MAINE: Gov. Paul
LePage and the legislature's Republican leaders found a way to avoid an
override of the Governor's recent veto of the most-favored nation
prohibition bill. The bill would bar insurers from requiring a health
care provider to charge an insurance company the lowest rate the
provider negotiates with any other insurance carrier. In his veto
message on the bill, LePage said he strongly believes that businesses
have a right to contract with each other as they deem appropriate. After
some Republicans complained, LePage met last week with GOP leaders and
co-chairs of the legislature's Insurance and Financial Services
Committee, which unanimously endorsed the bill last month. Republican
lawmakers agreed to vote to sustain the governor's veto when the House
acts on it, and the Governor agreed to submit compromise legislation.
The new bill would ban most-favored nation clauses but also allow
Maine's superintendent of
insurance to issue a waiver. It is unclear what conditions an insurer
would have to meet to earn a waiver. The bill's language is not yet
available to the public. With session scheduled to adjourn June 15, the
legislature is likely to wait until next year to take up the bill.
Governor LePage announced that Eric Cioppa, Deputy Superintendent of the Bureau of Insurance, Department of Professional and Financial will serve as Acting Superintendent effective immediately. Cioppa replaces former Superintendent Mila Kofman who resigned recently. In his former role as deputy superintendent,
Cioppa was responsible for the Examination, Market Conduct, Financial
Analysis, Alternative Risk Markets, Producer Licensing, Administrative
Support Unit, and Research and Statistics Units of the Bureau.
MICHIGAN:
In the next couple of weeks, the state Senate is expected to vote on a
$400 million paid-claims tax that would be levied on insurers and
third-party administrators as proposed by Governor Snyder.
Specifically, the bill would establish an entirely new tax on health
insurance claims as a way to match federal Medicaid funding. The 1
percent on tax on all medical claims
paid under health, dental, automobile and workers' compensation
coverage would impact fully and self-insured business. Ultimately, the
cost of the tax will be borne by the sponsor of that coverage – the
employer or the individual who already pays for the coverage. As
introduced, the tax would begin on October 1, 2011. While working with
lawmakers to help them understand the impact the tax would have on
constituents, Aetna has mobilized its grassroots employee network to
contact their state legislators regarding the issue. The bill has a
strong chance of passing, and Aetna is urging all its constituents in
the state to contact the Governor's office and legislators to express
any concerns they may have about the tax.
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