Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06710 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 06/02/2023

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
HB-6710 
AN ACT CONCERNING ASSOCIATION HEALTH PLANS AND 
ESTABLISHING A TASK FORCE TO STUDY STOP -LOSS 
INSURANCE. 
AMENDMENT 
LCO No.: 9466 
File Copy No.: 330 
House Calendar No.: 229  
 
Primary Analyst: MP 	6/2/23 
Contributing Analyst(s):  	() 
 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 24 $ FY 25 $ 
Insurance Dept. 	IF - Cost See Below See Below 
Insurance Dept. 	IF - Revenue 
Gain 
See Below See Below 
Insurance Dept. 	GF - Revenue 
Gain 
Minimal Minimal 
Department of Revenue Services GF - Potential 
Revenue Loss 
None See Below 
Connecticut Health Insurance 
Exchange 
Resources of the 
Exchange - 
Revenue Loss 
Potential 
Significant 
Potential 
Significant 
Note: GF=General Fund; IF=Insurance Fund 
Municipal Impact: None  
Explanation 
The amendment strikes the underlying bill and its associated fiscal 
impact, resulting in the fiscal impact described below. 
The amendment authorizes two forms of association health plans that 
are not permitted under current law: (1) self-funded multiple employer 
welfare arrangement (MEWA) trusts that administer a health benefit 
plan that is not insurance but has to follow most of the rules for health 
insurance companies, and (2) associations of small employers  2023HB-06710-R00LCO09466-FNA.docx 	Page 2 of 5 
 
 
purchasing health insurance subject to large group rating rules. 
The amendment results in: (1) costs and offsetting revenue to the 
Insurance Department (DOI) associated with regulating the self-funded 
MEWA trusts beginning as early as FY 24, (2) a potential revenue gain 
to the General Fund from license fees to the extent those entities form 
and pay the same license fees as health insurance companies, (3) a 
potential revenue loss to the General Fund associated with insurance 
premiums tax beginning in FY 25, and (4) a potentially significant 
revenue loss to the Connecticut Health Insurance Exchange 
(“exchange”) beginning in FY 24. 
The amendment also creates a task force to study stop loss insurance 
and report on its findings and recommendations by February 1, 2024, 
and requires self-funded MEWA trusts to report claims data to the all-
payer claims database, which are not anticipated to result in a fiscal 
impact. 
State Regulation Fiscal Impacts 
The total annual costs for state regulation of self-funded MEWAs will 
depend on the number of such entities that are established; however, 
the cost per year to DOI is anticipated to be approximately $17,000 or 
more each. The amendment requires that self-funded MEWAs 
reimburse DOI for costs associated with their financial and market 
conduct examinations, so costs to DOI under the amendment should be 
mostly offset by Insurance Fund revenue gains to the agency.
1  
Costs related to regulating self-funded MEWA trusts could be 
incurred beginning in FY 24, as the amendment allows them to apply 
for a license beginning October 1, 2023, and to start offering health 
benefit plans, once licensed, beginning April 1, 2024.  The entities would 
bear the cost of either staff time or the contracted services of attorneys, 
appraisers, independent actuaries, independent certified public 
accountants, or other professionals required to supplement agency 
 
1
 Increases in fully insured associations of small employers are not anticipated to 
increase DOI costs, as the insurers selling such plans are already regulated by DOI.  2023HB-06710-R00LCO09466-FNA.docx 	Page 3 of 5 
 
 
staffing, which is estimated to cost approximately $17,000 per self-
funded MEWA trust per year. 
The estimate reflects the staff time, at both analyst and supervisor 
hourly rates, anticipated to be required to handle the new volume of 
work, including time spent: (1) performing quarterly analysis and 
review, (3) reviewing requests for approvals, and (3) meeting with the 
companies as needed. 
The amendment gives employees covered by self-funded MEWA 
trusts’ health benefit plans access to the Consumer Affairs Division at 
DOI, which could result in staff costs to the Insurance Fund, to the extent 
additional staff are needed to handle the volume of complaints and 
questions received. 
The amendment also requires the Insurance Commissioner to make 
certain judgements and determinations related to self-funded MEWA 
trusts and visit and examine them every five years. 
To the extent many such self-funded MEWAs are established, DOI is 
anticipated to incur ongoing costs for hiring additional staff, resulting 
in salary and fringe benefit costs to the Insurance Fund. If the number 
of MEWAs is small, the agency is likely to rely on a combination of 
existing staff and consultants to supplement that capacity, resulting in 
contract costs that would be borne by the self-funded MEWA trusts.   
The amendment also results in a minimal General Fund revenue gain 
to DOI beginning in FY 24 associated with licensing fees and other filing 
fees charged to health insurance companies. (The initial license fee is 
$220, and the annual renewal fee is $200). The revenue gain would 
depend on the number of self-funded MEWA trusts that become 
licensed to offer health benefit plans under the amendment.  
The amendment allows DOI to adopt implementing regulations, 
which has no fiscal impact because the agency has the necessary 
expertise. 
State Tax and Exchange Revenue Impacts  2023HB-06710-R00LCO09466-FNA.docx 	Page 4 of 5 
 
 
The amendment may result in a change to the amount of net direct 
written premiums in the fully insured small group market beginning in 
FY 24, to the extent small employers currently purchasing that insurance 
begin participating in the association health plans permitted under the 
amendment.  
Significant uptake of self-funded MEWA trust health benefit plans by 
small employers currently in the fully insured market could reduce the 
total amount of net direct written premium that is taxed by the state 
beginning in FY 25, as health plans offered by self-funded MEWA trusts 
are not an insurance product.  
The insurance premiums tax is levied at a rate of 1.5% on all net direct 
premiums underwritten. The Department of Revenue Services collected 
$204.7 million from the insurance premiums tax in FY 22; it is uncertain 
how much of that revenue is from policies that could be affected by the 
amendment. 
Significant uptake of association health plans could reduce exchange 
revenue substantially by reducing the base for its marketplace 
assessment.  The operations of the exchange are almost entirely funded 
by its marketplace assessments, which are charged at a rate of 1.65% on 
premiums in the fully insured individual and small group markets.  
The exchange marketplace assessment totals approximately $31.4 
million for FY 23, with small group premiums accounting for 48% of 
that revenue (approximately $15.2 million annually). If there was a 10% 
reduction in fully insured small group premiums as a result of the 
amendment, exchange revenue would be anticipated to decrease by 
approximately $1.5 million per year. For context, fully insured small 
group plan enrollment was 107,652 in 2021.
2
  
Given that fully insured small group market enrollment has been 
decreasing in recent years, further enrollment reductions from the 
 
2
 Connecticut Insurance Department, 2022 Consumer Report Card on Health Insurance 
Carriers. Individual plan enrollment was 109,471 in 2021.  2023HB-06710-R00LCO09466-FNA.docx 	Page 5 of 5 
 
 
amendment could contribute to a smaller, deteriorating risk pool for 
those small employers remaining in the fully insured small group 
market.  
Insurance Fund Assessments 
The amendment does not impact the revenue to be collected by the 
three assessments that support the Insurance Fund (the general 
assessment, the Health and Welfare Fee, and the Public Health Fee), 
except to the extent that more revenue is needed to support DOI costs 
for regulating self-funded MEWA trusts than what is reimbursed by the 
entities. Self-funded MEWA trusts would not pay these assessments or 
assessments for the Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association.  
The Insurance Fund assessments begin with the total amount of 
revenue needed and divide responsibility for that total amount amongst 
insurers, HMOs, and, in the case of the Health and Welfare Fee, third-
party administrators and exempt insurers on behalf of the self-funded 
plans they administer.  
The preceding Fiscal Impact statement is prepared for the benefit of the members of the General Assembly, solely 
for the purposes of information, summarization and explanation and does not represent the intent of the General 
Assembly or either chamber thereof for any purpose. In general, fiscal impacts are based upon a variety of 
informational sources, including the analyst’s professional knowledge. Whenever applicable, agency data is 
consulted as part of the analysis, however final products do not necessarily reflect an assessment from any 
specific department.