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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Varela
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/16/07
03/14/07 HB
727/aHCPAC/
aHHGAC/aSFl
SHORT TITLE Behavioral Health Purchasing Collaborative
SB
ANALYST Geisler/Sallee
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
Minimal,
see narrative
Minimal,
See
narrative
Recurring General
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB 371/SB 212 and SB 1179, SB 1102
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Human Services Department (HSD)
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Department of Health (DOH)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFl Amendment
Senate Floor Amendment #1 to House Bill 727 as amended strikes House Health and
Government Affairs Committee amendment 3. This action restores the requirement that the
Senate confirm the Governor appointed chair of the Collaborative.
Synopsis of HHGAC Amendments
The House Health and Government Affairs Committee amendments to House Bill 727 do the
following:
Removes the requirement that the Senate confirm the Governor appointed chair of the
Collaborative.
Makes a technical change by clarifying the “director," rather than the “chair" of the division
of vocational rehabilitation as an agency member of the Collaborative and reformats the list
of agency members to bill drafting standards.
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House Bill 727/aHCPAC/aHHGAC/aSFl – Page
2
Synopsis of HCPAC Amendments
The House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee amendments to House Bill 727 do the
following:
Restores member agencies that the original bill proposed to remove from the collaborative,
including the secretaries of human services, labor, transportation, and the directors of the
administrative office of the courts, and the New Mexico mortgage authority. The
amendment also restores the division of vocational rehabilitation to the collaborative.
However, a technical amendment is needed to clarify that the “director" and not the “chair"
of the division of vocational rehabilitation is a member of the collaborative.
Clarify that the behavioral health budget request accounts for funding at the behavioral health
program at the human services department and for behavioral health services from other
collaborative agencies that will be used in contracting for services. The amendment strikes
language that proposed to limit the collaborative contract authority to only funds
appropriated to the collaborative. These changes would require agencies that do not have
funding appropriated in the behavioral health program at human services to still account for
behavioral health services funding requests in a consolidated behavioral health budget
request.
Clarify that the collaborative would appoint a director of the collaborative who would
coordinate day-to-day activities of the collaborative (with collaborative agency staff) but
would not have the additional duty of overseeing the behavioral health services division.
This change does not have a fiscal impact since the collaborative has already appointed a
collaborative chief executive officer.
Make technical changes, including clarifying portions of the enacting clause and replacing
required reporting elements of the collaborative annual report to clarify that the collaborative
should also report the number of people receiving services “by race, gender and ethnicity"
and striking “the most frequently treated diagnosis." Expenditures by type of service is still
reported.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 727 amends Section 9-7-6.4 NMSA 1978. It redefines the membership of the
collaborative as follows:
.
The secretary of aging and long-term services
.
The secretary of health
.
The secretary of corrections
.
The secretary of children, youth and families
.
The secretary of Indian affairs
.
The secretary of finance and administration
.
The secretary of public education
.
The director of the governor’s commission on disability
.
The administrator of the developmental disabilities planning council
.
The administrator of the New Mexico health policy commission
The secretaries of human services, labor, transportation, and the directors of the administrative
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House Bill 727/aHCPAC/aHHGAC/aSFl – Page
3
office of the courts, and the New Mexico mortgage authority would no longer be statutory
members of the collaborative.
The collaborative would also include the following non-voting members:
.
The chair and vice chair of the legislative health and human services committee
.
A member of the house of representatives from a party other than that of the chair of
the legislative health and human services committee
.
A member of the senate from a party other than that of the vice chair of the legislative
health and human services committee
.
Four members selected by the collaborative, with the governor’s consent,
representing other state agencies
The governor would appoint a chair of the collaborative for a two-year period, subject to
confirmation by the Senate. The collaborative would elect a vice chair from among its members.
This provision would replace the current structure of the secretary of human services serving as
permanent co-chair with the other co-chair alternating between the secretaries of health and
children, youth and families. The collaborative would be administratively attached to the human
services department.
HB 727 would require the collaborative to adopt rules through the human services department
for (1) standards of delivery for behavioral health services provided through contracted
behavioral health entities, and (2) approval of contracts and contract amendments by the
collaborative.
The collaborative would submit a separately identifiable consolidated behavioral health budget
request and could only contract for programs and services from funds appropriated to it by the
legislature.
The bill requires the collaborative to appoint, with the consent of the governor, a “director of
behavioral health services" who would be responsible for the coordination of the collaborative’s
and the behavioral health services division’s day-to-day activities.
The collaborative would also provide a quarterly report to the legislative finance committee on
performance measure outcome measures, and an annual report providing information on strategic
plans and goals, contractors and providers, and the number of people receiving services, among
other data related to services rendered and program operations.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Minimal fiscal impact.
HB 727 requires the collaborative to adopt rules governing standards for the delivery of
behavioral health services provided through its contractors, currently ValueOptions New
Mexico. Current law requires the collaborative to create a single statewide behavioral health
system and for participating agencies to comply with its comprehensive plan. To streamline
rules governing the system, each agency has to go through a separate rulemaking process,
presumably at the direction of the Collaborative. Based on comments from the Human Services
Department and other collaborative agencies, the drafting, public input and publication of rules
could have minimal costs.
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House Bill 727/aHCPAC/aHHGAC/aSFl – Page
4
HB 727 requires the appointment of a “director of behavioral health services." The director of
behavioral health services would be “responsible for the coordination of day-to-day activities of
the collaborative and the behavioral health services division, including the coordination of staff
from the collaborative member agencies." As a result, the bill would consolidate director
positions of the current collaborative CEO and the director of BHSD and therefore result in
savings. Any resultant savings could be used to fund a management analyst that HSD assumes
that coordination duties of the director would require. Collaborative agencies indicate that the
bill is unclear whether the “director" is a new position, or whether the “director" is the current
director of the Behavioral Health Services Division (BHSD) housed at Department of Health
(DOH). However, LFC notes that HSD indicates that there already exists such a position that,
while not appointed, sits on the Governor’s Cabinet and performs all of the duties outlined in the
bill. As such the bill should not have a fiscal impact. Of note, HB 371 and SB 212 contain an
executive proposal to transfer BHSD from DOH to HSD.
HB 371 and SB 212 contain an executive proposal to transfer BHSD from DOH to HSD. As a
result, approximately 94 percent of funding for the collaborative contract with ValueOptions
New Mexico will flow through HSD. HSD notes that coordination of staff from collaborative
member agencies and budget work may necessitate two additional FTE at an annual cost of at
least $120,000 total. LFC notes that since the bill attaches the collaborative to HSD for
administrative support, and since the vast majority of funding for the collaborative contract
comes from HSD no additional FTEs should be required to submit the budget request.
Finally, the LFC budget recommendation creates a new program in HSD called Medicaid
behavioral health program in anticipation of consolidating BHSD funding into HSD.
Consolidating these appropriations would aide in streamlining the budget request process for 94
percent of collaborative contracted behavioral health services.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
LFC provided input:
LFC Performance Review
. The LFC conducted a review of the collaborative during the 2006
interim. The report indicated that improvements were needed to fulfill the promise of New
Mexico’s behavioral health reform efforts. Specifically the report said “the collaborative lacks
clear authority to efficiently streamline rules governing access and quality of care standards.
Administering about $300 million in funding through a “virtual department" may prove
ineffective over time. And, finally, appropriations and performance measures remain spread
across multiple agencies, limiting the executive’s accountability to the Legislature."
The report recommended changes, including granting the collaborative rulemaking authority,
requiring a consolidated behavioral health budget - both of which were supported the Welfare
Reform Oversight Committee and the Health and Human Services Committee. The report also
recommended authorizing the collaborative to appoint the director of BHSD should the
legislature transfer the division to HSD, require quarterly performance reports and an annual
report to the Legislature. All these recommendations are contained in HB 727.
Rulemaking
. The collaborative is statutorily charged with creating a single statewide behavioral
health system, which should, therefore, require an alignment of service requirements across
multiple agencies and programs. The LFC performance review indicated that aligning agencies’
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House Bill 727/aHCPAC/aHHGAC/aSFl – Page
5
rules through multiple and separate processes is inefficient, and complicates effective public
participation in critical decisions regarding quality of behavioral health services. In addition,
using the contract process to make or align policy as is current practice, is not contemplated by
state law and puts the public at a disadvantage to effectively participate in the process. HB 727
provides limited rulemaking authority to ensure the collaborative does not encroach on members’
“single state agency" status.
HSD input:
Membership
. HB 727 proposes to remove from voting membership in the Collaborative the
Human Services Department (HSD), the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC), the New
Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority (NMFA), the Governor’s Health Policy Coordinator, the
Vocational Rehabilitation Division of the Public Education Department and the Transportation
Department (NMTRD), all of which, together with the agencies proposed to remain part of the
Collaborative, provide policy direction or funding for behavioral health services in New Mexico.
Drug and mental health courts, supported employment, housing and transportation funded or
supported by these agencies are among the most critical missing community support services to
support the recovery of persons with mental illness and/or substance abuse.
HB 727 proposes to add as non-voting members of the Collaborative the chair and vice-chair of
the Legislative Health and Human Services Committee (LHHS); members of the house of
representatives and the senate, appointed by the speaker and the president prop tempore,
respectively, from a party other than the one to which the chair of the LHHS belongs; and four
members representing other state agencies, selected by the Collaborative with the governor’s
consent.
The current membership of the Collaborative, plus the addition of some Agencies (e.g., HED,
Indian Affairs Department, Aging and Long Term Services Department) that were not Cabinet-
level Agencies at the time that the Collaborative were created, is critical to achieving the goals of
coordination, efficiency, and effectiveness of behavioral health services. Currently, each voting
member of the Collaborative has an equal voice. This contributes to the Collaborative’s ability to
establish policies and guidelines broadly and equitably.
Given that the Collaborative is an Executive entity, it would be an unusual precedent to include
four legislators in its membership. All Collaborative meetings are public and include public
comment in the agenda. There is currently ample opportunity for legislative input, as well as
input from all other stakeholders and interested parties.
HB 727 proposes that the governor shall appoint a chair of the Collaborative for a two-year
period, subject to confirmation by the senate, and that the Collaborative shall elect a vice-chair
from among its members.
The Behavioral Health Purchasing Collaborative was initially designed to bring different state
departments and their behavioral health dollars together into a collaborative whole, while still
maintaining the identity and essential functions of the departments. By giving the Collaborative
role-making authority and a separate budget, it essentially creates a new “department" or
“division", thus significantly changing the original intent and function of this structure.
Rulemaking
. The section of HB 727 that requires the Collaborative to adopt certain rules is
pg_0006
House Bill 727/aHCPAC/aHHGAC/aSFl – Page
6
unnecessary. Rules currently exist surrounding all of the areas mentioned in the bill. These rules
are mostly through Medicaid Managed Care regulations, but other member Agencies also have
rules that pertain to their behavioral health programs. While the Collaborative chairs have
expressed support for giving the Collaborative rule-making authority, this would have to be done
carefully to avoid duplication or inconsistency with single state agencies responsible for various
federal dollars. It would be duplicative for the Collaborative to make additional rules in these
same areas.
Operations
. HB 727 imposes requirements for contracting that are excessive and go beyond the
contracting rules set forth for other Executive entities. Given the dynamic nature behavioral
health services and of some of the programs that are part of the Collaborative, these requirements
would limit necessary flexibility, limit the Agencies’ abilities to live within their appropriated
budgets while maximizing services, and have an adverse effect on service delivery for behavioral
health consumers.
HB 727 unnecessarily requires that there be an appointed Director of Behavioral Health Services.
There already exists such a position that, while not appointed, sits on the Governor’s Cabinet and
performs all of the duties outlined in the bill.
HB 727 unnecessarily requires quarterly and annual reports to the LFC and LHHS. All of the
reporting items mentioned in the bill are already produced. They have been regularly reported
publicly at Collaborative meetings and at Legislative committee hearings.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
HSD notes the Governor has developed a comprehensive performance and accountability
contract. This contract has many behavioral health markers by which progress is being
measured. Such progress was predicated on the belief that behavioral health improvement is
dependent on a multi-disciplinary, holistic approach to intervention. At the state level, it was
predicated on the synergy of multiple departments working collectively together toward the
comprehensive improvement of the system and the consumers utilizing it. By giving the
Collaborative a separate budget (thus presumably pulling money from other agencies), we
potentially weaken the collaborative nature of the structure, reduce the “buy-in" from other
departments, and lose some of the comprehensive nature of the project. Were this to occur, it
could potentially weaken the ability to meet the Governor’s performance and accountability
outcomes and the Legislature’s goal of cross-agency coordination and accountability.
LFC notes that the bill provisions are consistent, would complement, and, in fact, enhance, the
Governor’s performance and accountability outcomes. Currently these measures cross agencies,
programs and funding streams. Requiring a consolidated behavioral health budget will allow the
Legislature and Governor to assess both funding levels and resulting performance in a
streamlined format. Currently, the General Appropriations Act contains funding and
performance measures for behavioral health services across multiple agencies. These measures
are, according to the collaborative, obsolete since these funds are blended and braided through
the single entity contract.
pg_0007
House Bill 727/aHCPAC/aHHGAC/aSFl – Page
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ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
HSD notes that HB 727:
1. Would create an entirely new budgeting process.
2. Would create a single chairperson, instead of the rotating co-chair approach currently utilized.
This would be another loss of potential “buy-in" from Collaborative members.
3. By giving the Collaborative rule-making authority, some of the functions of the Collaborative
may need to change to accommodate this authority.
4. The Collaborative would have to create a process for selecting four non-voting members.
Throughout state government, there are a number of behavioral health related programs housed
in several different agencies. Should legislation be passed and signed that would consolidate all
behavioral health related programs state-wide, there would be significant administrative
implications. Several statutes governing all affected State agencies may require updates to
reflect new duties and responsibilities; organization of FTE, space, telecommunications,
information technology and level of funding would also require considerable effort. This effort
in fact, could involve over 15 different state agencies, courts, district attorneys and the state
general control agencies, such as Department of Finance. LFC notes that the bill does not
provide for the transfer of programs or consolidation of staff, etc.
Administratively attached agencies may or may not operate administratively independent of the
agency to which they are attached. In this case an entire administrative services staff would be
needed to support human resources, information systems, payment, accounting and federal
reporting.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Related to: HB 371/SB 212, which proposes to transfer of the behavioral health services division
of DOH to HSD; SB 1179, which proposes to grant the collaborative rulemaking authority; and
SB 1102 which proposed to require the collaborative to present a single behavioral health budget
to the Legislative Finance Committee and other appropriate agencies.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
HSD provided input:
New Mexico has undertaken a major transformation of its behavioral health system. Changes on
such a large scale typically takes 7-10 years to be fully implemented. A significant aspect of the
transformation process was the formation of the Collaborative. The Collaborative has been
formed for only two and a half years at this point and has just completed 18 months of
implementation utilizing the new system. There are major strategies yet to be implemented in
the transformation process.
The changes proposed by HB 727 would have a significant impact on the participatory nature of
the different departments currently in the Collaborative. While potentially creating some degree
of simplification, it would likely weaken its Collaborative nature, reduce active participation, and
create an entirely new bureaucratic structure. It would also create significant additional
transition issues that would detract from the Collaborative’s work of improving services delivery
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House Bill 727/aHCPAC/aHHGAC/aSFl – Page
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and outcomes in New Mexico. More time is required to allow the current structure to be fully
activated. Elements of what are proposed in this bill may be helpful as the Collaborative process
matures, but at this time such changes seem premature.
LFC provided input: According to the LFC performance review, the recommendations
contained in HB 727 would build on the collaborative’s initial innovations and better position the
Legislature to assist in the long-term sustainability of New Mexico’s behavioral health reforms.
The Welfare Reform Oversight Committee recommended granting rulemaking authority to the
collaborative and the Legislative Finance Committee and Health and Human Services
Committee recommended a consolidated behavioral health budget and associated performance
measures.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
LFC provided input:
The work of the Collaborative in its current structure will continue, but without the oversight
provisions contained in the bill that are necessary to allow the Legislature to effectively assist in
the long-term reforms of the behavioral health system. The collaborative will not be able to
streamline behavioral health rules and will continue using a process for setting rules that puts the
public at a disadvantage for impacting important standards for delivery of services. The
Legislature’s oversight, budgeting and accountability monitoring ability would continue in
current format, which, according to the LFC review, limits executive agencies accountability to
the Legislature for behavioral health expenditures and outcomes.
HSD provided input:
The work of the Collaborative in its current structure will continue. As more time passes and
more knowledge are gained, changes in the Collaborative structure may be warranted. However,
such dramatic changes at this time have the potential to hurt the process more than help it. Also,
more time would allow the Collaborative agencies, interested legislators and legislative
committees to craft together any future statutory changes after additional experience with the
current structure.
GG/nt