LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
 
FISCAL NOTE, 86TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
 
April 8, 2019

TO:
Honorable James B. Frank, Chair, House Committee on Human Services
 
FROM:
John McGeady, Assistant Director     Sarah Keyton, Assistant Director
Legislative Budget Board
 
IN RE:
HB2333 by Paddie (Relating to the Texas ambulance response safety net program; imposing a mandatory payment; authorizing an administrative penalty.), As Introduced

The fiscal implications of the bill cannot be determined at this time because HHSC does not collect information from private providers regarding their revenues from non-Medicaid payers. 

Fiscal Analysis

The bill would establish the Texas ambulance response safety net program to provide reimbursement for grand transport emergency medical services delivered to Texas Medicaid clients. The program would be administered by The Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC). The program would be funded by quarterly payments, determined by a formula, from ground transport emergency medical service providers. HHSC would be required to set the payment amounts to generate sufficient revenue to cover the agency's administrative expenses related to the program and would be required to update the amount of the payment at least annually.

The bill would also set a maximum collectible amount of revenue for the program based on certain criteria, including that the maximum total payment imposed may not exceed 6% of the net operating revenue of all ground transport emergency medical services providers, and the maximum payment for a provider may not exceed the provider's net patient revenue. The bill would also authorize HHSC to assess a reasonable penalty, not to exceed 15 percent of the quarterly portion of the provider's mandatory payment, for failure to submit the quarterly payment as required. The bill would provide that if a ground transport emergency medical services provider refuses to submit a quarterly portion of a mandatory payment, HHSC may suspend all Medicaid payments to the provider until the provider submits the quarterly portion of the payment and any associated penalties or the provider and HHSC reach a negotiated settlement.

The bill would establish the Texas Ambulance Response Safety Net Trust Fund, to be held by the Comptroller outside of the treasury and administered by HHSC, to consist of all revenue from payments and penalties specified in the bill and the fund's earnings. The fund would be used for reimbursements and refunds to participating providers and HHSC's administrative expenses. The bill would specify that the trust fund may not be used to expand Medicaid eligibility under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010.



Note: This legislation would do one or more of the following: create or recreate a dedicated account in the General Revenue Fund, create or recreate a special or trust fund either in, with, or outside of the Treasury, or create a dedicated revenue source. Legislative policy, implemented as Government Code 403.095, consolidated special funds (except those affected by constitutional, federal, or other restrictions) into the General Revenue Fund as of August 31, 1993 and eliminated all applicable statutory revenue dedications as of August 31, 1995. Each subsequent Legislature has reviewed bills that affect funds consolidation. The fund, account, or revenue dedication included in this bill would be subject to funds consolidation review by the current Legislature.

The bill would take effect immediately if it receives a vote of two-thirds in each house. Otherwise, the bill takes effect September 1, 2019.

Methodology

HHSC and the Comptroller of Public Accounts (CPA) indicate that the fiscal impact of the bill cannot be determined. CPA notes that the bill stipulates the maximum annual fee assessed could not exceed six percent of net operating revenue of ground transport emergency medical services providers or the state portion of reimbursement enhancements, both of which are unknown. HHSC also indicates that they do not have enough information to estimate how much revenue would be collected from ground transport emergency medical service providers. According the CPA, HHSC estimates that if all providers were taxed at six percent, program revenue would be greater than $65 million in All Funds annually.

HHSC estimated that they would need 17.2 additional FTEs to perform audits of ambulance providers and make technology changes to collect cost reports and financial statements. The agency estimates the cost related to these FTEs and technology changes would be approximately $1.9 million in General Revenue Funds and approximately $1.9 million in Federal Funds during the 2020-21 biennium. In future fiscal years, the cost would be $920,515 in General Revenue and $916,462 in Federal Funds per fiscal year.

Local Government Impact

The fiscal implications of the bill cannot be determined at this time


Source Agencies:
304 Comptroller of Public Accounts, 529 Health and Human Services Commission
LBB Staff:
WP, AKi, JQ, BH