Hawaii 2025 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HCR176 Compare Versions

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11 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.C.R. NO. 176 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 STATE OF HAWAII HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION supporting the reactivation of, and urging the governor to appoint members to, the Hawaii Health Authority to plan for a transition to a maximally cost-effective single-payer health care system for the State, to be implemented as soon as possible after waivers have been obtained to capture all major sources of federal funding flowing to the State through Medicare, Medicaid, and Tricare.
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33 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.C.R. NO. 176
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3737 supporting the reactivation of, and urging the governor to appoint members to, the Hawaii Health Authority to plan for a transition to a maximally cost-effective single-payer health care system for the State, to be implemented as soon as possible after waivers have been obtained to capture all major sources of federal funding flowing to the State through Medicare, Medicaid, and Tricare.
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4545 WHEREAS, the Trump administration and the Republican majority in the United States Congress are threatening deep cuts to federal Medicaid funding; and WHEREAS, Hawaii may soon be in urgent need for a more cost-effective health care financing system if cuts to Medicaid are implemented; and WHEREAS, a Hawaii single-payer health care financing system could achieve large savings from reduced administrative costs without cuts to care delivery by doctors and hospitals; and WHEREAS, global budgets based on the cost of operations could eliminate about fifteen percent of total hospital budgets that would otherwise be apportioned for billing and collection costs; and WHEREAS, independent doctors paid with simplified, standardized fee-for-service based on time and required training for a given procedure, rather than assigning a relative value to each of thousands of procedure codes, could markedly reduce billing and collections costs that now consume around fifteen percent of physician practice revenue; and WHEREAS, similar savings in the fifteen percent range could be achieved from reduced administrative cost for a Hawaii single-payer administrator; and WHEREAS, some of these savings could be used to fund community-based programs for high-risk and special needs patients and specialist consultations to primary care to save the cost of preventable emergency room visits and hospitalizations; and WHEREAS, some of these savings could be used to improve take-home pay for primary care specialties and psychiatry so that doctors in under-paid specialties could afford Hawaii's high cost of living, reversing the State's severe physician shortage; and WHEREAS, health care costs for Medicaid and state and county employee and retiree benefits now consume around thirty percent of the total state budget; and WHEREAS, all the above administrative cost savings could add up to a reduction in Hawaii health care costs in the range of thirty percent or more, reducing the total state budget by around nine percent; and WHEREAS, the Hawaii Health Authority is already established in state law with a mission of planning for a universal health care system covering all residents of the State, but the Authority is currently inactive; now, therefore, BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the Thirty-third Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2025, the Senate concurring, that this body supports the reactivation of, and the Governor is urged to appoint members to, the Hawaii Health Authority to plan for a transition to a maximally cost-effective single-payer health care system for the State, to be implemented as soon as possible after waivers have been obtained to capture all major sources of federal funding flowing to the State through Medicare, Medicaid, and Tricare; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Hawaii Health Authority is requested to submit a report of its progress and recommendations, including any proposed legislation, to the Legislature no later than twenty days prior to the convening of the Regular Session of 2026; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the Governor, Director of Finance, and Director of Human Services. OFFERED BY: _____________________________
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4747 WHEREAS, the Trump administration and the Republican majority in the United States Congress are threatening deep cuts to federal Medicaid funding; and
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5151 WHEREAS, Hawaii may soon be in urgent need for a more cost-effective health care financing system if cuts to Medicaid are implemented; and
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5555 WHEREAS, a Hawaii single-payer health care financing system could achieve large savings from reduced administrative costs without cuts to care delivery by doctors and hospitals; and
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5959 WHEREAS, global budgets based on the cost of operations could eliminate about fifteen percent of total hospital budgets that would otherwise be apportioned for billing and collection costs; and
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6363 WHEREAS, independent doctors paid with simplified, standardized fee-for-service based on time and required training for a given procedure, rather than assigning a relative value to each of thousands of procedure codes, could markedly reduce billing and collections costs that now consume around fifteen percent of physician practice revenue; and
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6767 WHEREAS, similar savings in the fifteen percent range could be achieved from reduced administrative cost for a Hawaii single-payer administrator; and
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7171 WHEREAS, some of these savings could be used to fund community-based programs for high-risk and special needs patients and specialist consultations to primary care to save the cost of preventable emergency room visits and hospitalizations; and
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7575 WHEREAS, some of these savings could be used to improve take-home pay for primary care specialties and psychiatry so that doctors in under-paid specialties could afford Hawaii's high cost of living, reversing the State's severe physician shortage; and
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7979 WHEREAS, health care costs for Medicaid and state and county employee and retiree benefits now consume around thirty percent of the total state budget; and
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8383 WHEREAS, all the above administrative cost savings could add up to a reduction in Hawaii health care costs in the range of thirty percent or more, reducing the total state budget by around nine percent; and
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8787 WHEREAS, the Hawaii Health Authority is already established in state law with a mission of planning for a universal health care system covering all residents of the State, but the Authority is currently inactive; now, therefore,
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9191 BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the Thirty-third Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2025, the Senate concurring, that this body supports the reactivation of, and the Governor is urged to appoint members to, the Hawaii Health Authority to plan for a transition to a maximally cost-effective single-payer health care system for the State, to be implemented as soon as possible after waivers have been obtained to capture all major sources of federal funding flowing to the State through Medicare, Medicaid, and Tricare; and
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9595 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Hawaii Health Authority is requested to submit a report of its progress and recommendations, including any proposed legislation, to the Legislature no later than twenty days prior to the convening of the Regular Session of 2026; and
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9999 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the Governor, Director of Finance, and Director of Human Services.
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121121 Report Title: Hawaii Health Authority; Single-Payer Health Care System
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