EMPLOYER MED. BENEFIT MAX COSTS H.B. 6058 (H-2):

SUMMARY OF DISCHARGED BILL

 

 

 

 

 

House Bill 6058 (Substitute H-2 as discharged)

Sponsor: Representative Mai Xiong

House Committee: Labor

Senate Committee: Government Operations (discharged)

 


CONTENT

 

The bill would amend the Publicly Funded Health Insurance Contribution Act to do the following:

 

--   Beginning January 1, 2025, require a public employer that contributed to certain employee medical plans to pay no more than specified amounts for the annual costs, rates, and reimbursement of copays, deductibles, or payments into health savings accounts, flexible spending accounts, among other things.

--   Allow a public employer to allocate its payments for medical benefit plan costs among its employees and elected officials as the employer sees fit.

--   By April 1, 2025, and each following year, require the State Treasurer to adjust the maximum employer payments for single-person and family coverage for medical benefit plans for the succeeding year based on any changes in the in the medical care component of the average Michigan health insurance rates or by 3%, whichever was greater.

--   Prescribe the rate at which the State Treasurer would have to adjust individual-and-spouse or individual-and-plus-one coverage.

--   Specify that the maximum payments would not apply to an employee covered by a collective bargaining agreement or other contract that was inconsistent with the bill's provisions until the agreement or contract was amended.

--   Beginning January 1, 2025, require a public employer to pay at least 80% of the total costs of all medical benefit plans it offered or contributed to for its employees and elected public officials.

--   Specify that the 80% requirement would not apply to an employee covered by a collective bargaining agreement or contract until the stated expiration date of that agreement or contract.

--   Prohibit a collective bargaining agreement or contract executed after January 1, 2025, from including terms that were inconsistent with the maximum payments required under the bill.

 

MCL 15.563 et al. Legislative Analyst: Eleni Lionas

 

FISCAL IMPACT

 

This bill would increase public employer contribution caps and mandate an 80% contribution floor. If the public employer contributions were already at the 80% level, then there would be no fiscal impact. If the public employer contributions were below the 80% cap, when the cap was changed to a floor, they would have to increase their spending to reach the 80% cap. Additionally, if a public employer were at or below 80% currently but would like to increase above 80%, the bill would allow the employer to do so. The bill would set these levels at $8,259 for single-person coverage, $17,271 for individual-and-spouse or individual-plus-one-non-spouse-dependent, and $22,523 for family coverage. The bill also would adjust these amounts for future years. A total cost cannot be estimated at this time.

 

Date Completed: 12-19-24 Fiscal Analyst: Bobby Canell

Joe Carrasco, Jr.

This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.