished by physicians and, if
23         appropriate, physician assistants, nurse
24         practitioners, and nurse midwives.
25             (B) Diagnostic laboratory and radiologic services.
26             (C) Preventive health services, including the

 

 

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1         following:
2                 (i) Prenatal and perinatal services.
3                 (ii) Screenings for breast and cervical
4             cancer.
5                 (iii) Well-child services.
6                 (iv) Immunizations against vaccine-preventable
7             diseases.
8                 (v) Screenings for elevated blood lead levels,
9             communicable diseases, and cholesterol.
10                 (vi) Pediatric eye, ear, and dental screenings
11             to determine the need for vision and hearing
12             correction and dental care.
13                 (vii) Voluntary family planning services.
14                 (viii) Preventive dental services.
15             (D) Emergency medical services.
16             (E) Pharmaceutical services as appropriate for
17         particular health centers.
18         (2) Referrals to providers of medical services and
19     other health-related services (including addiction
20     treatment and mental health services).
21         (3) Patient case management services (including
22     counseling, referral, and follow-up services) and other
23     services designed to assist health provider patients in
24     establishing eligibility for and gaining access to
25     federal, State, and local programs that provide or
26     financially support the provision of medical, social,

 

 

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1     educational, or other related services.
2         (4) Services that enable individuals to use the
3     services of the health provider (including outreach and
4     transportation services and, if a substantial number of the
5     individuals in the population are of limited
6     English-speaking ability, the services of appropriate
7     personnel fluent in the language spoken by a predominant
8     number of those individuals).
9         (5) Education of patients and the general population
10     served by the health provider regarding the availability
11     and proper use of health services.
12         (6) Additional health services consisting of services
13     that are appropriate to meet the health needs of the
14     population served by the health provider involved and that
15     may include the following:
16             (A) Environmental health services, including the
17         following:
18                 (i) Detection and alleviation of unhealthful
19             conditions associated with water supply.
20                 (ii) Sewage treatment.
21                 (iii) Solid waste disposal.
22                 (iv) Detection and alleviation of rodent and
23             parasite infestation.
24                 (v) Field sanitation.
25                 (vi) Housing.
26                 (vii) Other environmental factors related to

 

 

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1             health.
2             (B) Special occupation-related health services for
3         migratory and seasonal agricultural workers, including
4         the following:
5                 (i) Screening for and control of infectious
6             diseases, including parasitic diseases.
7                 (ii) Injury prevention programs, which may
8             include prevention of exposure to unsafe levels of
9             agricultural chemicals, including pesticides.
10     "Specialty health care services" means health care
11 services, other than primary health care services, provided by
12 such specialists, as the Department Public Health in
13 consultation with the Department of Healthcare and Family
14 Services may determine by rule.
15     "Specialty health care services" may include, without
16 limitation, dental services, mental health services,
17 behavioral health services, and optometry services.
18     "Targeted populations" means one or more of the following:
19 the medically underserved population, persons in a medically
20 underserved area, the uninsured population of this State, and
21 persons enrolled in a means-tested healthcare program
22 administered by the Department of Healthcare and Family
23 Services.
24     "Uninsured population" means persons who do not have
25 private health care insurance, are not part of a group
26 insurance plan, and are not enrolled in any State or federal

 

 

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1 government-sponsored means-tested healthcare program.
 
2     Section 30-10. Grants.
3     (a) The Department of Public Health and the Department of
4 Healthcare and Family Services, in consultation with the
5 Healthcare Justice Commission, will establish a community
6 health provider targeted expansion grant program and may make
7 grants subject to appropriations. The grants shall be for the
8 purpose of (i) establishing new community health provider
9 sites, (ii) expanding primary health care services at existing
10 community health provider sites, or (iii) adding or expanding
11 specialty health care services at existing community health
12 center sites, in each case to serve one or more of the targeted
13 populations in this State.
14     (b) Grants under this Section shall be for a period not to
15 exceed 3 years. The Department may make new grants whenever the
16 total amount appropriated for grants is sufficient to fund both
17 the new grants and the grants already in effect.
18     (c) The Department of Public Health, the Department of
19 Healthcare and Family Services, and the Department of Human
20 Services, in consultation with the Healthcare Justice
21 Commission, shall identify geographic areas of the State in
22 need of primary health services and specialty care services for
23 one or more targeted populations. Grants may be targeted in
24 accordance with those identified needs, with respect to
25 geographic areas, categories of services or targeted

 

 

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1 populations.
2     (d) The review of grant applications will be performed
3 jointly by the Departments of Public Health and Healthcare and
4 Family Services.
 
5     Section 30-15. Use of grant moneys. In accordance with
6 grant agreements respecting grants awarded under this Act, a
7 recipient of a grant may use the grant moneys to establish or
8 expand community health care provider sites, including:
9         (1) To purchase or upgrade equipment.
10         (2) To acquire a new physical location for the purpose
11     of delivering primary health care services or specialty
12     health care services.
13         (3) To construct new or renovate existing health
14     provider sites.
 
15     Section 30-20. Reporting. Within 60 days after the first
16 and second years of a grant under this Act, the grant recipient
17 must submit a progress report to the Department demonstrating
18 that the recipient is meeting the goals and objectives stated
19 in the grant, that grant moneys are being used for appropriate
20 purposes, and that residents of the community are being served
21 by the targeted expansions established with grant moneys.
22 Within 60 days after the final year of a grant under this Act,
23 the grant recipient must submit a final report to the
24 Department demonstrating that the recipient has met the goals

 

 

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1 and objectives stated in the grant, that grant moneys were used
2 for appropriate purposes, and that residents of the community
3 are being served by the targeted expansions established with
4 grant moneys.
 
5     Section 30-25. Rules. The Department of Public Health in
6 consultation with the Department of Healthcare and Family
7 Services, shall adopt rules it deems necessary for the
8 efficient administration of this Act.
 
9
ARTICLE 33. ILLINOIS EFFICIENCY, QUALITY AND COST CONTAINMENT
10
INITIATIVE

 
11     Section 33-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
12 Illinois Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment Initiative
13 Act. All references in this Article to "this Act" mean this
14 Article.
 
15     Section 33-5. Definitions. In this Act:
16     "Chronic care" means health services provided by a
17 healthcare professional for an established chronic condition
18 that is expected to last a year or more and that requires
19 ongoing clinical management attempting to restore the
20 individual to highest function, minimize the negative effects
21 of the condition, and prevent complications related to chronic
22 conditions. Examples of chronic conditions include diabetes,

 

 

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1 hypertension, cardiovascular disease, asthma, pulmonary
2 disease, substance abuse, mental illness, and hyperlipidemia.
3     "Chronic care information system" means the electronic
4 database developed under the Illinois Efficiency, Quality and
5 Cost Containment Initiative that shall include information on
6 all cases of a particular disease or health condition in a
7 defined population of individuals. Such a database may be
8 developed in collaboration between the Department of
9 Healthcare and Family Services and the Department of Public
10 Health building upon and integrating current State databases.
11     "Chronic care management" means a system of coordinated
12 healthcare interventions and communications for individuals
13 with chronic conditions, including significant patient
14 self-care efforts, systemic supports for the physician and
15 patient relationship, and a plan of care emphasizing prevention
16 of complications utilizing evidence-based practice guidelines,
17 patient empowerment strategies, and evaluation of clinical,
18 humanistic, and economic outcomes on an ongoing basis with the
19 goal of improving overall health.
20     "Health risk assessment" means screening by a healthcare
21 professional for the purpose of assessing an individual's
22 health, including tests or physical examinations and a survey
23 or other tool used to gather information about an individual's
24 health, medical history, and health risk factors during a
25 screening.
26     "Illinois Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment

 

 

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1 Initiative" means the State's plan for chronic care
2 infrastructure, prevention of chronic conditions, and chronic
3 care management program, and includes an integrated approach to
4 patient self-management, community development, healthcare
5 system and professional practice change, and information
6 technology initiatives.
 
7     Section 33-10. Illinois Efficiency, Quality and Cost
8 Containment Initiative.
9     (a) In coordination with the Director of Public Health or
10 his or her designee and the Secretary of Human Services or his
11 or her designee, the Director of Healthcare and Family Services
12 shall be responsible for the development and implementation of
13 the Illinois Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment
14 Initiative, including the 5-year strategic plan. The Illinois
15 Healthcare Justice Commission will review the initiative's
16 progress on a yearly basis.
17     (b)(1) The Director of Healthcare and Family Services shall
18 establish an executive committee to advise him or her on
19 creating and implementing a strategic plan for the development
20 of the statewide system of chronic care and prevention
21 described under this Section. The executive committee shall
22 consist of no fewer than 16 individuals, including
23 representatives from the Department of Financial and
24 Professional Regulation, the Department of Healthcare and
25 Family Services Division of Medical Programs, the Department of

 

 

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1 Healthcare and Family Services Office of Healthcare
2 Purchasing, the Department of Human Services, the Department of
3 Public Health, 2 representatives of Illinois physician
4 organizations, a representative of Illinois hospitals, a
5 representative from Illinois nurses, a representative from
6 Illinois community health centers, a representative from
7 community mental health providers, a representative from
8 substance abuse providers, 2 representatives of private health
9 insurers, and at least 2 consumer advocates.
10         (2) The executive committee shall engage a broad range
11     of healthcare professionals who provide services and have
12     expertise in specific areas addressed by the Illinois
13     Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment Initiative. Such
14     professionals shall be representative of practice in both
15     private insurance and public health and in care for those
16     served by State medical programs including, but not limited
17     to, the Covering ALL KIDS Health Insurance Program, the
18     Children's Health Insurance Program Act, and medical
19     assistance under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code
20     generally.
21     (c)(1) The strategic plan shall include:
22             (A) A description of the Illinois Efficiency,
23         Quality and Cost Containment Initiative, which
24         includes general, standard elements, patient
25         self-management, community initiatives, and health
26         system and information technology reform, to be used

 

 

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1         uniformly statewide by private insurers, third party
2         administrators, and State healthcare programs.
3             (B) A description of prevention programs and how
4         these programs are integrated into communities, with
5         chronic care management, and the Illinois Efficiency,
6         Quality and Cost Containment Initiative model.
7             (C) A plan to develop an appropriate payment
8         methodology that aligns with and rewards health
9         professionals who manage the care for individuals with
10         or at risk for conditions in order to improve outcomes
11         and the quality of care.
12             (D) The involvement of public and private groups,
13         healthcare professionals, insurers, third party
14         administrators, hospitals, community health centers,
15         and businesses to facilitate and ensure the
16         sustainability of a new system of care.
17             (E) The involvement of community and consumer
18         groups to facilitate and ensure the sustainability of
19         health services supporting healthy behaviors and good
20         patient self-management for the prevention and
21         management of chronic conditions.
22             (F) Alignment of any information technology needs
23         with other healthcare information technology
24         initiatives.
25             (G) The use and development of outcomes measures
26         and reporting requirements, aligned with existing

 

 

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1         outcome measures within the Departments of Public
2         Health and Healthcare and Family Services, to assess
3         and evaluate the system of chronic care.
4             (H) Target timelines for inclusion of specific
5         chronic conditions to be included in the chronic care
6         infrastructure and for statewide implementation of the
7         Illinois Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment
8         Initiative.
9             (I) Identification of resource needs for
10         implementing and sustaining the Illinois Efficiency,
11         Quality and Cost Containment Initiative, and
12         strategies to meet the needs.
13             (J) A strategy for ensuring statewide
14         participation no later than January 1, 2012 by
15         insurers, third-party administrators, State healthcare
16         programs, healthcare professionals, hospitals and
17         other professionals, and consumers in the chronic care
18         management plan, including common outcome measures,
19         best practices and protocols, data reporting
20         requirements, reimbursement methodologies
21         incentivizing chronic care management and prevention
22         or early detection of chronic illnesses, and other
23         standards.
24         (2) The strategic plan shall be reviewed biennially and
25     amended as necessary to reflect changes in priorities.
26     Amendments to the plan shall be reported to the General

 

 

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1     Assembly and the Office of the Governor in the report
2     established under subsection (d) of this Section.
3     (d)(1) The Director of Healthcare and Family Services in
4 collaboration with the Director of Public Health and the
5 Secretary of Human Services shall report annually to members of
6 the General Assembly and the Office of the Governor on the
7 status of implementation of the Illinois Efficiency, Quality
8 and Cost Containment Initiative. The report shall include: the
9 number of participating insurers, healthcare professionals,
10 and patients; the progress for achieving statewide
11 participation in the chronic care management plan, including
12 the measures established under subsection (c) of this Section;
13 the expenditures and savings for the period; and the results of
14 healthcare professional and patient satisfaction surveys. The
15 surveys shall be developed in collaboration with the executive
16 committee established under subsection (b) of this Section.
17         (2) If statewide participation in the Illinois
18     Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment Initiative is not
19     achieved by January 1, 2013, the Director of Healthcare and
20     Family Services shall evaluate the Illinois Efficiency,
21     Quality and Cost Containment Initiative and recommend to
22     the General Assembly changes necessary to create
23     alternative measures to ensure statewide participation by
24     health insurers, third party administrators, State
25     healthcare programs, and healthcare professionals.
 

 

 

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1     Section 33-15. Chronic Care Management Program.
2     (a) The Director of Healthcare and Family Services shall
3 ensure that chronic care management programs, including
4 disease management programs established for those enrolled in
5 medical programs administered by the Department, including
6 both State employee health insurance programs and means-tested
7 healthcare programs administered by the Department, are
8 modified over time to comply with the Illinois Efficiency,
9 Quality and Cost Containment Initiative strategic plan and to
10 the extent feasible collaborate in its initiatives.
11     (b) The programs described in subsection (a) shall be
12 designed or modified as necessary to:
13         (1) Include a broad range of chronic conditions in the
14     chronic care management program.
15         (2) Utilize the chronic care information system
16     established under this Act.
17         (3) Include an enrollment process which provides
18     incentives and strategies for maximum patient
19     participation, and a standard statewide health risk
20     assessment for each individual.
21         (4) Include methods of increasing communications among
22     healthcare professionals and patients, including patient
23     education, self-management, and follow-up plans.
24         (5) Include process and outcome measures to provide
25     performance feedback for healthcare professionals and
26     information on the quality of care, including patient

 

 

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1     satisfaction and health status outcomes.
2         (6) Include payment methodologies to align
3     reimbursements and create financial incentives and rewards
4     for healthcare professionals to establish management
5     systems for chronic conditions, to improve health
6     outcomes, and to improve the quality of care, including
7     case management fees, payment for technical support and
8     data entry associated with patient registries, and any
9     other appropriate payment for achievement of chronic care
10     goals.
11         (7) Include a requirement that the data on enrollees be
12     shared, to the extent allowable under federal law, with the
13     Department of Central Management Services in order to
14     inform the healthcare reform initiatives under the
15     Illinois Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment
16     Initiative.
 
17     Section 33-20. Promoting Wellness under the Illinois
18 Efficiency, Quality and Cost Containment Initiative. The
19 Director of Healthcare and Family Services, in collaboration
20 with the Director of Public Health, the Secretary of Human
21 Services, and the Department of Central Management Services,
22 shall develop new strategies to:
23         (1) Promote wellness and the adoption of healthy
24     lifestyle choices and prevent chronic illness in the
25     State's means-tested healthcare programs. The Department

 

 

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1     of Healthcare and Family Services shall analyze whether any
2     federal waivers or waiver modifications are needed or
3     desirable to integrate such programs into the State's
4     means-tested healthcare programs.
5         (2) Promote wellness and the adoption of healthy
6     lifestyle choices and prevent chronic illness in the State
7     employee's health insurance programs. Such initiatives
8     shall involve consultation with the State of Illinois
9     employees' representatives.
 
10
ARTICLE 40. REDUCING ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS IN THE OVERALL
11
HEALTHCARE SYSTEM THROUGH ADMINISTRATIVE SIMPLIFICATION

 
12     Section 40-5. Common claims and procedures work group.
13     (a) No later than January 1, 2011, a common claims and
14 procedures work group shall form, composed of:
15         (1) Two representatives of Illinois hospitals.
16         (2) Two representatives of Illinois physicians
17     organizations.
18         (3) One representative of a nursing organization.
19         (4) One representative of a community health center.
20         (5) The Director of Healthcare and Family Services or
21     his or her designee.
22         (6) Two representatives from business groups appointed
23     by the Governor.
24         (7) The Director of Professional and Financial

 

 

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1     Regulation or his or her designee.
2         (8) Two representatives of the insurance industry
3     appointed by the Governor.
4     (b) The group shall design, recommend, and implement steps
5 to achieve the following goals:
6         (1) Simplifying the claims administration process for
7     consumers, healthcare providers, and others so that the
8     process is more understandable, and less time-consuming.
9         (2) Lowering administrative costs in the healthcare
10     financing system.
11         (3) Where possible, harmonizing the claims processing
12     system for State healthcare programs with the process
13     utilized by private insurers.
14     (c) On or before July 1, 2011, the work group shall present
15 a 2-year work plan and budget to the General Assembly and
16 Office of the Governor. This work plan may include the elements
17 of the claims administration process, including claims forms,
18 patient invoices, and explanation of benefits forms, payment
19 codes, claims submission and processing procedures, including
20 electronic claims processing, issues relating to the prior
21 authorization process, and reimbursement for services provided
22 prior to being credentialed.
23     (d) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services may
24 procure a vendor or external expertise to assist the work group
25 in its activities. Such a vendor shall have broad knowledge of
26 claims processing and benefit management across both public and

 

 

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1 private payors. Particular attention may be paid to harmonizing
2 claims processing system for State healthcare programs with the
3 processes utilized by private insurers.
 
4
ARTICLE 50. PROMOTING RESPONSIBILITY FOR HEALTH INSURANCE AND
5
HEALTHCARE COSTS

 
6     Section 50-5. Findings. A majority of Illinoisans receive
7 their healthcare through employer sponsored health insurance.
8 The cost of such healthcare has been rising faster than wage
9 inflation. A majority of businesses offer and subsidize such
10 health insurance. However, a growing number of businesses are
11 not offering health insurance. When a business does not offer
12 subsidized health insurance, employees are far more likely to
13 be uninsured and the costs of their healthcare are borne by
14 other payors including other businesses. Likewise, when
15 individuals choose to forgo paying for health insurance, they
16 may still experience illness or be involved in an accident
17 resulting in high medical costs that are borne by others. This
18 cost shifting is driving up the cost of insurance for
19 responsible businesses who are offering health insurance and
20 other individuals who are purchasing health insurance in the
21 non-group market. It is also shifting costs to State
22 government, and therefore taxpayers, by expanding the costs of
23 current State healthcare programs. Therefore, the General
24 Assembly finds that it is equitable to assess businesses a fee

 

 

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1 to offset such costs when such a business is not contributing
2 adequately to the cost of healthcare insurance and services for
3 its employees.
 
4
PART 1. SHORT TITLE AND CONSTRUCTION

 
5     Section 50-101. Short title. This Article may be cited as
6 the Illinois Shared Responsibility and Shared Opportunity
7 Assessment Act. References in this Article to "this Act" mean
8 this Article.
 
9     Section 50-105. Construction. Except as otherwise
10 expressly provided or clearly appearing from the context, any
11 term used in this Act shall have the same meaning as when used
12 in a comparable context in the Illinois Income Tax Act as in
13 effect for the taxable year.
 
14
PART 2. DEFINITIONS AND MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

 
15     Section 50-201. Definitions.
16     (a) When used in this Act, where not otherwise distinctly
17 expressed or manifestly incompatible with the intent thereof:
18     "Department" means the Department of Revenue.
19     "Director" means the Director of Revenue.
20     "Employer" means any individual, partnership, association,
21 corporation or other legal entity who employs 2 or more full

 

 

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1 time equivalent employees during the taxable year. The word
2 "employer" shall not include nonprofit entities, as defined by
3 the Internal Revenue Code, that are exclusively staffed by
4 volunteers nor shall the word "employer" include sole
5 proprietors. The term "employer" does not include the
6 government of the United States, of any foreign country, or of
7 any of the states, or of any agency, instrumentality, or
8 political subdivision of any such government. In the case of a
9 unitary business group, as defined in Section 1501(a)(27) of
10 the Illinois Income Tax Act, the employer is the unitary
11 business group.
12     "Expenditures for health care" means any amount paid by an
13 employer to provide health care to its employees or their
14 families or reimburse its employees or their families for
15 health care, including but not limited to amounts paid or
16 reimbursed for health insurance premiums where the underlying
17 policy provides or has provided coverage to employees of such
18 employer or their families. Such expenditures include but are
19 not limited to payment or reimbursement for medical care,
20 prescription drugs, vision care, medical savings accounts, and
21 any other costs to provide health care to an employer's
22 employees or their families.
23     "Full-time equivalent employees". The number of "full-time
24 equivalent employees" employed by an employer during a taxable
25 year shall be the lesser of (i) the number of persons who were
26 employees of the employer at any time during the taxable year

 

 

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1 and (ii) the total number of hours worked by all employees of
2 the employer during the taxable year, divided by 1500. In the
3 case of a short taxable year, the denominator shall be 1500
4 multiplied by the number of days in the taxable year, divided
5 by the number of days in the calendar year.
6     "Illinois employee" means an employee who is an Illinois
7 resident during the time he or she is performing services for
8 the employer or who has compensation from the employer that is
9 "paid in this State" during the taxable year within the meaning
10 of Section 304(a)(2)(B) of the Illinois Income Tax Act. For
11 purposes of computing the liability under Section 50-301 for a
12 taxable year and the credit under Section 50-302 of this Act,
13 an employee with health care coverage provided by another
14 employer of that employee, or with health care coverage as a
15 dependent through another employer, is not an "Illinois
16 employee" for that taxable year.
17     "Wages" means wages as defined in Section 3401(a) of the
18 Internal Revenue Code, without regard to the exceptions
19 contained in that Section and without reduction for exemptions
20 allowed in computing withholding.
21     (b) Other definitions.
22         (1) Words denoting number, gender, and so forth, when
23     used in this Act, where not otherwise distinctly expressed
24     or manifestly incompatible with the intent thereof:
25             (A) Words importing the singular include and apply
26         to several persons, parties or things;

 

 

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1             (B) Words importing the plural include the
2         singular; and
3             (C) Words importing the masculine gender include
4         the feminine as well.
5         (2) "Company" or "association" as including successors
6     and assigns. The word "company" or "association", when used
7     in reference to a corporation, shall be deemed to embrace
8     the words "successors and assigns of such company or
9     association", and in like manner as if these last-named
10     words, or words of similar import, were expressed.
11         (3) Other terms. Any term used in any Section of this
12     Act with respect to the application of, or in connection
13     with, the provisions of any other Section of this Act shall
14     have the same meaning as in such other Section.
 
15     Section 50-202. Applicable Sections of the Illinois Income
16 Tax Act. All of the provisions of Articles 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12,
17 13 and 14 of the Illinois Income Tax Act which are not
18 inconsistent with this Act shall apply, as far as practicable,
19 to the subject matter of this Act to the same extent as if such
20 provisions were included herein.
 
21     Section 50-203. Severability. It is the purpose of Section
22 50-301 of this Act to impose a tax upon the privilege of doing
23 business in this State, so far as the same may be done under
24 the Constitution and statutes of the United States and the

 

 

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1 Constitution of the State of Illinois. If any clause, sentence,
2 Section, provision, part, or credit included in this Act, or
3 the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is
4 adjudged to be unconstitutional, then it is the intent of the
5 General Assembly that the tax imposed and the remainder of this
6 Act, or its application to persons or circumstances other than
7 those to which it is held invalid, shall not be affected
8 thereby.
 
9
PART 3. TAX IMPOSED

 
10     Section 50-301. Tax imposed.
11     (a) A tax is hereby imposed on each employer for the
12 privilege of doing business in this State at the rate of 1.5%
13 of the wages paid to Illinois employees by the employer during
14 the taxable year for firms with fewer than 10 employees; at the
15 rate of 3.0% of the wages paid to Illinois employees by the
16 employer during the taxable year for firms with between 10 and
17 24 employees; at the rate of 4.0% of the wages paid to Illinois
18 employees by the employer during the taxable year for firms
19 with between 25 and 99 employees; at the rate of 5.0% of the
20 wages paid to Illinois employees by the employer during the
21 taxable year for firms with between 100 and 999 employees; and
22 at the rate of 6% of the wages paid to Illinois employees by
23 the employer during the taxable year for firms with 1000 or
24 more employees, provided that the tax on wages paid by the

 

 

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1 employer to any single employee shall not exceed $15,000 for
2 the taxable year.
3     (b) The tax imposed under this Act shall apply to wages
4 paid on or after January 1, 2010 and shall be paid beginning
5 July 1, 2011 as set forth in Part 4 of this Act and thereafter.
6     (c) The tax imposed under this Act is a tax on the
7 employer, and shall not be withheld from wages paid to
8 employees or otherwise be collected from employees or reduce
9 the compensation paid to employees.
10     (d) The tax collected pursuant to this Section shall be
11 deposited in the Illinois Shared Responsibility and Shared
12 Opportunity Trust Fund established by Section 50-701 of this
13 Act.
 
14     Section 50-302. Credits.
15     (a) For each taxable year, an employer whose total
16 expenditures for health care for Illinois employees equal or
17 exceed 4% of the wages paid to Illinois employees for that
18 taxable year shall be entitled to a full credit against the tax
19 imposed under Section 50-301.
20     (b) If the tax otherwise due under subsection (a) of
21 Section 50-301 of this Act with respect to the wages of any
22 employee of the employer is $15,000, the credit allowed in
23 subsection (a) of this Section shall be computed without taking
24 into account any wages paid to that employee or any
25 expenditures for health care incurred with respect to that

 

 

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1 Employee.
2     (c) For purposes of determining whether total expenditures
3 for health care for Illinois employees equal or exceed 4% of
4 the wages paid to Illinois employees for a taxable year, the
5 wages paid to and expenditures for health care for any Illinois
6 employee with health care coverage provided by another employer
7 of that employee, or with health care coverage as a dependent
8 through another employer, shall be disregarded.
 
9     Section 50-303. Exemptions. Start-up businesses with 5
10 full-time equivalent employees or fewer will be exempt from
11 paying this tax during their first three years of operation.
 
12
PART 4. PAYMENT OF ESTIMATED TAX

 
13     Section 50-401. Returns and notices.
14     (a) In General. Except as provided by the Department by
15 regulation, every employer qualified to do business in this
16 State at any time during a taxable year shall make a return
17 under this Act for that taxable year.
18     (b) Every employer shall keep such records, render such
19 statements, make such returns and notices, and comply with such
20 rules and regulations as the Department may from time to time
21 prescribe. Whenever in the judgment of the Director it is
22 necessary, he or she may require any person, by notice served
23 upon such person or by regulations, to make such returns and

 

 

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1 notices, render such statements, or keep such records, as the
2 Director deems sufficient to show whether or not such person is
3 liable for the tax under this Act.
 
4     Section 50-402. Payment on due date of return. Every
5 employer required to file a return under this Act shall,
6 without assessment, notice, or demand, pay any tax due thereon
7 to the Department, at the place fixed for filing, on or before
8 the date fixed for filing such return pursuant to regulations
9 prescribed by the Department. In making payment as provided in
10 this Section, there shall remain payable only the balance of
11 such tax remaining due after giving effect to payments of
12 estimated tax made by the employer under Section 50-403 of this
13 Act for the taxable year, which payments shall be deemed to
14 have been paid on account of the tax imposed by this Act for
15 the taxable year.
 
16     Section 50-403. Payment of estimated tax.
17     (a) Each taxpayer is required to pay estimated tax in
18 installments for each taxable year in the form and manner that
19 the Department requires by rule.
20     (b) Payment of an installment of estimated tax is due no
21 later than each due date during the taxable year under Article
22 7 of the Illinois Income Tax Act for payment of amounts
23 withheld from employee compensation by the employer.
24     (c) The amount of each installment shall be (1) the

 

 

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1 percentage of employees' wages outlined in Section 50-301
2 during the period during which the employer withheld the amount
3 of Illinois income withholding that is due on the same date as
4 the installment, minus (2) the credit allowed for the taxable
5 year under Section 50-302 of this Act, multiplied by the number
6 of days during the period in clause (1), divided by 365.
7     (d) For purposes of Section 3-3 of the Uniform Penalty and
8 Interest Act, a taxpayer shall be deemed to have failed to make
9 timely payment of an installment of estimated taxes due under
10 this Section only if the amount timely paid for that
11 installment is less than 90% of the amount due under subsection
12 (c) of this Section.
 
13
PART 6. HEALTH INSURER RESPONSIBILITY

 
14     Section 50-601. Health insurer responsibility. Within 30
15 days after the conclusion of 2 years from the effective date of
16 the Illinois Program, the Governor shall designate a 9-person
17 task force to determine the propriety of regulatory reform
18 requiring prior approval of premium rates charged by health
19 insurers for group and individual contracts. The task force
20 shall be composed of a designee of the Governor, the Speaker of
21 the House of Representatives, the President of the Senate, the
22 Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services,
23 the Director of the Division of Insurance, a representative of
24 the health insurance industry, a representative of health care

 

 

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1 providers, and 2 representatives of labor groups or employee
2 associations. Within 270 days after the conclusion of 2 years
3 from the effective date of the Illinois Program, the task force
4 shall issue a written report to the Governor, including a
5 description of findings, analyses, conclusions, and
6 recommendations, regarding whether additional health insurance
7 rate regulation is appropriate. If necessary, the Governor
8 shall thereafter take action appropriate to implement the
9 recommendations of the task force.
 
10
PART 7. ILLINOIS SHARED RESPONSIBILITY AND SHARED OPPORTUNITY
11
TRUST FUND

 
12     Section 50-701. Establishment of Fund.
13     (a) There is hereby established a fund to be known as the
14 Illinois Shared Responsibility and Shared Opportunity Trust
15 Fund. There shall be credited to this Fund all taxes collected
16 pursuant to this Act. The Illinois Shared Responsibility and
17 Shared Opportunity Trust Fund shall not be subject to sweeps,
18 administrative charges, or charge-backs, including but not
19 limited to those authorized under Section 8h of the State
20 Finance Act or any other fiscal or budgeting transfer that
21 would in any way transfer any funds from the Illinois Shared
22 Responsibility and Shared Opportunity Trust Fund into any other
23 fund of the State, except to repay funds transferred into this
24 Fund.

 

 

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1     (b) Interest earnings, income from investments, and other
2 income earned by the Fund shall be credited to and deposited
3 into the Fund.
 
4     Section 50-702. Use of Fund.
5     (a) Amounts credited to the Illinois Shared Responsibility
6 and Shared Opportunity Trust Fund shall be expended for
7 programs designed to increase health care coverage, including,
8 without limitation, premium assistance and reinsurance
9 pursuant to Article 10 of the Act, medical services and
10 prescription drug assistance pursuant to Article 9 of the Act,
11 reimbursements, rebates, and other payments pursuant to
12 Article 5 of the Act, expansion of mental health, alcohol, and
13 substance abuse services or other existing programs pursuant to
14 Article 7 of the Act, debt service for capital spending
15 intended to increase access to health centers, repayment of
16 funds transferred into this Fund pursuant to statute, and
17 capital grants to community health centers, to rural health
18 clinics, and to federally qualified health centers as well
19 providing additional improvements to the healthcare system
20 pursuant to Article 30 and Article 33 of the Act.
21     (b) Not later than December 31 of each fiscal year, the
22 Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall prepare
23 estimates of the revenues to be credited to the Trust Fund in
24 the subsequent fiscal year and shall provide this report to the
25 General Assembly. In order to maintain the integrity of the

 

 

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1 Illinois Shared Responsibility and Shared Opportunity Trust
2 Fund, for fiscal year 2010 through fiscal year 2012, the total
3 amount of expenditures from the Illinois Shared Responsibility
4 and Shared Opportunity Trust Fund shall be limited to each
5 fiscal year in relation to 90% of revenues generated during
6 such fiscal year.
7     (c) Beginning on or after July 1 of Fiscal Year 2009, the
8 General Assembly shall make appropriations of such estimated
9 revenues to the various programs authorized to be funded. If
10 revenues credited to the Illinois Shared Responsibility and
11 Shared Opportunity Trust Fund are less than the amounts
12 estimated, the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall
13 notify the General Assembly of such deficiency and shall notify
14 the Departments administering the programs funded from the
15 Trust Fund that the revenue deficiency shall require
16 proportionate reductions in expenditures from the revenues
17 available to support programs appropriated from the Illinois
18 Shared Responsibility and Shared Opportunity Trust Fund.
 
19     Section 50-703. The Illinois Shared Responsibility and
20 Shared Opportunity Trust Fund Financial Oversight Panel.
21     (a) Creation. In order to maintain the integrity of the
22 Illinois Shared Responsibility and Shared Opportunity Trust
23 Fund, prior to July 1, 2010, the Department shall create the
24 Illinois Shared Responsibility and Shared Opportunity Trust
25 Fund Financial Oversight Panel to monitor the revenues and

 

 

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1 expenditures of the Trust Fund and to furnish information
2 regarding the Illinois programs to the Governor and the members
3 of the General Assembly.
4     (b) Membership. The Oversight Panel shall consist of 7
5 non-State employee members appointed by the Governor in
6 consultation with the Healthcare Justice Commission. Each
7 Panel member shall possess knowledge, skill, and experience in
8 at least one of the following areas of expertise: accounting,
9 actuarial practice, risk management, investment management,
10 management and accounting practices specific to health
11 insurance administration, administration of public aid public
12 programs, or public sector fiscal management. Panel members
13 shall serve 3-year terms. If appropriate, the terms may be
14 modified at the Panel's inception to ensure a quorum. The
15 Governor shall bi-annually appoint a Chairman and
16 Vice-Chairman. Any person appointed to fill a vacancy on the
17 Panel shall be appointed in a like manner and shall serve only
18 the unexpired term. Panel members shall be eligible for
19 reappointment. Panel members shall serve without compensation
20 and be reimbursed for expenses.
21     (c) Statements of economic interest. Before being
22 installed as a member of the Panel, each appointee shall file
23 verified statements of economic interest with the Secretary of
24 State as required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act and
25 with the Board of Ethics as required by the Executive Order of
26 the Governor.

 

 

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1     (d) Advice and review. The Panel shall offer advice and
2 counsel regarding the Illinois Shared Responsibility and
3 Shared Opportunity Trust Fund with the objective of expanding
4 access to affordable health care within the financial
5 constraints of the Trust Fund. The Panel is required to review,
6 and advise the Department, the General Assembly, and the
7 Governor on, the financial condition of the Trust Fund.
8     (e) Management. Upon the vote of a majority of the Panel,
9 the Panel shall have the authority to compensate for
10 professional services rendered with respect to its duties and
11 shall also have the authority to compensate for accounting,
12 computing, and other necessary services.
13     (f) Semi-annual accounting and audit. The Panel shall
14 semi-annually prepare or cause to be prepared a semi-annual
15 report setting forth in appropriate detail an accounting of the
16 Trust Fund and a description of the financial condition of the
17 Trust Fund at the close of each fiscal year, including:
18 semi-annual revenues to the Trust Fund, semi-annual
19 expenditures from the Trust Fund, implementation and results of
20 cost-saving measures, program utilization, and projections for
21 program development.
22     If the Panel determines that insufficient funds exist in
23 the Trust Fund to pay anticipated obligations in the next
24 succeeding fiscal year, the Panel shall so certify in the
25 semi-annual report the amount necessary to meet the anticipated
26 obligations. The Panel's semi-annual report shall be directed

 

 

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1 to the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
2 Representatives, the Minority Leader of the Senate, and the
3 Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
 
4
PART 8. SEVERABILITY

 
5     Section 50-801. Severability. It is the purpose of Section
6 50-301 of this Act to impose a tax upon the privilege of doing
7 business in this State, so far as the same may be done under
8 the Constitution and statutes of the United States and the
9 Constitution of the State of Illinois. If any clause, sentence,
10 Section, provision, part, or credit included in this Act, or
11 the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is
12 adjudged to be unconstitutional, then it is the intent of the
13 General Assembly that the tax imposed and the remainder of this
14 Act, or its application to persons or circumstances other than
15 those to which it is held invalid, shall not be affected
16 thereby.

 

 

HB1081 - 104 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3     New Act
4     305 ILCS 5/1-12 new
5     305 ILCS 5/1-13 new
6     215 ILCS 5/352b new
7     215 ILCS 5/359a from Ch. 73, par. 971a
8     215 ILCS 5/370c from Ch. 73, par. 982c
9     215 ILCS 5/Art. XLV
10     heading new
11     215 ILCS 5/1500-5 new
12     215 ILCS 5/1500-10 new
13     215 ILCS 5/1500-15 new
14     215 ILCS 5/1500-20 new
15     215 ILCS 5/1500-25 new
16     215 ILCS 5/1500-30 new
17     215 ILCS 125/5-3 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1411.2
18     215 ILCS 134/45
19     110 ILCS 949/Act title
20     110 ILCS 949/1
21     110 ILCS 949/5
22     110 ILCS 949/10
23     110 ILCS 949/15
24     110 ILCS 949/25
25     110 ILCS 949/30

 

 

HB1081 - 105 - LRB096 09937 DRJ 20101 b

1     110 ILCS 949/35