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For Immediate
Release
5/22/07
Contact:
Joe Pittman
(724) 357-0151 or (724) 541-0552 (cell)
Senate Sends Amended Blues
Merger Bill Back to House
HB 112 would include "social
mission" spending as part of state review
 
The Senate today
(Tuesday, May 22) approved House Bill 112, legislation to provide state
oversight of proposed mergers involving non-profit health insurance companies,
and sent the amended bill back to the House for concurrence, according to
Senator Don White, Chairman of the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee.
While there have
been significant changes in the bill since its passage by the House on April 24,
the key component of the bill (as it is with Senate Bill 550, which Senator
White introduced and approved by the Senate in March) is the requirement that
any merger involving the “Blues” be subject to approval by the Department of
Insurance.
“This regulatory
oversight is essential for policyholders and to ensure competition within the
health insurance marketplace,” Senator White said. “While we have debated and
revised many provisions in this legislation, the oversight provision has
remained consistent throughout the process.”
While the Insurance
Department would hold final approval -- or denial -- authority for a merger of
non-profit health insurance companies, House Bill 112 also establishes an
Insurance Restructuring Public Interest Review Board comprised of
representatives from the Auditor General’s Office, the Administration, and the
four caucuses of the General Assembly, as well as a policyholder to provide
recommendations to the Department.
“This Board will
ensure that the public has an opportunity to comment on the merger and is
empowered to retain an independent financial expert to review the union. This
analysis will consider the financial aspects of the merger and determine the
total amount the non-profit organizations are currently dedicating to the social
mission,” Senator White said.
“Funding for the
social mission is a major component,” Senator White continued. “The Blues were
essentially created by the Legislature in part for that expressed purpose and in
turn they are excused from premium taxes and afforded other statutory advantages
under Pennsylvania law.”
Once the review
board submits its recommendations, House Bill 112 specifically requires the
Department of Insurance to provide detailed written explanations of why a board
recommendation will or will not be adopted as part of a merger approval or
denial.
“The point here is
that we do not want the review panel to simply be a token player in the
process,” Senator White said. “This requirement is intended to prevent the
Department from simply rejecting out-of-hand any recommendation from the review
board without a detailed explanation.”
In addition, House
Bill 112 requires the Department of Insurance to develop a written determination
that the merger or consolidation will result in a sustained reduction in health
care premiums. The Department’s written determination must also set forth the
reasons why the transaction will be in the public interest.
“Highmark and IBC
contend the merger should be approved based on the premise that it will result
in savings. If so, then there must be ironclad assurances that those savings
will be reflected in the short and long term,” Senator White said. “Further,
any savings should not be used to support growing operations in other states or
in lines of business outside of insurance. Moreover, we need to make sure these
savings do not come at the cost of consumers’ accessibility to needed health
care – and to the doctors, hospitals, pharmacists and others who provide that
care.”
House Bill 112 also
includes a specific “good government” provision that prohibits any contract or
agreement between the Commonwealth and Independence Blue Cross or Highmark
relating to the disbursement or spending of the proceeds from the merger or
consolidation. It also prohibits any spending from the restricted receipt
account except upon appropriation by the General Assembly.
“This will ensure
that all dealings between the Department and the Blues are above board and
beyond reproach. It would be contrary to all that we are working to accomplish
if the Blues were permitted to buy state approval through any type of donation
or contribution.” Senator White said.
Finally, House Bill
112 adds a new article to the Insurance Company Act that will require hospital
plan corporations and professional health services plan corporations to report
amounts spent on social mission and advertising annually to the Department of
Insurance and the House and Senate Insurance Committees.
“It’s obvious to
anyone who reads a newspaper or watches television that the Blues spend a
significant amount of money on advertising,” Senator White said. “I believe it
is in the public interest to review that spending as well as social mission
spending on an annual basis to ensure that the Blues are properly fulfilling
their intended role in the Commonwealth.”
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