Colorado 2025 2025 Regular Session

Colorado Senate Bill SB314 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/30/2025

                    SB 25-314  
Fiscal Note 
Legislative Council Staff 
Nonpartisan Services for Colorado’s Legislature 
SB 25-314: RECOVERY AUDIT CONTRACTOR PRO GRAM  
Prime Sponsors: 
Sen. Kirkmeyer; Bridges 
Rep. Bird; Sirota  
Published for: House Appropriations 
Drafting number: LLS 25-0717  
Fiscal Analyst: 
Kristine McLaughlin, 303-866-4776 
kristine.mclaughlin@coleg.gov  
Version: First Revised Note  
Date: April 29, 2025 
Fiscal note status: The revised fiscal note reflects the reengrossed bill, which was recommended by the 
Joint Budget Committee. 
Summary Information 
Overview. The bill places several requirements on vendors hired by the Department of Health Care Policy 
and Financing to conduct recovery audits and the audits they conduct. 
Types of impacts. The bill is projected to affect the following areas on an ongoing basis: 
 State Revenue 
 State Diversions 
 State Expenditures 
Appropriations. For FY 2025-26, the bill requires and includes a net zero change in appropriations to the 
Department of Health Care Policy and Financing. 
Table 1 
State Fiscal Impacts 
Type of Impact
1
 
Budget Year 
FY 2025-26 
Out Year 
FY 2026-27 
State Revenue 	$0 	$0 
State Expenditures 	$0 	$0 
Diverted Funds  	$20,900,588 Not Calculated 
Change in TABOR Refunds 	$0 	$0 
Change in State FTE 	0.0 FTE 	0.0 FTE 
1
 Fund sources for these impacts are shown in the tables below.  Page 2 
April 29, 2025  SB 25-314 
 
 	Table 1A  
State Diversions/Expenditures 
Fund Source 
Budget Year 
FY 2025-26 
Out Year 
FY 2026-27 
General Fund, Cash Funds, & Federal Funds 	-$20,900,588 Not Calculated 
Recovery Audit Contractor Recoveries Cash Fund $20,900,588 Not Calculated 
Net Diversion 	$0 	$0 
Summary of Legislation 
The bill places several requirements on vendors hired by the Department of Health Care Policy 
and Financing (HCPF) to conduct recovery audits (RAC vendors) and the audits they conduct 
including contracting requirements, disclosure requirements, audit limitations, and review 
requirements. 
Contracting Requirements 
The bill requires RAC vendor compensation to be contingent on the money they recover. For the 
next audit, this contingency fee must not exceed 16 percent of recoveries and for subsequent 
audits must be tiered based on required work, if allowed by federal regulations. 
Disclosure Requirements 
The bill requires HCPF to issue notices of adverse action within 120 days of an informal 
reconsideration meeting or forfeit the state share of the recovery. 
Audit Limitations 
The bill imposes the following limits on audits, if allowed by federal regulations: 
 audits are restricted to claims made in the last three years; 
 providers may be audited no more than three times per calendar year; 
 audits must be grouped across providers; 
 the number medical records an RAC vendor can request is capped and tiered by provider 
size; and 
 for providers with an audit denial rate of 40 percent or higher, audits are restricted to 
25 percent of claims per audit type. 
Review Requirements 
The bill requires HCPF to: 
 review all RAC vendor audit proposals and regularly review all vendor work; 
 notify providers of preliminary findings and the associated rational and methodology;  Page 3 
April 29, 2025  SB 25-314 
 
 establish a process for providers to request an exit conference, informal, and formal 
reconsideration process; and 
 issue an exit interview determination within 30 days. 
The bill requires providers to request an informal reconsideration before submitting a formal 
appeal. 
Recoveries Cash Fund 
Finally, the bill requires all recoveries to be credited to the newly created Recovery Audit 
Contractor Recoveries Cash Fund. Subject to available appropriations, HCPF may use the cash 
fund to offset the need for appropriations for medical services and to pay the RAC vendor. 
State Diversion 
Currently, overpayment recoveries are credited to HCPF based on the funds that paid the initial 
provider claims. The bill diverts these funds—$20.9 million in FY 2025-26—into the newly 
created Recovery Audit Contractor Recoveries Cash Fund. Recoveries for future years have not 
been estimated. These funds will continue to offsets HCPF’s need for General Funds, cash funds, 
and federal funds based on the funds that paid in the initial claims. 
State Revenue and Expenditures 
The bill impacts HCPF revenue and expenditures in several ways, which will be adjusted through 
the annual budget process. 
Contingency Fees 
The bill will decrease HCPF’s expenditures for contractor contingency fees in FY 2026-27 only. 
The RAC vendor contingency fee is currently 18 percent of recoveries. The bill requires it to be 
lowered to 16 percent for the next audit only. If recoveries remain consistent, this may lower 
HCPF’s contract costs by about $400,000, approximately one third of which would be state 
funds. However, recoveries are not historically consistent and the lowered rate may decrease 
recovery revenue if RAC vendors are less incentivized to identify overpayments. Thus, the fiscal 
note has not estimated savings.  
Forfeited Recoveries 
The bill’s disclosure requirements may decrease HCPF revenue by requiring notices of adverse 
action to be issued within 120 days of an informal reconsideration meeting. The fiscal note 
assumes HCPF will comply with the deadline and there will be no fiscal impact from forfeited 
recoveries.  Page 4 
April 29, 2025  SB 25-314 
 
Audit Limitations 
The bill’s audit limitations may decrease HCPF revenue. Audits are currently being conducted 
within the audit limitations specified in the bill. If substantial evidence arises to indicate that 
overpayments were made on claims outside of these limitations, the fiscal note assumes that 
federal regulations will require HCPF to conduct audits to recover these funds and, per the bill, 
HCPF would not be bound by the limitations and no recoveries would be lost. 
Workload Impacts 
The bill may decrease workload for HCPF if the requirement that providers request an informal 
reconsideration before submitting a formal appeal results in fewer formal appeals. 
The bill requires HCPF to review all RAC vendor audit proposals and regularly review all vendor 
work. This codifies current practice and therefore does not impact workload. 
All other requirements of the bill minimally increase workload for HCPF to promulgate rules, 
conduct provider outreach, and prepare reports. This work can be accomplished within existing 
resources. 
Effective Date 
The bill takes effect 90 days following adjournment of the General Assembly sine die, assuming 
no referendum petition is filed. 
State Appropriations 
For FY 2025-26, the bill requires and includes a net zero change in appropriation to the 
Department of Health Care Policy and Financing that includes an increase in appropriations of 
$20,900,588 from the Recovery Audit Contractor Recoveries Cash Fund and a corresponding 
decrease in General Fund, cash funds, and federal funds appropriations from recoveries and 
recoupments. 
State and Local Government Contacts 
Health Care Policy and Financing  	Joint Budget Committee Staff 
 
 
The revenue and expenditure impacts in this fiscal note represent changes from current law under the bill for each 
fiscal year. For additional information about fiscal notes, please visit the General Assembly website.