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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HHGAC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/24/07
HB 335/csHHGAC/aHFL
SHORT TITLE Fair Share for Health Care
SB
ANALYST Weber
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Human Service Department
Public Regulatory Commission
Public Education Department
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HF Amendment of the Substituted Bill
The amendment adds self-insurance plans as an approved insurance alternative. Also, it
modifies the language in Section 3 (C). These changes do not make substantive changes in the
bill.
Synopsis of Original Substituted Bill
The House Health and Government Affairs Committee Substitute for House Bill 335 (CS/HB
335), the Fair Share for Health Care Act, requires all employers with ten thousand or more
nationwide employees doing business in New Mexico to make a one-time report stating whether
it is offering its employees comprehensive major medical insurance coverage.
"Employer" does
not include the federal or state government or a political subdivision of the state or another state.
The
report is submitted to the Human Services Department for reporting to the Governor with a $250
per day fine for failure to report. HSD may sanction non-reporting.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
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Bill No. – Page
2
There would be some minimal expenditure related to the bill.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HSD notes that the bill requires all employers with ten thousand or more nationwide employees
who are doing business in New Mexico to provide an annual report to the Human Services
Department. Due to the minimal number of New Mexico employers with 10,000 or greater
employees nationally, the bill would primarily apply to an unknown number of national
employers with one or more New Mexico employees deriving income from business in the state.
The report must include a statement as to whether the employer is offering its employees
comprehensive heath insurance coverage and a summary of the employer health care coverage
policy. Subsequent reports are required only if the employer ceases to offer comprehensive
major medical insurance. A civil penalty of $250 per day may be imposed for noncompliance
with reporting.
Comprehensive major medical insurance is defined as health insurance covering the
reimbursement for or purchase of coverage for hospital, surgical and medical expenses. Short-
term travel, accident-only, limited or specified disease policies such as dental or vision are not
included in the definition.
The bill designates the Human Services Department to collect the data and publish an annual
report to the Governor titled “Fair Share for Health Care" reporting the name of each employer
not offering comprehensive major medical insurance.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Fair share is defined in the bill as “comprehensive major medical insurance". The bill indicates
"employee" means an individual employed by an employer such that the employer pays social
security withholding, unemployment insurance or workers' compensation insurance for the
individual. The employer must file no later than January 15, 2008 and annually thereafter, a
report stating whether it is offering its employees comprehensive health care coverage. This
implies the employer must offer all employees comprehensive major medical insurance. Since it
is likely all employers have classes of employees, such as part-time or per diem, that are not
offered insurance, it is possible no employer will meet this test and be able to report
affirmatively. This diminishes the value of the report since there will be no distinction of
employers in classes of do and don’t.
MW/mt