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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Carraro
DATE TYPED 1/25/2005 HB
SHORT TITLE Eliminate Nursing Home Daily Bed Surcharge
SB 44
ANALYST Taylor
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Provision
FY06
Bed Surcharge
Repeal
(19,500.0)
(20,000.0) Recurring
General Fund
Tax Credit Repeal
1,000.0
2,000.0 Recurring
General Fund
Total Impact
(18,500.0)
(18,000.0) Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Duplicates HB 77
Relates to HB 213, HB 214,
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Responses Received From
Human Services Department (HSD)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
SB 44 eliminates the daily bed surcharge imposed on nursing homes, intermediate care facilities
for the mentally retarded and residential treatment centers. Also, the bill repeals the sections of
law pertaining to the distribution of the associated revenues to the general fund for purposes of
funding the Medicaid program as well as the income tax credit provided for payment of the tax
not made by insurers.
The bill does not specify an effective date, so provisions are assumed to become effective 90
days after the end of the session.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 44 -- Page 2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The general fund revenue loss simply reflects the $19.5 million included in the FY 2006 revenue
estimate. The revenue estimate reflects the initial fiscal impact estimate of $22.5 million ad-
justed for collections to date.
Based on information provided by TRD and HSD repeal of the income tax credit is estimated to
increase general fund revenues by about $1 million in FY 06 and $2 million in FY07. The fiscal
impact estimate reports that there are approximately 8,400 beds in the kind of facilities eligible
for the tax credit. It also assumes 10 percent of beds are private pay and a 90 percent occupancy
rate, implying 756 occupied beds. Some private pay beds are financed by insurance and some by
individuals. TRD assumes that about three-quarters are paid for by individuals. Multiplying 756
by three quarters by $10 dollars by 365 yields a $2.0 million full year fiscal impact. The FY 06
impact is one-half the estimated full year impact. In making this estimate TRD assumed that the
credit would not apply to expenditures paid after the effective date of the repeal. However, they
note that the effective date of the repeal is ambiguous.
TRD also indicates that the fiscal impact of repealing the tax credit may be understated because
the private pay group does not include nursing home patients who pay for their care from social
security benefits. TRD notes that they don’t know how large this group is, but claim it could be
significant.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
HSD reports that bed rates for nursing homes and intermediate care facilities, which were
changed effective July 1, 2005, would need to be reduced.
TRD indicates that repealing the bed tax would result in administrative savings to the depart-
ment.
SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Bed tax revenues are earmarked to the Medicaid program. HSD’s analysis notes that the federal
government’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) does not have a concern with
bed surcharge revenues per se; their concern relates to the income tax credit. Unless the tax
credit is repealed, CMS will not allow bed surcharge revenue to be used as a state match to
Medicaid program. The federal government pays for approximately 73 percent of the Medicaid
program. Thus, a net loss of $18.5 million in general fund revenues implies a loss of approxi-
mately $50 million in federal funds for Medicaid unless other revenues from the general fund are
used to replace bed surcharge revenues.
HSD says that revenues lost from the repeal of the bed surcharge “would result in the enforce-
ment of additional cost containment measures”.
BT/yr