Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00008 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/30/2024

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sSB-8 
AN ACT CONCERNING DRUG AFFORDABILITY. 
AMENDMENT 
LCO No.: 4940 
File Copy No.: 309 
Senate Calendar No.: 197  
 
Primary Analyst: MP 	4/30/24 
Contributing Analyst(s):  	() 
Reviewer: JS 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 25 $ FY 26 $ FY 27 $ 
Insurance Dept. IF - Cost See Below See Below See Below 
Insurance Dept. IF - Revenue Gain See Below See Below See Below 
Insurance Dept. GF - Potential 
Revenue Gain 
Minimal Minimal Minimal 
Department of 
Revenue Services 
GF - Revenue 
Impact 
None Potential Potential 
Connecticut 
Health Insurance 
Exchange 
EF - Revenue 
Impact 
None None Potential 
Note: IF=Insurance Fund; GF=General Fund; EF=Enterprise 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 a self-funded multiple employer welfare 
arrangement (MEWA) trust, once licensed by the Insurance Department 
(DOI), to administer a health benefit plan that is not insurance but must 
follow most of the rules for health insurance companies in the state. It 
also permits associations of small employers purchasing health 
insurance in the fully insured market to be subject to large group rating 
rules in certain circumstances.  2024SB-00008-R00LCO04940-FNA.DOCX 	Page 2 of 5 
 
 
The amendment results in: (1) costs and  offsetting revenue to DOI 
associated with regulating the self-funded MEWA trusts beginning as 
early as FY 25, (2) a potential minimal revenue gain to the General Fund 
from license and filing fees of any new entities formed, (3) a potential 
revenue impact to the General Fund associated with insurance 
premiums tax beginning in FY 26, and (4) a potential revenue impact to 
the Connecticut Health Insurance Exchange (“exchange”) beginning in 
FY 27. 
The amendment also requires self-funded MEWA trusts to report 
claims data to the all-payer claims database, which has no 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 exceed $17,000 each.
1
 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 will be mostly offset by Insurance 
Fund revenue gains to the agency.
2
  
Costs related to regulating self-funded MEWA trusts could be 
incurred beginning in FY 25, as the amendment allows them to apply 
for a license beginning as early as October 1, 2024, and to start offering 
health benefit plans, once licensed, beginning April 1, 2025.  The entities 
will bear the cost of the contracted services of attorneys, appraisers, 
independent actuaries, independent certified public accountants, or 
other professionals required to supplement agency staffing in order to 
complete their financial examinations and market conduct reviews. 
They will also be billed for Insurance Department staff time in 
 
1
 $17,000 per trust reflects the staff time, at both analyst and supervisor hourly rates, 
anticipated to be required to handle the new volume of work associated with quarterly 
financial analysis of one such entity. A typical market conduct examination is 
approximately $100,000, which would typically be done once every three to five years. 
2
Associations of small employers purchasing in the large group market are not 
anticipated to increase DOI costs, as the insurers selling such plans are already 
regulated by DOI.  2024SB-00008-R00LCO04940-FNA.DOCX 	Page 3 of 5 
 
 
connection with those examinations and reviews. 
The amendment gives employees covered by self-funded MEWA 
trusts’ health benefit plans access to the Division of Consumer Affairs 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. One additional Health Unit insurance examiner at a 
cost of $143,000 annually ($73,000 for salary and $70,000 for fringe 
benefits) is anticipated to be required if approximately 100,000 people 
become covered by the trusts.  
The bill appears to require the trusts to pay the same license and filing 
fees applicable to health insurance companies, which include: (1) the 
pre-license document filing fee of $220, (2) the annual license fee of $200, 
and (3) the annual report fee of $50.  To the extent self-funded MEWA 
trusts are formed and apply for licensure, the bill results in a minimal 
annual revenue gain to the General Fund associated with these fees 
beginning as early as FY 25. 
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 
The amendment may result in a change to the amount of net direct 
written premiums in the fully insured market beginning in FY 25, with 
a potential revenue impact beginning in FY 26, to the extent small 
employers currently purchasing health insurance instead participate in 
the new health plans permitted under the amendment.
3
  
 
3
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 because self-funded MEWA plans are 
not an insurance product. However, if the risk pool of the small group fully insured 
market deteriorates, there would be an offsetting effect in which premiums for the 
remaining enrollees would rise. Enrollment in the small group market has already 
been declining in recent years, with some small businesses moving to level-funded 
plans (which are not part of the fully insured market). Self-funded MEWA trusts are  2024SB-00008-R00LCO04940-FNA.DOCX 	Page 4 of 5 
 
 
The insurance premiums tax is levied at a rate of 1.5% on all net direct 
premiums underwritten. The Department of Revenue Services collected 
$254.3 million from the insurance premiums tax in FY 23; it is uncertain 
how much of that revenue is from policies that could be affected by the 
amendment. 
Significant uptake of the new health plans by businesses and 
organizations currently in the fully insured small group market could 
also impact exchange revenue by changing the base for its marketplace 
assessment beginning in FY 27. The operations of the exchange are 
almost entirely funded by its marketplace assessments, which are 
charged at a rate of 1.85% on premiums in the fully insured individual 
and small group markets.  
The exchange marketplace assessment totaled approximately $31.4 
million for FY 23, with small group premiums accounting for 48% of 
that revenue (approximately $15.2 million annually). For context, fully 
insured small group plan enrollment was 107,652 in 2021, and 97,668 in 
2022.
4
  
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, 
premium taxes, 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 
 
required to purchase certain insurance products (i.e., stop-loss, fiduciary liability, and 
directors’ and officers’ liability).  
4
 Connecticut Insurance Department, 2022 & 2023 Consumer Report Cards on Health 
Insurance Carriers. Individual plan enrollment was 109,471 in 2021 and 110,667 in 2022.  2024SB-00008-R00LCO04940-FNA.DOCX 	Page 5 of 5 
 
 
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.