Florida 2023 2023 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H0121 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 03/23/2023

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: CS/CS/HB 121    Florida Kidcare Program Eligibility 
SPONSOR(S): Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee, Healthcare Regulation Subcommittee, Bartleman, 
Trabulsy and others 
TIED BILLS:    IDEN./SIM. BILLS:  SB 246 
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
1) Healthcare Regulation Subcommittee 17 Y, 0 N, As CS Calamas McElroy 
2) Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee 13 Y, 0 N, As CS Smith Clark 
3) Health & Human Services Committee   
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
 
The Florida Kidcare Program implements the federal Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) in Florida. 
The CHIP provides federal matching funds to states to subsidize health insurance coverage for children in 
families with incomes too high to qualify for Medicaid and meet other eligibility requirements. 
 
Kidcare is governed by part II of ch. 409, F.S., and is administered jointly by the Agency for Health Care 
Administration (AHCA), the Department of Children and Families (DCF), the Department of Health (DOH), and 
the Florida Healthy Kids Corporation (Corporation) established in ch. 624, F.S.  
 
Eligibility for the CHIP-funded program components of Kidcare is determined by household annual income, and 
set as a factor of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). Children in families with incomes up to 200% FPL are 
currently eligible for CHIP-subsidized coverage. 
 
Families enrolled in CHIP-subsidized Kidcare programs pay a monthly, per-household premium of $15 or $20, 
depending on income level. 
 
CS/CS/HB 121 increases eligibility for CHIP-subsidized Kidcare programs to 300% FPL. The bill requires the 
Corporation to establish new monthly premiums for enrollees in households over 150% FPL. The Corporation 
must establish the new premiums in at least three, but no more than six, income-based tiers. 
 
The bill has a fiscal impact to state government of $9.9 million from the General Revenue Fund to support 
additional eligible children and also increases the Medical Care Trust Fund with federal funds of approximately 
$24.7 million. The bill has no impact on local governments. See Fiscal Analysis. 
 
The bill provides an effective date of January 1, 2024. 
 
   STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
Background  
 
Florida Kidcare Program 
 
The Florida Kidcare Program (Kidcare or Program) was created by the Florida Legislature in 1998 in 
response to the passage of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) in 1997.
1
 The CHIP 
provides federal funding to states to provide subsidized health insurance coverage to uninsured 
children in families with incomes that are too high to qualify for Medicaid but who meet other eligibility 
requirements. When created, CHIP was initially authorized and allotted funding for 10 years. However, 
due the program’s capped funding structure, the federal government has had to repeatedly reauthorize 
and extend funding.
2
 Most recently, the 2023 Consolidated Appropriations Act extended federal funding 
for CHIP through fiscal year 2029.
3
  
 
Kidcare encompasses four programs.  
 
1. Medicaid for children  
2. The Medikids program  
3. The Children’s Medical Services Network (for children with special needs)  
4. The Florida Healthy Kids program 
 
Kidcare is governed by part II of ch. 409, F.S., and is administered jointly by the Agency for Health Care 
Administration (AHCA), the Department of Children and Families (DCF), the Department of Health 
(DOH), and the Florida Healthy Kids Corporation (Corporation) established in ch. 624, F.S. The chart 
below delineates the roles of each agency and the Corporation. 
 
State Agency 	Responsibilities 
Agency for Health Care 
Administration (AHCA) 
(MediKids) 
 Administers the Medicaid program (Title XIX) 
 Administers the MediKids program (Title XXI, ages 1-4) 
 Serves as lead Title XXI contact with the federal Centers for Medicare 
and Medicaid Services 
 Distributes federal funds for Title XXI programs 
 Manages the Florida Healthy Kids Corporation contract 
 Develops and maintains the Title XXI Florida Kidcare State Plan 
Department of Children 
and Families (DCF) 
(Medicaid for Children) 
 Determines Medicaid (Title XIX) eligibility  
 Administers the CMS Behavioral Health Network (Title XXI, ages 0-18) 
Department of Health 
(Children’s Medical 
Services) 
 Administers Children’s Medical Services (Titles XIX and XXI, ages 0-
18 with special health care needs) 
Florida Healthy Kids 
Corporation 
(Healthy Kids) 
 Performs administrative functions for Florida Kidcare (eligibility 
determination, premium collection, marketing, and customer service) 
 Administers Florida Healthy Kids program (Title XXI, ages 5-18) 
 
Funding 
 
                                                
1
 CHIP w as created as part of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA 97, Pub. L. No. 105.33, s. 4901). 
2
 The Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA, Pub. L. No. 111–3, s.101) reauthorized CHIP through fiscal year (FY) 
2013, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, (ACA, Pub. L. No. 111–148, s. 10203) extended CHIP funding through FY 2015, the 
Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (Pub. L. No. 114–10, s. 301) extended funding through FY 2017, the Healthy Kids Act extended 
funding to FY 2023 (Pub. L. No. 115-120, s. 3002), and the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, (Pub. L. No. 115-123, s. 50101) extended funding for CHIP 
through 2023 .  
3
 Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, Pub. L. No. 117-328, s. 5111.  STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
Kidcare coverage is funded by state and federal funds through Title XIX (Medicaid) and Title XXI 
(CHIP) of the federal Social Security Act. The federal government provides matching funds for state 
expenditures, called the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP). The Medicaid (Title XIX) 
FMAP is approximately 60%, meaning the federal government pays 60% of service costs, while the 
state pays 40%. The CHIP (Title XXI) has a higher FMAP, at approximately 72%; the state pays 28%.
4
 
 
The following chart summarizes funding by eligibility category for the programs within Kidcare.
5
 
 
 
Eligibility and Cost-Sharing 
 
Eligibility is determined in part by age and household income, as a percent of the Federal Poverty Level 
(FPL), as indicated by the table below.  
 
Program Ages 
Family Income Eligibility 
Monthly 
Premium 
Copay 
(some services) 
FPL Threshold Annual Income
6
 
Medicaid for 
Children 
0-1 185-200% FPL $55,500-$60,000 $0 	$0 
Medikids 1-4 133-200% FPL $41,400-$60,000 $15  
for 133-158% FPL 
 
$20 
for 158-200% FPL 
 
(per household) 
Up to $10 
Healthy Kids 
5 133-200% FPL $41,400-$60,000 	Up to $10 
6-18 100-200% FPL $30,00-$60,000 	Up to $10 
Children’s 
Medical Services 
0-18 Up to 200% FPL $0-$60,000 	$0 
Full-Pay 
(Medikids & 
Healthy Kids) 
1-18 Over 200% FPL Over $60,000 
$210 - Medikids 
$259 - Healthy Kids 
 
(per child) 
$10 or $15 
 
Families contribute to the monthly premium cost of the coverage under the Title XXI-funded (CHIP) 
components of Kidcare based on their household size, income, and other eligibility factors, although 
current law does not specify using the per-household approach. Household monthly premiums are $15 
                                                
4
 Both program FMAPs temporarily increased as a result of time-limited pandemic funding: 6.2% in Medicaid; and 4.34% in the CHIP. The increased 
FMAPs w ill phase out quarterly in 2023. See, infra, note 10. 
5
  Institute for Child Health Policy at University of Florida, Florida Kidcare Program Evaluation 2015, available at 
https://w eb.archive.org/web/20221108221838/https://ahca.myflorida.com/medicaid/Policy_and_Quality/Policy/program_policy/FLKidcare/PDF/2015_Flori
da_Kidcare_Evaluation_Report.pdf (last viewed March 20, 2023). 
6
 Based on a family of four.  STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
or $20, depending on income level, as indicated by the table above. Similarly, nominal service copays 
are also based on income level, as indicated by the table above. The premium does not vary by the 
number of children in the household.  
 
Currently, these limited premium and copay ranges reflect the only income-based tiers for enrollee 
cost-sharing in the subsidized Kidcare programs.  
 
For families with incomes above the income limits for monthly premium assistance, Kidcare also offers 
an option under the Healthy Kids component (ages 5-18) and the Medikids component (ages 1-4) for 
the family to obtain coverage for their children by paying the full premium. This “Full-Pay” program 
premium for Healthy Kids is $259 a month, or $3,114 annually, and the Full-Pay program requires a $5 
or $10 copay for some services.
7
 Currently, nearly 25,000 children are in Full-Pay program (3,312 in 
Medikids and over 21,000 in Healthy Kids).  
 
The increase from a $20 household-wide premium to a $259 per-child premium may be triggered by a 
much lesser increase in income. For example, an income increase equating to 1% of the federal 
poverty level is a $300 annual income increase (for a family of four). This small increase can move a 
family from subsidized eligibility to Full-Pay eligibility, resulting in an increased annual coverage cost of 
$5,748 (assuming the family of four has 2 children). This may cause a family to drop child coverage, or 
limit coverage to the most medically needy child. 
 
Enrollment 
 
As of January, 117,092 children are enrolled in Kidcare.
8
 Most of those children (80,258) are enrolled in 
Healthy Kids (the Title XXI CHIP-subsidized program); 21,424 children are in the Full-Pay program.
9
  
 
Caseload growth in Kidcare is generally 2-3 percent per year; however, Fiscal Year 2023-2024 
projections assume that Medicaid redeterminations,
10
 which will begin in April 2023, will cause a 
76.54% caseload growth in the Title XXI-funded (CHIP) part of program that year, as indicated by the 
graph below.
11
  
 
 
 
                                                
7
 While s. 409.814(7), F.S., requires Full-Pay enrollees to pay the entire cost of the premium, including administrative costs, in 2019 the legislature 
began subsidizing those costs through the General Appropriation Act, to reduce significant premium increases caused by a shrinking risk pool. See, 
Fiscal Year 2019-2020 General Appropriation Act Specific Appropriation 178, Ch. 2019-115 Law s of Florida.   
8
 Social Services Estimating Conference, Florida Kidcare Caseloads, Feb. 13, 2023. 
9
 AHCA 2023 Agency Legislative Bill Analysis, HB 121, dated Jan. 10, 2023. 
10
 The federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act provided an enhanced federal matching rate of 6.2 percentage points for 
states during the COVID pandemic. The enhanced rate w as conditioned on states agreeing to provide continuous eligibility through the end of the 
federally declared public health emergency. Under that requirement, Medicaid eligibility has not been review ed since March, 2020, meaning there may 
be many enrollees w ho no longer meet the income eligibility requirements for the program. This contributed to a 1.8 million increase in enrollment since 
2020. The federal Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 ended the continuous coverage policy effective April 1, 2023, and established a quarterly 
reduction in the enhanced match rate through December 2023. See, Medicaid Redetermination, AHCA and DCF presentation in the Health and Human 
Services Committee, Jan. 18, 2023.  
11
 While many families no longer eligible may no longer need health coverage, many may be at income levels too high for Medicaid but too low for other 
forms of coverage. These families may enroll their children in Kidcare, resulting in this increased enrollment in FY 2023-2024. The graph also notes the 
sudden decline in CHIP enrollment starting in Spring 2020, coinciding w ith the beginning of the pandemic. Many of those CHIP families may have 
experienced a decline in income at that time and become eligible for Medicaid; the redetermination process may shift those families back to CHIP.  STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
In 2021,
12
 327,200 children in Florida were uninsured. Of those, 163,700 are in families with income 
levels below 200% of the federal poverty level; that is, they were eligible for coverage under Kidcare (or 
regular Medicaid).
13
  
 
Of the uninsured children in Florida, 42,073 children are in families with income levels between 200% 
and 300% of the federal poverty level. These children are not currently eligible for (subsidized) Kidcare 
coverage, but are eligible for the Full-Pay option. 
 
Effect of Proposed Changes 
 
CS/CS/HB 121 expands eligibility for CHIP-funded Kidcare programs to children in families with 
household incomes up to 300% FPL from the current 200% FPL threshold. In addition, the bill 
authorizes the Florida Healthy Kids Corporation and AHCA to establish new premium tiers for enrollees 
above 150% FPL, including the new expansion group. 
 
Eligibility 
 
The bill raises the eligibility income threshold for the CHIP-funded Medikids, Healthy Kids, and 
Children’s Medical Services programs, all currently capped at 200% FPL, to 300% FPL. The bill limits 
an applicant-family’s obligation to provide specific documentation during the eligibility determination 
process to only those instances when eligibility cannot be verified using reliable data in accordance 
with federal requirements. 
 
Subsidized Enrollment Impact 
 
Assuming the higher threshold attracts more families to the subsidized program, the bill could increase 
CHIP-subsidized Kidcare enrollment compared to current projections. In addition, the Medicaid 
redetermination process
14
 will likely increase enrollment in CHIP-subsidized Kidcare, as current 
Medicaid enrollees with income levels too high for Medicaid disenroll and look for other coverage 
options.  
 
Full-Pay Enrollment Impact 
 
Currently 24,736 children are in the Full-Pay program, all with household incomes higher than 200% 
FPL. The Corporation estimates 8,610 of these children (7,617 in Healthy Kids and 993 in Medikids) 
have household incomes under the expansion threshold of 300% FPL.
15
 Under the bill, children in this 
group would automatically move from Full-Pay to subsidized status, on the effective date of the 
applicable household income level. This will have a negative fiscal impact on the state and federal 
governments. 
 
The Medicaid redetermination process is already projected to increase enrollment in Full-Pay, as 
current Medicaid enrollees with income levels too high for Medicaid and too high for CHIP-subsidized 
Kidcare disenroll and look for other coverage options. The Corporation estimates 16,328 children with 
household incomes under 300% FPL will enroll in Full-Pay Kidcare in Fiscal Year 2023-2024.
16
  
 
 
Cost-Sharing 
 
The bill also amends the structure of household premiums for CHIP-subsidized Kidcare. Currently, the 
premium is $15 a month, per household, for households with incomes 133-158% FPL, and $20, per 
household, for households with incomes 158-200% FPL. Current law caps premiums for households 
with incomes 150%-200% FPL to no more than 5% of the household’s annual income.  
                                                
12
 2021 is the most recent year for w hich there is federal census data. 
13
 Health Insurance Coverage of Low Income Children 0-18, 2021, Kaiser Family Foundation State Health Facts Data, available at 
https://www.kff.org/other/state-indicator/health-insurance-coverage-of-low-income-children-0-18-under-200-fpl/?state=FL (last viewed March 20, 2023). 
14
 Supra, note 10. 
15
 Florida Healthy Kids Corporation, 2023 Legislative Bill Analysis: HB 121, March 1, 2023. 
16
 Florida Healthy Kids Corporation, Policy Options Analysis, March 10, 2023, (on file w ith the Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee).   STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
 
The bill requires the Corporation to establish premium tiers based on household income for all 
enrollees with household incomes over 150% FPL. The bill’s requirement applies both to current 
enrollees at 150%-200% FPL and to the new eligibility group at 200%-300% FPL. The Corporation 
must establish at least three, but no more than six, tiers of premiums. 
 
The bill does not address copays for the new eligibility group or amend them for existing eligibility 
groups. 
 
The bill provides an effective date of January 1, 2024. 
  
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
Section 1:  Amends s.409.8132, F.S., relating to Medikids program component. 
Section 2: Amends s. 409.814, F.S., relating eligibility. 
Section 3: Amends s. 409.816, F.S., relating to eligibility. 
Section 4: Amends s. 624.91, F.S., relating to the Florida Healthy Kids Corporation Act. 
Section 5: Providing an effective date of January 1, 2024.  
 
 
II.  FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
 
The Corporation will experience increased revenue due to the bill requirement of new, tiered 
premiums (see Fiscal Comments). The Corporation will experience reductions in revenue related to 
Full-Pay families moving to subsidized coverage. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
 
The bill is estimated to increase state expenditures by $9,947,375 million recurring General 
Revenue and federal expenditures by $24,707,662. The Corporation projects over 16,000 additional 
children will enroll in FY 2023-2024.  
 
Expenditure data and out-year enrollment projections are reflected in the table below. 
  STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 7 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
 
 
In addition, the Corporation estimates implementation will generate administrative costs of 
$800,000 in non-recurring funds in FY 2023-2024 for third-party administrator contracted services to 
implement the new eligibility tiers. Implementation will also generate a cost of $526,522 in recurring 
funds in FY 2023-2024 for enrollee services based on the projected enrollment increase. 
 
Similarly, AHCA anticipates indeterminate one-time administrative implementation costs to update 
the Florida Medicaid Management Information System (FMMIS).
17
 
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues: 
 
None.  
 
2. Expenditures: 
 
None. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
 
                                                
17
 Agency for Health Care Administration, 2023 Legislative Bill Analysis: HB 121, Jan. 10, 2023 (received Feb. 16, 2023). The AHCA analysis appears to 
incorporate both AHCA and Corporation administrative costs, w ithout breaking out the FMMIS update item. 300% FPL
Effective January 2024
Family Premium Model - 6 Tiers
Set Household Size of 2.57
Baseline	Total Expenditures Difference From Baseline
SFY 2024
Total Children Enrolled	174,785                              	191,113                              	16,328                                
New Children Enrolled 
2
-                                     	16,328                                	16,328                                
Average Monthly Premium per Child 
3
242.94$                               	242.45$                               	(0.49)$                                  
Total Computable Expenditures - Gross 
4
509,545,479$                       	556,019,405$                       	46,473,926$                         
Family Contributions	24,344,285$                         	37,489,593$                         	13,145,308$                         
Total Computable Expenditures - Net	485,201,194$                       	518,529,812$                       	33,328,618$                         
State Expenditures 
5	137,272,845$                       	146,829,654$                       	9,556,809$                           
Federal Expenditures 
6
347,928,349$                       	371,700,157$                       	23,771,809$                         
SFY 2025
Total Children Enrolled	221,764                              	252,860                              	31,096                                
New Children Enrolled 
2
-                                     	31,096                                	31,096                                
Average Monthly Premium per Child 
3
271.13$                               	273.30$                               	2.17$                                   
Total Computable Expenditures - Gross 
4
721,528,089$                       	829,288,940$                       	107,760,851$                       
Family Contributions	30,763,551$                         	63,139,699$                         	32,376,147$                         
Total Computable Expenditures - Net	690,764,537$                       	766,149,241$                       	75,384,704$                         
State Expenditures 
5	203,062,501$                       	225,235,118$                       	22,172,617$                         
Federal Expenditures 
6
487,702,037$                       	540,914,123$                       	53,212,086$                         
SFY 2026
Total Children Enrolled	230,257                              	272,452                              	42,196                                
New Children Enrolled 
2
-                                     	42,196                                	42,196                                
Average Monthly Premium per Child 
3
282.58$                               	284.46$                               	1.88$                                   
Total Computable Expenditures - Gross 
4
780,778,872$                       	930,007,474$                       	149,228,602$                       
Family Contributions	31,916,519$                         	74,355,247$                         	42,438,728$                         
Total Computable Expenditures - Net	748,862,353$                       	855,652,228$                       	106,789,875$                       
State Expenditures 
5	222,041,324$                       	253,709,919$                       	31,668,595$                         
Federal Expenditures 
6
526,821,029$                       	601,942,309$                       	75,121,280$                         
SFY 2027
Total Children Enrolled	237,262                              	283,591                              	46,329                                
New Children Enrolled 
2
-                                     	46,329                                	46,329                                
Average Monthly Premium per Child 
3
294.59$                               	296.22$                               	1.62$                                   
Total Computable Expenditures - Gross 
4
838,747,934$                       	1,008,055,014$                    	169,307,080$                       
Family Contributions	32,889,195$                         	80,775,733$                         	47,886,538$                         
Total Computable Expenditures - Net	805,858,739$                       	927,279,281$                       	121,420,542$                       
State Expenditures 
5	238,036,058$                       	273,902,623$                       	35,866,565$                         
Federal Expenditures 
6
567,822,681$                       	653,376,658$                       	85,553,977$                         
SFY 2028
Total Children Enrolled	244,144                              	291,032                              	46,888                                
New Children Enrolled 
2
-                                     	46,888                                	46,888                                
Average Monthly Premium per Child 
3
307.04$                               	308.28$                               	1.24$                                   
Total Computable Expenditures - Gross 
4
899,542,288$                       	1,076,634,010$                    	177,091,722$                       
Family Contributions	33,855,497$                         	84,835,063$                         	50,979,566$                         
Total Computable Expenditures - Net	865,686,791$                       	991,798,947$                       	126,112,156$                         STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 8 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
Additional subsidized coverage at the income levels established in the bill may reduce use of employer-
based dependent child coverage, assuming any newly-eligible family uses such coverage now. 
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
 
The Corporation’s fiscal analysis is based on some policy assumptions not directly addressed in the bill. 
 
1. The bill requires the Corporation to establish “at least three but no more than six” tiers of premiums 
scaled to household income for enrollees with incomes over 150% FPL. This would apply to an 
income group currently eligible for subsidized Kidcare: those with incomes 150%-200% of the 
federal poverty level.  
 
2. The Corporation’s fiscal impact estimate uses a per-household premium and assumes 2.57 children 
per household.  
 
These assumptions generated the tiered premium structure in the table below. 
 
 
 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
 
Not Applicable.  This bill does not appear to affect county or municipal governments. 
 
 2. Other: 
 
None. 
 
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
 
AHCA has sufficient rule-making authority to implement the provisions of the bill, if necessary. 
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
 
None. 
IV.  AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES 
 
On March 16, 2023, the Healthcare Regulation Subcommittee adopted one amendment and reported 
the bill favorably as a committee substitute. The committee substitute corrected a drafting error to 
change a reference to a percent of the federal poverty level to conform to like changes elsewhere in the 
bill. 
 
On March 22, 2023, the Health Care Appropriations Subcommittee adopted one amendment and 
reported the bill favorably as a committee substitute. The committee substitute removes the two-year Family 
Size100% FPL
Tier 1            
150%-175%Premium
Tier 2           
175%-200%Premium
Tier 3           
200%-225%Premium
Tier 4            
225%-250%Premium
Tier 5            
250%-275%Premium
Tier 6            
275%-300%Premium
1 $14,580 $25,515$17.00 $29,160$38.00 $32,805$64.00 $36,450$94.00 $40,095$130.00 $43,740$170.00
2 $19,720 $34,510$17.00 $39,440$38.00 $44,370$64.00 $49,300$94.00 $54,230$130.00 $59,160$170.00
3 $24,860 $43,505$17.00 $49,720$38.00 $55,935$64.00 $62,150$94.00 $68,365$130.00 $74,580$170.00
4 $30,000 $52,500$17.00 $60,000$38.00 $67,500$64.00 $75,000$94.00 $82,500$130.00 $90,000$170.00
5 $35,140 $61,495$17.00 $70,280$38.00 $79,065$64.00 $87,850$94.00 $96,635$130.00$105,420$170.00
6 $40,280 $70,490$17.00 $80,560$38.00 $90,630$64.00$100,700$94.00$110,770$130.00$120,840$170.00
7 $45,420 $79,485$17.00 $90,840$38.00$102,195$64.00$113,550$94.00$124,905$130.00$136,260$170.00
8 $50,560 $88,480$17.00$101,120$38.00$113,760$64.00$126,400$94.00$139,040$130.00$151,680$170.00  STORAGE NAME: h0121c.HCA 	PAGE: 9 
DATE: 3/23/2023 
  
phase-in for income eligibility increases and requires income eligibility to increase to 300% FPL as of 
January 1, 2024. The Corporation must establish new premiums for no less than three but no more 
than six income-based tiers.  
 
The bill analysis is drafted to the committee substitute adopted by the Health Care Appropriations 
Subcommittee.