Second Regular Session Seventy-fourth General Assembly STATE OF COLORADO INTRODUCED LLS NO. 24-0802.01 Shelby Ross x4510 HOUSE BILL 24-1086 House Committees Senate Committees Health & Human Services A BILL FOR AN ACT C ONCERNING THE OPERATION OF THE DENVER HEALTH AND HOSPITAL101 AUTHORITY.102 Bill Summary (Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced and does not reflect any amendments that may be subsequently adopted. If this bill passes third reading in the house of introduction, a bill summary that applies to the reengrossed version of this bill will be available at http://leg.colorado.gov .) Current law requires the department of health care policy and financing (department) to offer to enter into a direct contract with the managed care organization (MCO) operated by or under the control of the Denver health and hospital authority (Denver health) until Denver health ceases to operate a medicaid managed care program or until June 30, 2025. The bill removes the option for the department to enter into a direct HOUSE SPONSORSHIP Holtorf and Amabile, SENATE SPONSORSHIP (None), Shading denotes HOUSE amendment. Double underlining denotes SENATE amendment. Capital letters or bold & italic numbers indicate new material to be added to existing law. Dashes through the words or numbers indicate deletions from existing law. contract until June 30, 2025, and instead requires the department to enter into the contract until Denver health ceases to operate a managed care program. The bill prohibits the MCO from reimbursing contracted medicaid providers at rates that are higher than the department's medicaid fee for service rates unless the provider enters into a quality incentive agreement with the MCO. The bill requires the MCO's contract to provide physical and behavioral health-care services to the population it serves. For the 2023-24 state fiscal year, the department distributed money appropriated for a supplemental state payment to Denver health. The bill authorizes the department to continually distribute any money appropriated for payment to Denver health. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Colorado:1 SECTION 1. Legislative declaration. (1) The general assembly2 finds that:3 (a) Safety net hospitals are experiencing significant financial4 hardships due to uncompensated care, increased staffing costs, inflation,5 and federal money that is no longer available. Hospitals are seeing more6 uninsured, underinsured, and medicaid patients. Safety net hospitals are7 caring for patients longer, with less revenue and increased expenses, and8 they are struggling with how to provide care for their communities. Rural9 safety net hospitals and Denver health are the mostly heavily burdened by10 these increasing financial hardships.11 (b) Denver health and hospital authority is the largest safety net12 hospital in Colorado, serving patients from 63 out of the 64 counties in13 the state;14 (c) From 2020 to 2023, uncompensated care at Denver health has15 increased 127% due to underpayment from public insurance companies16 and increases in uninsured patients, including migrants and people17 experiencing homelessness;18 (d) In 2023, Denver health is projected to provide more than $13519 HB24-1086-2- million in uncompensated care;1 (e) Increased demand for services among uninsured and2 underinsured patients and increases in the number of homeless patients3 and those with a mental health diagnosis, together with the increasing4 expenses and stagnating public funding from federal, state, and local5 governments, have created an unsustainable financial situation for Denver6 health;7 (f) As a safety net hospital on the front line of providing8 health-care services statewide, it is important for the health of Coloradans9 that Denver health is financially stable and remains a valuable health-care10 resource; and11 (g) As the largest safety net hospital in Colorado, Denver health12 maintains and invests in administrative infrastructure necessary to carry13 out the responsibilities of serving a disproportionate share of medicaid14 members and uninsured individuals. Because of this, Denver health is15 unable to generate sufficient revenue to fulfill the ongoing investment16 need.17 (2) Therefore, the general assembly declares it is important to18 provide authority to the department of health care policy and financing to19 assist safety net hospitals, such as Denver health, in becoming financially20 stable.21 SECTION 2. In Colorado Revised Statutes, 25.5-5-402, amend22 (7.5) as follows:23 25.5-5-402. Statewide managed care system - rules -24 definitions - repeal. (7.5) (a) The state department shall offer to enter25 into a direct contract with the MCO operated by or under the control of26 Denver health and hospital authority, created pursuant to article 29 of title27 HB24-1086 -3- 25, until the MCO ceases to operate a medicaid managed care program.1 or until June 30, 2025, unless sooner reprocured. If the state department2 designates an MCO to manage behavioral health services pursuant to this3 article 5, Denver health and hospital authority, or any subsidiary thereof,4 shall collaborate with the MCO during the term of contract.5 (b) The MCO operated by or under the control of Denver health6 and hospital authority shall:7 (I) Maintain adequate financials to ensure proper solvency as a8 risk manager;9 (II) Accept rates determined by the state department, through10 standard methodologies, to cover the population it is serving. R ATES PAID11 BY THE MCO TO CONTRACTED PROVIDERS MUST NOT BE HIGHER THAN THE12 STATE DEPARTMENT'S MEDICAID FEE FOR SERVICE RATES UNLESS THE13 PROVIDER ENTERS INTO A QUALITY INCENTIVE AGREEMENT WITH THE14 MCO.15 (III) Maintain service and quality metrics, as determined by the16 state department; and 17 (IV) Meet statewide managed care system standards and operate18 as part of the overall managed care system; AND19 (V) P ROVIDE PHYSICAL AND BEHAVIORAL HEALTH -CARE SERVICES20 TO THE POPULATION IT SERVES.21 SECTION 3. In Colorado Revised Statutes, amend 25.5-4-42722 as follows:23 25.5-4-427. State payment to the Denver health and hospital24 authority. (1) The state department shall distribute money appropriated25 for a supplemental payment to the Denver health and hospital authority26 created in section 25-29-103.27 HB24-1086 -4- (2) This section is repealed, effective July 1, 2024.1 SECTION 4. Act subject to petition - effective date. This act2 takes effect at 12:01 a.m. on the day following the expiration of the3 ninety-day period after final adjournment of the general assembly; except4 that, if a referendum petition is filed pursuant to section 1 (3) of article V5 of the state constitution against this act or an item, section, or part of this6 act within such period, then the act, item, section, or part will not take7 effect unless approved by the people at the general election to be held in8 November 2024 and, in such case, will take effect on the date of the9 official declaration of the vote thereon by the governor.10 HB24-1086 -5-