Legislature(2019 - 2020)CAPITOL 106

04/18/2019 03:00 PM House HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ HB 96 PIONEERS' HOME AND VETERANS' HOME RATES TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invited/Public> --
+ SB 37 RENEWAL OF VACCINE ASSESSMENT PROGRAM TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invited/Public> --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
         HB 96-PIONEERS' HOME AND VETERANS' HOME RATES                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:11:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  ZULKOSKY announced  that  the first  order of  business                                                               
would be HOUSE BILL NO. 96,  "An Act relating to Alaska Pioneers'                                                               
Home and Alaska Veterans' Home  rates and services."  [Before the                                                               
committee was CSHB 96(STA).]                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:11:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE ZACK  FIELDS, Alaska  State Legislature,  as prime                                                               
sponsor, presented  HB 96.   He said the  bill's goal is  to keep                                                               
Alaska's  Pioneer Homes  thriving.   He explained  that inflation                                                               
has reduced  the real value of  rates paid at the  Pioneer Homes.                                                               
He said  rates have  been adjusted  a few  times since  2004, but                                                               
rates have  not kept pace with  inflation.  He said  CSHB 96(STA)                                                               
would rebase  rates to keep pace  with inflation since 2004.   It                                                               
would give  the Department of  Health and Social  Services (DHSS)                                                               
the  ability  to have  care  levels  of  Level  IV and  Level  V.                                                               
Representative  Fields stated  that there  is a  need for  higher                                                               
intensity of  care, given that  the average age of  residents has                                                               
risen to  about 87, and  given a growing population  of residents                                                               
with dementia.   Consistent with the Agnew  Beck Report [November                                                               
29, 2018],  the proposed bill would  allow a Level V  care, which                                                               
is a totally  separate billing structure for  what the department                                                               
and  Agnew  Beck  envision as  behavioral  health  neighborhoods.                                                               
These  neighborhoods  would  be  physically  separate  but  still                                                               
within  the  Pioneer Homes.    He  emphasized the  importance  of                                                               
behavioral  health neighborhoods  for  broader  cost control  and                                                               
quality of care issues.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS stated  the  CSHB 96(STA)  would effect  a                                                               
change from  a Consumer  Price Index (CPI)  to a  Social Security                                                               
cost-of-living  adjustment  (COLA),   which  the  department  has                                                               
indicated is its  preference.  He remarked that he  does not have                                                               
a strong  preference on what the  index rate is.   He pointed out                                                               
that  the  CSHB  96(STA)   represents  a  substantive  compromise                                                               
between the original  bill and where the department  is trying to                                                               
go.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:13:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took a brief at-ease.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:14:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS  noted that  the  first  Pioneer Home  was                                                               
established  in  1913  in  Sitka.   The  Pioneer  Homes  expanded                                                               
steadily throughout  the Twentieth Century, with  the newest home                                                               
constructed in Juneau  in 1988, and there are  currently homes in                                                               
six  communities.   There was  a major  improvement in  2007 when                                                               
Representative   Shaw  helped   establish  the   first  certified                                                               
Veterans' Home  in Palmer  while he was  the commissioner  of the                                                               
Department of Military and Veterans Affairs.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS explained  that the  rates at  the Pioneer                                                               
Homes  are established  by regulation.   Because  the rates  have                                                               
failed to keep pace with inflation  going back to 2004, the state                                                               
has lost  about 15  percent of  real value since  then.   He said                                                               
CSHB 96(STA)  would make a  significant rate update to  keep pace                                                               
with inflation.   Unique about  the Pioneer  Homes is the  mix of                                                               
residents in  terms of income  levels and  intensity of care.   A                                                               
large  percentage of  residents are  private pay,  and while  the                                                               
rates  currently don't  capture the  full cost  of care,  they do                                                               
capture a substantial amount of the cost of care.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS discussed  the topic  of what  would be  a                                                               
sustainable financial model long into  the future for the Pioneer                                                               
Homes.  He  said it is to the state's  and department's advantage                                                               
to  maintain a  robust share  of residents  who are  private pay,                                                               
whether they  are paying full  cost of  care or 70-90  percent of                                                               
the cost of care.   If 51 percent of the  residents are paying at                                                               
least a substantial  portion of the cost of care,  that is a more                                                               
secure  place  to be  financially  than  if  100 percent  of  the                                                               
residents  are being  completely subsidized,  because that  would                                                               
entail more general fund obligations to the Pioneer Homes.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   FIELDS  stated   he  is   concerned  about   the                                                               
department's proposed  new rates, because  the rate jumps  are so                                                               
high  and the  rate levels  so high  that many  fewer self-paying                                                               
residents will enter  and stay in the Pioneer Homes.   He posited                                                               
that rather than simply capturing  those much higher rates, there                                                               
would  be adverse  selection and  the population  at the  Pioneer                                                               
Homes  would  quickly  shift  to  a  much  larger  percentage  of                                                               
residents who are almost wholly being subsidized by the state.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS  said  he  supports the  State  of  Alaska                                                               
subsidizing  residents  to  the extent  necessary,  including  to                                                               
seniors with less means.   However, he cautioned, the legislature                                                               
should  be careful  to not  unintentionally push  out self-paying                                                               
residents.   Even a  resident paying  80 percent  of the  cost of                                                               
care is a lot more than 0 percent.   That is an important part of                                                               
the financial  sustainability of the Pioneer  Homes going forward                                                               
and, hence, the rates in the proposed bill are a compromise.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:17:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  said there  are currently three  levels of                                                               
care.   He related that  internally DHSS is  preparing, including                                                               
through  regulation, to  go  to  five levels  of  care, which  is                                                               
consistent  with the  Agnew Beck  recommendations  that are  very                                                               
detailed  and  based on  good  research.    The bill  before  the                                                               
committee would allow five levels of  care and would not cap base                                                               
Level V because that is  a separate category of reimbursement for                                                               
much more  intensive behavioral health  care where a  much higher                                                               
reimbursement rate can  be captured than the  daily Medicaid rate                                                               
for  assisted living.   Pioneer  Homes are  assisted living,  not                                                               
nursing  homes,  and because  of  that  [the  state] has  a  more                                                               
limited ability  to capture  a higher  daily rate  from Medicaid.                                                               
Pioneer Homes happen  to be a relatively more  acute intense form                                                               
of assisted living, but they  are still assisted living, and that                                                               
does limit [the state's] federal revenue potential.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS stated that  while the rates proposed under                                                               
CSHB 96(STA) are  a significant [increase], they are  a much more                                                               
modest increase  for Levels I,  II, and  III.  The  proposed bill                                                               
would  allow a  new Level  IV, plus  a new  Level V  that is  not                                                               
capped,  based  on  the  ability   to  capture  potentially  more                                                               
revenue.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:19:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  provided a  comparison of rates:   current                                                               
costs of care that  go back to 2004 for Levels I,  II, and III; a                                                               
comparison  of the  current monthly  rate  with the  department's                                                               
proposed rates; and  the rates proposed under CSHB  96(STA).  The                                                               
bill represents a compromise and  would cap rate increases in the                                                               
future to  the Social Security cost-of-living  adjustment (COLA),                                                               
which  would  provide  certainty   for  residents  following  the                                                               
significant bump  in rates to catch  up with inflation.   He said                                                               
this is important for residents  and for older folks and families                                                               
who are saving for their final years.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR observed  sponsor  information stating  that                                                               
the rate increases  may be annual and then will  be capped at the                                                               
most   recent  Social   Security   COLA.     She  asked   whether                                                               
consideration was given  between the words "may" and  "shall".  A                                                               
challenge  she  has   seen  over  the  years  is   that  in  some                                                               
circumstances, using  "may" creates a  need to allow  for receipt                                                               
authority, so  [DHSS] could collect  more in fees.   She inquired                                                               
whether "shall  do an annual  adjustment" should be used  so that                                                               
it is built in.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:21:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TRISTAN WALSH,  Staff, Representative  Zack Fields,  Alaska State                                                               
Legislature,  replied  that  CSHB   96(STA)  describes  the  rate                                                               
increase mechanism on page 4,  lines 17-21, Section 4(g), and the                                                               
word  "shall"  is used.    He  explained  he  used "may"  in  the                                                               
PowerPoint because the  Social Security cost-of-living adjustment                                                               
isn't necessarily always raised, sometimes it is held flat.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR expressed  her hope that this would  set up a                                                               
new way of doing things because  the Pioneer Home is not the only                                                               
state service that  has been limited in this way,  where the user                                                               
of the  service would be  willing to pay  more if the  state were                                                               
asking more.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:22:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS resumed his  presentation.  He talked about                                                               
what the Social  Security COLA has been historically.   The rates                                                               
of inflation were  much higher in the 1970s, and  in recent years                                                               
they have  been more modest.   This  provision in the  bill would                                                               
allow for keeping pace with gradual increases in costs.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  inquired about  the relationship  between the                                                               
Social  Security  COLA and  the  CPI  and  asked why  the  Social                                                               
Security COLA was picked versus the CPI.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WALSH responded  that in  discussions  with the  department,                                                               
DHSS  related  that  it has  historically  preferred  the  Social                                                               
Security  COLA  because that  is  more  directly linked  to  most                                                               
residents' direct source of income.   Broadly speaking the Social                                                               
Security  COLA is  still largely  relative  to the  CPI, so  they                                                               
generally track with each other.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:23:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS summarized that  CSHB 96(STA) would provide                                                               
certainty for  the residents  and for the  department.   It would                                                               
provide  more  certainty for  DHSS  in  terms of  capturing  some                                                               
additional revenue,  but hopefully at prices  that are affordable                                                               
for residents.   The  bill would ensure  timely and  orderly rate                                                               
increases,  and these  would be  more regular  than in  the past.                                                               
Limiting the rate  increases to the rate of inflation  as per the                                                               
Social  Security  COLA  would  provide   peace  of  mind  to  the                                                               
residents.  The proposed update to  the levels of care would more                                                               
accurately  correspond to  the population  of  residents who  are                                                               
currently in  the Pioneer Homes,  which has many  older residents                                                               
and a higher and growing percentage of residents with dementia.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:24:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR inquired about the bill's fiscal notes.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS replied  the fiscal notes are  complex.  He                                                               
said historically the Pioneer Homes  have been subsidized through                                                               
general fund.  The administration's  proposal is general fund and                                                               
payment assistance.   The  bill is written  so it  would maintain                                                               
the  department's flexibility  to  use general  fund funding  for                                                               
general  support of  the Pioneer  Homes  and payment  assistance.                                                               
The bill  would give DHSS  the ability to  shift more to  a need-                                                               
based model while  still allowing for the prices to  be below the                                                               
cost  of care  for some  levels of  care.   The bill  would raise                                                               
revenue relative  to the status quo.   He deferred to  Mr. Lasley                                                               
of DHSS to explain the fiscal notes.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:26:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CLINTON  LASLEY, Director,  Central  Office,  Division of  Alaska                                                               
Pioneer Homes,  Department of Health and  Social Services (DHSS),                                                               
stated  that the  budget put  forward by  the governor,  and then                                                               
amended by  the governor at the  end of March, would  raise rates                                                               
reflective  of what  it truly  costs  to provide  services.   The                                                               
structure in  which the  fiscal notes  were set  up was  that the                                                               
entire general fund (GF) portion  of the Pioneer Homes component,                                                               
which is  the component that  operates the homes  themselves, was                                                               
removed and general funds were put  into a new component that was                                                               
specifically   for   assisting   those  individuals   that   need                                                               
assistance to pay,  so it is a payment assistance  component.  In                                                               
the  subcomponent  for  the   Pioneer  Homes  payment  assistance                                                               
component there is $20.9 million,  but in the governor's proposal                                                               
there is no  funding and currently the $33 million  that has been                                                               
in the Pioneer  Homes component is no longer there.   The purpose                                                               
of that was because current  statute protects all elders who live                                                               
in any  of the  Pioneer Homes  such that if  they cannot  pay the                                                               
rates  that  are   charged,  they  may  apply   for  the  payment                                                               
assistance  program.    Statute  specifies how  that  program  is                                                               
managed and  there are specifications  on income limits  and what                                                               
portion a  resident may keep  for personal needs and  for federal                                                               
taxes  and a  spouse in  the  community.   The remaining  portion                                                               
would be  paid to the  Pioneer Homes and whatever  the difference                                                               
between the  rates at the Pioneer  Homes and the amount  that the                                                               
resident  needs for  assistance  would  be paid  by  the state  -                                                               
historically  out   of  normal  general  funds,   but  under  the                                                               
governor's proposal  it would come  out of a new  component which                                                               
is specifically  only to be  used for payment assistance,  so for                                                               
those that truly need assistance.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:28:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  interjected that  a key question  here is,                                                               
what is the elasticity of demand  for people to enter and stay in                                                               
a Pioneer  Home?  He argued  that by setting price  points at the                                                               
cost of care  the department's assumption is that  demand for the                                                               
Pioneer  Homes  is highly  inelastic  -  whatever price  is  set,                                                               
people are  going to enter the  Pioneer Homes at that  level.  He                                                               
said it  is fair to assume  that demand for the  Pioneer Homes is                                                               
relatively  inelastic, but  that it  definitely isn't  completely                                                               
inelastic.  This  bill is important because right  now 51 percent                                                               
of the residents are self-paid  people and it is really important                                                               
to  retain a  payer mix  that includes  some self-pay  along with                                                               
people who are  very reliant on the state for  subsidies.  Losing                                                               
the  self-pay  population  is  not  wanted.    From  a  financial                                                               
perspective  it is  better to  have someone  who is  paying 80-90                                                               
percent of the cost  of a given level of care than  it is to have                                                               
someone who is paying 0 percent of the cost.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS  related  that   he  compared  prices  for                                                               
assisted living  throughout the  region.  He  said he  found that                                                               
the cost of  assisted living in the  Pacific Northwest frequently                                                               
ranges  between $5,000  and $6,000  per month,  which is  why the                                                               
bill has an attractive rate structure  to get people in the door.                                                               
It  would   remain  competitive   at  Level   II  and   would  be                                                               
significantly  more expensive  at Levels  III and  IV, but  he is                                                               
trying  to  get   people  in  the  door   because  that  self-pay                                                               
population is  really important for  the financial health  of the                                                               
Pioneer Homes.  He has no  objection to the ethical decision that                                                               
[the state] should go to a  need-based model.  As proposed by the                                                               
Pioneer Homes,  his concern is  an economic  one.  If  prices are                                                               
set  too high  in a  competitive marketplace,  customers will  be                                                               
lost.   There aren't  a lot  of institutions  out there  like the                                                               
Pioneer Homes, but when families  are looking around the country,                                                               
regardless of whether they have  limited or significant means, if                                                               
the prices  are that high, he  is worried the Pioneer  Homes will                                                               
lose a significant percentage of the self-pay population.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:31:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR acknowledged  that there  is a  fast-growing                                                               
senior  population  and  so  it  seems that  demand  won't  be  a                                                               
problem.   She  said she  appreciates the  department wanting  to                                                               
make sure there  were funds available for people  who didn't have                                                               
the  ability to  pay and  she  also appreciates  the move  toward                                                               
capturing the  people who can.   She  noted the bill  would raise                                                               
the  rates  and  secondarily  would  try  to  maintain  this  new                                                               
[needs]-based pot of money that was  going to be the general fund                                                               
portion.   The  fiscal  note  says the  difference  would be  $13                                                               
million to  fund the gap  between charge  rates and full  cost of                                                               
services for the  residents on private pay.  There  would be some                                                               
increase  in revenue  from the  increased rates  and hopefully  a                                                               
healthy  percentage   of  fully   private-pay  people   would  be                                                               
maintained.  The  increased rates would also help  offset what is                                                               
trying to be accomplished by  having the needs-based system.  She                                                               
asked how to blend the two sets of numbers.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:32:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY  responded that the  current structure of  the Pioneer                                                               
Homes is a needs-based system,  but [the department] has not been                                                               
charging the rates  that reflect the needs.   Therefore, everyone                                                               
who lives  in the Pioneer  Homes, regardless of whether  they are                                                               
private pay today,  is being subsidized by the state  and this is                                                               
anywhere from 40  percent to a little over 100  percent.  That is                                                               
where  the  $33  million  the department  has  been  spending  in                                                               
general fund in the Pioneer  Homes component comes in because the                                                               
department isn't charging rates  equivalent.  Under CSHB 96(STA),                                                               
if the current pair mix and the  current level of care mix in the                                                               
home is  looked at and what  is anticipated for fiscal  year (FY)                                                               
2020, the maximum  amount that [the department] would  be able to                                                               
charge is  $13 million  less than  what it  costs to  provide the                                                               
service.  There  would need to be $13 million  in general fund in                                                               
the Pioneer  Homes component in  order to make up,  because under                                                               
the  current proposal  from the  governor the  payment assistance                                                               
component is  only for payment  assistance.  For example,  if the                                                               
rate was $13,000 and [the  department] was only charging $10,000,                                                               
[the department]  couldn't draw  that extra  $3,000 a  month from                                                               
the  payment assistance  component  because the  resident is  not                                                               
truly  on payment  assistance, [the  department] is  not charging                                                               
the resident for it.  Same  today - for those individuals who are                                                               
on Medicaid,  for example,  [the department]  charges a  rate for                                                               
Medicaid,  [the department]  only  gets  a certain  reimbursement                                                               
rate; that  cannot be drawn  down from payment assistance.   "And                                                               
so,"  Mr.  Lasley  continued,  "the   intent  of  this  from  the                                                               
governor's  bill is  to truly  charge  what it  costs to  provide                                                               
services  knowing that  there  is the  protection  in place  that                                                               
those  individuals that  are on  Medicaid -  it would  not affect                                                               
Medicaid Waiver  because we have  a set rate -  those individuals                                                               
that are currently  on payment assistance it would  not affect in                                                               
any way  because they're already  paying the maximum  amount that                                                               
they can  under the  formula of  the payment  assistance program.                                                               
And those  individuals who are  currently private pay,  but still                                                               
being  subsidized by  the state,  would pay  what they  could pay                                                               
under the  payment assistance formula  that's set in  statute and                                                               
the  remainder amount  would be  subsidized by  the state  and be                                                               
captured in that payment assistance component."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:35:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  surmised the  difference  is  from the  $33                                                               
million to the  $13 million.  The bill would  get [the state] $20                                                               
million ahead in  the financial problem because it  would go from                                                               
the $33 million for the general  fund subsidy down to $13 million                                                               
with implementation of the bill.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY  answered there still  would be the $33  million; just                                                               
$20 million is  in the payment assistance  general fund component                                                               
and $13 million.  When  doing the original analysis for proposing                                                               
the rate increases, and looking at  the budget and how to pay for                                                               
services if [the  state] truly needs to not spend  more than what                                                               
it is  earning, [the state] can't  earn the money if  [the state]                                                               
is not  at least charging  for it.   Proposing rate  increases of                                                               
that amount was  not an easy decision to make.   The proposal put                                                               
forward  is  a  true  needs-based  system,  [the  state]  is  not                                                               
subsidizing those  individuals who  may have  the ability  to pay                                                               
for the  services.  Everyone  would use  the program that  is set                                                               
forward under statute, which is  payment assistance, and pay what                                                               
they  can pay,  and  the  remainder would  be  subsidized by  the                                                               
state.   So, in any  of these  proposals the general  fund amount                                                               
really doesn't change, it just is  where the money is coming from                                                               
  whether it is coming  from true payment assistance or mandating                                                               
the  $13 million  under  the  bill because  not  enough is  being                                                               
charged  to provide  the services.   In  the initial  analysis of                                                               
raising the rates  to what it truly costs to  provide services it                                                               
was  estimated that  revenue  would be  increased  by about  $5.7                                                               
million, which  is still nowhere  near what it costs  [the state]                                                               
to provide the service.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:37:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS   said  the   aforementioned  is   a  good                                                               
description.  Put  another way, he continued, is  that either the                                                               
bill or the proposed rates  and regulation would increase revenue                                                               
to  the state  next year.   If  the administration's  regulations                                                               
went through, the question is how  much of that would actually be                                                               
captured in revenue  because very few people will be  able to pay                                                               
that.  The Medicaid daily  rate for residential support living is                                                               
$162.70 per  day, which comes  out to  a little less  than $5,000                                                               
per month.  So, once  the department has captured people's assets                                                               
and they have  qualified for Medicaid, the state is  not going to                                                               
capture anywhere near the department's  advertised rates.  If the                                                               
department adopts these  rates, the question is what  will be the                                                               
gap  between   advertised  rate  and  what   the  state  actually                                                               
captures.  An analogous question  is what the complex interaction                                                               
will  be  in  two  to  five  years  of  some  private-pay  people                                                               
departing from the Pioneer Homes.   Representative Fields posited                                                               
that there  would be a larger  mix of people who  are effectively                                                               
paying nothing or are on the  Medicaid daily rate.  But under his                                                               
bill, he posited further, more  of those private-pay people would                                                               
stay in  the system  with the  relatively more  affordable rates.                                                               
Either way  the state is going  to increase revenue in  the short                                                               
term and his  hope is that revenue is increased  in a sustainable                                                               
manner that does not unintentionally  push private-pay people out                                                               
of the system.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:39:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SPOHNHOLZ requested  clarification from  Representative                                                               
Fields that he said only 54 percent are currently self-pay.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS clarified  that 51  percent are  self-pay.                                                               
He acknowledged Mr. Lasley correctly  stated that self-pay is not                                                               
self-pay  per se,  because they  are  not paying  the full  rate.                                                               
However, he continued, they are  paying a significant amount that                                                               
does make  the homes more  financially sustainable.  He  wants to                                                               
ensure  that [the  Pioneer  Homes] still  have  a large  self-pay                                                               
population even if it is only 80 percent of the full cost.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  compared the current rates  to those proposed                                                               
by the  administration and those  proposed by CSHB 96(STA).   She                                                               
noted  that for  Level  I the  current rate  is  almost $2,600  a                                                               
month, the  administration has proposed  $3,800 a month,  and the                                                               
bill proposes  $3,100, which is  still a substantial  increase in                                                               
rates.    For the  highest  [level]  the  current rate  is  about                                                               
$6,800,  the administration  is proposing  $13,000, and  the bill                                                               
proposes $10,000.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  responded that  Level IV is  a challenging                                                               
level because these  are largely going to be  folks with dementia                                                               
with a  very high acuity level  for assisted living.   He said he                                                               
doesn't know that  $10,000 is the perfect number,  but $13,000 is                                                               
such a high  rate compared to other assisted living  care in this                                                               
region that  it could cause  people to  flee and deter  them from                                                               
ever entering the Pioneer Homes to begin with.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SPOHNHOLZ asked  Mr. Lasley  whether dementia  patients                                                               
are typically Level IV, because  her understanding was that these                                                               
patients  are  typically  Level  V.   She  requested  Mr.  Lasley                                                               
describe the difference between Level IV and Level V.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY answered  that a little over 50 percent  of the elders                                                               
in the  Pioneer Homes are at  the current Level III,  the highest                                                               
level of care, and those  individuals primarily would move to the                                                               
new Level  IV.   He said  the gap is  primarily in  [the current]                                                               
Level II.   Individuals move  into the home  at Level I  or Level                                                               
II, but there  is a big gap  at the Level II  because the current                                                               
Level II requires  that the individual only  receive nursing care                                                               
during the  day.  As  individuals age  in place they  maybe don't                                                               
need 24-hour a day nursing care  seven days a week, so they don't                                                               
move to the  current Level III.  As their  acuity level continues                                                               
to increase,  they sort of get  trapped at that high  level of II                                                               
because they don't  meet that definition of Level III.   So, [the                                                               
Pioneer Homes  would] try to move  the current 50 percent  of the                                                               
population up  to a Level  IV, and then  Level II would  be split                                                               
into  two levels  of  care.   The  Level V  that  is proposed  is                                                               
individuals with  complex behaviors that [the  Pioneer Homes] are                                                               
not currently serving.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  stated that a current  challenge in providing                                                               
for  Alaska's  elder  community is  ensuring  adequate  care  for                                                               
people with dementia.  She  inquired about the difference between                                                               
Level IV and Level V as  they relate to that and further inquired                                                               
what "complex care"  means.  She requested Mr. Lasley  to be more                                                               
specific about the  kinds of care at Level V  and whether care is                                                               
being provided to people with dementias at Level IV.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY replied that the  proposed Level V, complex behaviors,                                                               
are individuals with dementia that  may have excessive wandering,                                                               
elopement  issues where  they try  to leave  the building,  self-                                                               
harm,  aggressive to  themselves or  others.   Under the  current                                                               
model,  the  Pioneer   Homes  have  not  been   caring  for  this                                                               
population, but oftentimes  these individuals are inappropriately                                                               
placed  in  emergency  rooms  or  maybe  the  Alaska  Psychiatric                                                               
Institute  (API).   Last year  capital funding  was requested  to                                                               
help take  a neighborhood within  the Anchorage Pioneer  Home and                                                               
build out  a complex  behavior neighborhood  to serve  that need.                                                               
Current Level III  individuals with dementia can  progress in the                                                               
dementia through their life, so  [the homes] may have individuals                                                               
at the  lower level of dementia  all the way up  to starting some                                                               
wandering or  a lot of memory  loss, who cannot do  activities of                                                               
daily living on their  own, and then all the way  to the point of                                                               
getting closer  to end of life  to where they are  heavy dementia                                                               
but bedridden.  So, there is a large gap in there.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:45:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  added that Level  V is an  important thing                                                               
to mention  because this is  actually a significant  cost savings                                                               
opportunity for the  state at large.  Right now,  there are folks                                                               
who could be  in a prospective behavioral  health neighborhood in                                                               
the  Anchorage Pioneer  Home.   These  folks  currently cost  the                                                               
state over  $500,000 a  year at  API or  similar levels  at other                                                               
facilities  that aren't  well suited  for these  seniors; API  is                                                               
really not an  ideal place to house these seniors.   So, while it                                                               
sounds expensive to have Level V  in the Pioneer Homes, the Agnew                                                               
Beck Report  details that  this would actually  save the  state a                                                               
lot of money and would be safer for seniors.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  agreed with  the aforementioned,  noting that                                                               
back-of-the-hand math indicates it costs  the state about $40,000                                                               
a month to  keep somebody at API.   He said if it can  be done at                                                               
half of that at the Pioneer  Home, which is a more supportive and                                                               
home-like environment, that is probably  better for everyone.  As                                                               
well,  it would  be a  very  significant cost  savings and  would                                                               
ensure that  API can be  used for people  that only API  can care                                                               
for, which is a very significant population.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS related  that Mr.  Lasley did  a good  job                                                               
describing  to  the  State Affairs  Standing  Committee  how  the                                                               
population  at the  Pioneer Homes  has  changed over  time.   Mr.                                                               
Lasley said  the population used  to be  more of a  cocktail hour                                                               
crowd   self-supporting  people who have a  great assisted living                                                               
facility to  live out their  final years.   Whereas now it  is an                                                               
older population  with a  greater spectrum  and higher  acuity of                                                               
need and  CSHB 96(STA) really reflects  that.  The Level  V shows                                                               
how much that spectrum has broadened as the needs have changed.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:47:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR ZULKOSKY  asked whether it  is correct that  the Pioneer                                                               
Homes, through regulation,  are able to adjust the  rates with or                                                               
without this legislation.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS  confirmed that  is correct.   He  said the                                                               
bill would effectively cap the  extent to which the Pioneer Homes                                                               
can  raise the  rates and  it would  allow the  Pioneer Homes  to                                                               
capture significantly more revenue.   However, the bill would not                                                               
allow the  Pioneer Homes to set  as high of rates  as proposed in                                                               
the current draft regulations.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR ZULKOSKY  offered her understanding  that the  bill does                                                               
increase  rates  as Co-Chair  Spohnholz  indicated,  but with  an                                                               
intention to find some rationale  for basing those costs and also                                                               
finding some compromise in bringing in receipts where possible.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS confirmed  that is correct.   He related he                                                               
has heard  from many  people who  are scared  or angry  about the                                                               
proposed rate increases.  He  sympathizes with the department and                                                               
how  DHSS wants  to  capture new  revenue, but  he  thinks it  is                                                               
really  important to  share respect  for the  state's elders  and                                                               
have  rates  that  are  affordable and  that  the  Pioneer  Homes                                                               
(indisc.).                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:49:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRUITT  asked  when   the  rates  had  last  been                                                               
changed.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY responded that there  was an 8.5 percent rate increase                                                               
in 2016, a 1 percent [increase]  in 2017, which was equivalent to                                                               
Social Security, and no rate increase in 2018.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRUITT  surmised  the  rates  have  been  changed                                                               
fairly regularly as needed.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY  answered that  they have  not been  raised at  a rate                                                               
that  has kept  up with  inflation.   He said  the department  is                                                               
trying  to  make  a  correction  now and  then  come  up  with  a                                                               
methodology in  policy that would  set an expectation  that rates                                                               
would be raised (indisc.) some form,  whether it be CPI or Social                                                               
Security.   There  are many  variations of  CPI.   A health  care                                                               
economist recently  advised him  that [the department]  should be                                                               
looking at  the health care  CPI, which  is much higher  than the                                                               
CPI shown in  the slides from Representative Fields.   Last year,                                                               
for  instance, health  care  CPI in  the state  of  Alaska was  7                                                               
percent.    So,  the  challenge  has been  that  even  with  rate                                                               
increases, this  bill does not  get to  what it truly  costs [the                                                               
department] to  provide service.   Secondly, [the  department] is                                                               
not  keeping up  with the  cost of  health care  in the  state of                                                               
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRUITT  inquired  about the  annual  increase  in                                                               
delivering care through the Pioneer Homes.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LASLEY  replied that  after  talking  with the  health  care                                                               
economist he  looked at the  budgets from  the past 15  years and                                                               
looked at the cost of health  care CPI for urban Alaska, which is                                                               
the sector  to look at,  and the cost is  right in line  with the                                                               
health care CPI.   On average in the state of  Alaska it is about                                                               
4.5-5.0 percent  a year for  health care  cost in the  state, and                                                               
last year was 7 percent.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRUITT  surmised  that  those  changes  are  made                                                               
through a  regulation change  with a  public process  and comment                                                               
time, so therefore it takes a bit of time to make those changes.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY responded  correct.  He said that  currently when [the                                                               
department]  puts forward  the proposed  rate increases  it's not                                                               
like [the department] is saying this  is the rates that are going                                                               
to  be; [the  department] is  not  mandating that  these are  the                                                               
rates at the  end of the regulatory process.   The purpose of the                                                               
process being in  regulation is to allow for public  comment.  It                                                               
is now  currently published and  is a 60-day process,  and during                                                               
the 60 days  individuals have the ability to  either make comment                                                               
through public  meetings or send  them in  writing.  All  of that                                                               
information is then  gathered, and the commissioner  looks at all                                                               
of that data  and determines what is in the  best interest of the                                                               
department and the division and the elders.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE PRUITT  asked whether  the bill would  provide the                                                               
ability to recover  costs and [make] change, or  whether the bill                                                               
would provide a cap  and once that cap was hit  there would be no                                                               
way to recover any costs or  make those changes or go through the                                                               
60-day process  of changing regulations  to deal with  the impact                                                               
of increased CPI for medical in Alaska.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LASLEY answered  that, if  passed, the  bill would  take the                                                               
ability  for  the  department  to  manage  the  finances  of  the                                                               
division and  put it with  the legislature since it  would become                                                               
statute,  so  [the  department] would  not  have  the  regulatory                                                               
process.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRUITT  remarked that  this  would  be a  classic                                                               
scenario  of "it  takes  an  act of  Congress  to  make a  change                                                               
there."  In this case it would  take an act of the legislature to                                                               
be able  to make these  changes.  He  inquired about how  easy it                                                               
would be to make changes in  this particular case and whether Mr.                                                               
Lasley  sees  this  as pretty  much  permanent.    Representative                                                               
Pruitt posited that  the fiscal note is probably  wrong in regard                                                               
to the  set amount of  cost and  therefore it should  be expected                                                               
that  there would  be  an  increase to  the  State  of Alaska  in                                                               
general fund because the number will  have been set at a specific                                                               
amount that cannot be raised.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY replied  it would be the anticipation  under this bill                                                               
that the  department would  have to  come before  the legislature                                                               
every year  and re-look at  this because if anything  changes and                                                               
there  is additional  cost to  the division  there is  no way  to                                                               
recapture those funds  and they would be set in  statute and [the                                                               
department]  would be  set to  a formula  that it  has no  way of                                                               
managing.   As the subject  matter experts, the  department would                                                               
have to come and ask for a change.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:55:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS noted that as  a practical reality, CPI has                                                               
risen twice  as fast as rates  since 2004 and, as  pointed out by                                                               
Mr. Lasley, health  care costs have grown much  faster than that.                                                               
So, he said,  the regulatory process has not kept  up with costs.                                                               
He pointed  out that the  bill would  re-base rates to  take into                                                               
account some  of the growth  in costs.   There is a  point beyond                                                               
which  price  increases  are  kind   of  theoretical  because  of                                                               
people's ability  to pay.  The  charge could be $30,000  a month,                                                               
but  if no  one  can  actually pay  that  then  more money  isn't                                                               
actually being  captured and helping  the financial  situation of                                                               
the  Pioneer Homes.    It is  important to  have  rates that  are                                                               
reality based that people can pay.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRUITT stated  that his  point was  just made  by                                                               
Representative  Fields.   Rates  haven't increased  at the  level                                                               
that it costs;  rates have been increased  through the regulatory                                                               
process at  half the CPI.   [The bill]  would set in  statute the                                                               
inability to  raise them  at all,  so as  the CPI  increases [the                                                               
department]  is  going   to  have  to  come  in   front  of  [the                                                               
legislature] every  single time [the  department] has to  make an                                                               
adjustment.  Setting  a rate from which to  start this particular                                                               
year may make  sense, but [the bill] doesn't give  the ability to                                                               
recoup  the cost  going  forward and  that is  a  binding of  the                                                               
hands.  This legislation doesn't look  to the future, it looks to                                                               
what the current situation is and isn't forward thinking.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:57:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  offered her  understanding that  CSHB 96(STA)                                                               
would re-base the rates and would  allow for rates to be adjusted                                                               
annually based on Social Security cost-of-living adjustment.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS confirmed  Co-Chair Spohnholz  is correct.                                                               
Addressing  Representative Pruitt,  he  said the  bill does  look                                                               
forward.  By  giving the department the authority  to raise rates                                                               
annually  it's designed  to keep  [the state]  from falling  back                                                               
into this hole like [the stated] did last time.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  said that  in many  respects CSHB  96(STA) is                                                               
designed to be  forward thinking and to make sure  that the cost-                                                               
of-living  adjustment is  taken  into account  and  that a  major                                                               
reform effort  does not have  to be  launched in order  to adjust                                                               
rates moving forward.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE FIELDS concurred.  He  offered that if it would be                                                               
the committee's  preference to have  a medical CPI as  the annual                                                               
cost  inflator, he  would be  supportive.   He noted  he has  had                                                               
discussion with the department about  what is the best annual way                                                               
to keep pace with increasing cost.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ  recalled Mr.  Lasley's statement  that health                                                               
care inflation went up 7 percent  last year.  But, she noted, not                                                               
all the costs at the Pioneer  Homes are health care related; many                                                               
are akin  to traditional  CPI because they  are costs  for people                                                               
who do laundry,  deliver food, or other  day-to-day living costs.                                                               
She therefore inquired how the  department came up with using the                                                               
Social Security  COLA to Representative Fields  instead of health                                                               
care inflation or CPI.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY answered that when  he talked to Representative Fields                                                               
before  they  were  talking  about   under  the  current  payment                                                               
assistance program, for which  the Social Security cost-of-living                                                               
increase  has always  been used  because it  was determined  that                                                               
individuals on  payment assistance  have no  additional resources                                                               
to pay for services and so  the state is already subsidizing them                                                               
an  amount determined  under the  formula of  payment assistance.                                                               
The  only additional  increase in  revenue that  they would  have                                                               
every  year  is primarily  Social  Security,  and  it is  set  in                                                               
statute  that   [the  department]   would  have  to   review  any                                                               
additional  revenue  that they  have.    When talking  about  the                                                               
health  care  CPI, 81  percent  of  the  cost for  operating  the                                                               
Pioneer  Homes is  personnel and  almost  all of  that is  direct                                                               
care.  Out of the 600 staff  within the homes, 150 are not direct                                                               
care staff operating the 24-hour  facility and 144 of those staff                                                               
are laundry,  housekeeping, and food service  currently.  Usually                                                               
those individuals  are at the  lower end of  the wage scale.   Is                                                               
health  care CPI  the right  number?   That was  a recommendation                                                               
made to  him by a  health care economist  listening in on  one of                                                               
the board  meetings.  It is  known that the Social  Security rate                                                               
of increase is not keeping up  with the cost of inflation and the                                                               
cost of providing the services.   That is why he did a comparison                                                               
of what  was it costing to  provide the services knowing  that 81                                                               
percent  of that  is personnel.   He  compared it  against health                                                               
care CPI after the health  care economist's recommendation and it                                                               
was pretty close to the same.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SPOHNHOLZ  asked  whether  Mr. Lasley  just  said  that                                                               
health care  inflation is  pretty close to  what the  increase in                                                               
[Pioneer Home] expenses is from year to year.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LASLEY replied  yes.   When  doing the  comparison, he  took                                                               
health care  CPI and looked back  15 years at the  Pioneer Homes'                                                               
true cost  of providing services  and it  is almost in  line with                                                               
that.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:01:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  DRUMMOND inquired  whether  the  State of  Alaska                                                               
owns all the  Pioneer Homes and Veterans Homes and  that they are                                                               
not leased.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY responded correct.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   DRUMMOND  surmised   that   these  rates   cover                                                               
operating costs  and services  delivered to  the residents.   She                                                               
asked whether [the division] has  money set aside for maintenance                                                               
or major  maintenance or  whether that  is something  the Pioneer                                                               
Home  system has  to come  to the  state for  if a  major capital                                                               
improvement or roof repair is  needed.  She further asked whether                                                               
money is  set aside for  that or whether  it goes on  the capital                                                               
budget as a separate request.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY  answered it is  both.   Minor repairs are  set within                                                               
[the  division's] budget  and  the capital  budget  pays for  the                                                               
large projects, so those are a capital request.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ asked  how much of [the  division's] costs are                                                               
related to health care delivery.   She clarified she is trying to                                                               
understand the  distinction between what  sort of a  standard CPI                                                               
adjustment and  what is  related to  health care  cost increases,                                                               
and what the ratio is.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  LASLEY replied  he does  not have  the exact  percentage and                                                               
will get back to the committee with an answer.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ said understanding  that ratio is important to                                                               
her because she appreciates that  the bill would allow for annual                                                               
cost  of living  increases that  will be  faced that  the current                                                               
rate  structure hasn't  taken into  account and  which has  meant                                                               
that every  once in a  while [the  department] has done  a little                                                               
jump-up that  hasn't kept up with  cost of services.   [The bill]                                                               
finds a  compromise position  because there is  a lot  of concern                                                               
amongst people  who are at the  Pioneer Homes and the  people who                                                               
love  them.   Providing some  certainty is  important and  to her                                                               
there is a value statement that  caring for the state's elders is                                                               
an important thing  when she thinks about the  people who changed                                                               
their children's diapers, put their  children through school, and                                                               
helped their children along their way.   There is value in caring                                                               
for elders  and it  isn't necessarily important  to her  that 100                                                               
percent of  the cost of doing  services is recovered.   There are                                                               
some things  that are  just a good  thing to do  and that  she is                                                               
proud of  as an  Alaskan.  She  would like to  come up  with some                                                               
sort of  a compromise that  works that recognizes what  true cost                                                               
growth is.   It's probably not 100 percent  health care inflation                                                               
and probably not just CPI.   It would be helpful if some rational                                                               
compromise  is identified  that is  based on  what percentage  of                                                               
monthly expenses are related to health care and what are not.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. LASLEY responded he agrees  with Co-Chair Spohnholz.  He said                                                               
the proposal put forward was not  an easy decision to make and he                                                               
struggles with  it every day because  his job is to  care for the                                                               
state's elders.  The governor's proposal  is to truly make this a                                                               
needs-based  system  and what  is  being  proposed is  that  [the                                                               
department] charge what it costs  to provide services.  Yes, [the                                                               
Pioneer Homes]  are classified  as assisted  living but  they are                                                               
providing  services through  the  end  of life.    Many of  those                                                               
individuals who  are primarily at  [the current] Level  III would                                                               
not be accepted at a  traditional assisted living facility.  [The                                                               
division's] mission  is to provide  elders a home in  a community                                                               
celebrating life  through its  final breath  and that  is exactly                                                               
what [the division] does.  The  governor's proposal in this is to                                                               
provide  the  assurance  that  there   is  a  payment  assistance                                                               
program, which  is set in statute,  and to charge the  rates that                                                               
truly reflect what it costs  [the state] to provide services, but                                                               
knowing that  there is that  payment assistance program  that has                                                               
been set  in statute for  many years to protect  every individual                                                               
65 and older  that needs to live in a  Pioneer Home regardless of                                                               
their ability to pay.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:06:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  SPOHNHOLZ offered  her  appreciation  for Mr.  Lasley's                                                               
comments.   She said  she thinks  it is  an honest  difference of                                                               
opinion around the  rate proposals being put  forward by Governor                                                               
Dunleavy's administration  is that  it's always highest  and best                                                               
that the  Pioneer Homes  charge the  highest rates.   There  is a                                                               
certain amount  of value  and dignity  in being  able to  pay for                                                               
yourself that a lot of people  would like to continue to be self-                                                               
pay for  as long as  possible.  Increasing rates  so dramatically                                                               
will require a  lot of people to spend down  all of their assets,                                                               
sending them  into public assistance, which  is psychologically a                                                               
difficult burden  for a  lot of people.   Historically  the state                                                               
has said  the Pioneer Homes didn't  have to operate on  full cost                                                               
recovery.   She has heard from  people in emails and  phone calls                                                               
that  this forces  them to  spend down  every last  bit of  their                                                               
assets and go  on to public assistance much earlier.   There is a                                                               
perceived  lack  of dignity  that  comes  with  that and  she  is                                                               
included to go with her elders on this difference of opinion.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  FIELDS  added  that  a  particularly  challenging                                                               
circumstance is  that of a  married couple  with one spouse  in a                                                               
Pioneer Home  and the other spouse  living independently, perhaps                                                               
in the  home they  shared for 50  years.  He  has heard  from his                                                               
constituents  that the  very, very  high  rates are  particularly                                                               
threatening for  those independent  couples where one  person has                                                               
dementia and  the other  is still working  trying to  self-pay at                                                               
the Pioneer  Home, and  these new proposed  very high  rates from                                                               
the administration just put them  in an impossible situation.  It                                                               
is different than  just one person who  is on his or  her own and                                                               
maybe they pay  or maybe they can't, and they  are in the Pioneer                                                               
Home already.  [The state]  should be respectful of those couples                                                               
where one spouse is caring for another in the Pioneer Home.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:09:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  ZULKOSKY noted  there is  no invited  testimony on  the                                                               
bill.  She opened public testimony.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:10:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BRAD RIDER  testified in support of  HB 96.  He  said his parents                                                               
are in the  Pioneer Home, and that the Pioneer  Homes are amazing                                                               
and something  that should be held  up for everyone to  see.  The                                                               
state long  ago offered to  help its  seniors and that  should be                                                               
continued.  Cultures from the  beginning of time across the world                                                               
have  taken care  of their  elders.   For this  administration to                                                               
have said "it's time to rip the Band-Aid off" is disgusting.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:11:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
FRED KOKEN  testified in  support of  HB 96.   He  said he  was a                                                               
financial consultant  for 30 years  and understands the  need and                                                               
the wisdom  for a balanced  budget.  However, the  proposed level                                                               
of increase  for the Pioneer Homes  going forward is scary.   His                                                               
wife  is currently  a Level  III resident  in the  Juneau Pioneer                                                               
Home and  the amount of  increase they  are looking at  is scary.                                                               
While a  balanced budget is  important, it shouldn't  be balanced                                                               
on the backs of the most vulnerable citizens  Alaska's seniors.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:13:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LUANN MCVEY  testified in support  of HB 96.   She stated  she is                                                               
very worried  about the proposed  current draft  regulations that                                                               
would  make the  Pioneer Homes  unaffordable to  people like  her                                                               
parents who  have lived in Juneau  since 1957.  In  the mid-1980s                                                               
her  88-year-old   father  retired   from  the   National  Marine                                                               
Fisheries  Service and  her 87-year-old  mother retired  from the                                                               
U.S.  Forest Service.    They  have continued  to  live in  their                                                               
Juneau home  assuming they could  eventually move to  the Pioneer                                                               
Home and  afford to  pay for it  themselves.  It  was and  is the                                                               
only affordable long-term  care option available to  them here in                                                               
Juneau.   They applied to and  remain on the Juneau  Pioneer Home                                                               
inactive list.   So far, they  haven't needed to move  there, but                                                               
eventually  they  will.    The rate  increases  proposed  in  the                                                               
governor's  regulations would  make the  Pioneer Home  absolutely                                                               
unaffordable to them.   Her parents are very worried,  as is she,                                                               
about  what is  going to  happen  to them.   She  urged that  the                                                               
Pioneer Home rates be kept  reasonable so people like her parents                                                               
who have spent their lives in  Alaska will not have to spend down                                                               
all their assets and go on public assistance.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:16:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MARK BADGER  testified in  support of  HB 96.   He  said he  is a                                                               
caregiver for his  parents in Anchorage.  He  recalled visiting a                                                               
102-year-old  man in  the Fairbanks  Pioneer Home  in 1969  whose                                                               
pilot license was signed by Orville  Wright.  It was clear to him                                                               
back then that the Pioneer Homes are  a shrine to a great deal of                                                               
wisdom.  He  has spent the last three years  learning the details                                                               
of Medicaid,  Alzheimer's resources,  and assisted  living homes.                                                               
It is  a very difficult  and people  do not understand  what they                                                               
are going to have  to field at the end of life  and that it isn't                                                               
what they  expect.   There is  no golden net  to catch  people as                                                               
they reach the end of their  lives.  The rate increase is putting                                                               
to a parallel  of private nursing homes, while  the Pioneer Homes                                                               
do not have the same patient to  nurse ratio and are not the same                                                               
as  going  into  private  nursing homes.    The  administration's                                                               
managers are  in charge of executing  this incredibly destructive                                                               
rate increase.   They are saying  no one will be  discharged from                                                               
the  Pioneer Homes  but  will  be moved  to  Medicaid, while  the                                                               
administration  has made  its  disdain clear  for  the number  of                                                               
people on  Medicaid.  He expressed  his strong support for  HB 96                                                               
because it  would provide a  reasoned approach to  the adjustment                                                               
of  rates  and  because  he  believes  that  regulatory  or  rate                                                               
increases should be in the hands of the legislature.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:19:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LAURA BONNER  testified in  support of  HB 96.   She said  she is                                                               
retired and nearly  70 years old and the bill  would keep Pioneer                                                               
and  Veterans homes  affordable.   The  notice  recently sent  to                                                               
residents  is a  slap in  the face  and another  example of  cost                                                               
shifting  in the  governor's  plan for  Alaska.   Alaskans  still                                                               
value their veterans and seniors  and have since 1913.  Residents                                                               
in the homes  nearing the ends of their lives  and their families                                                               
need predictability  in what  the rates  will be.   She may  be a                                                               
[Pioneer Home]  resident in  the future and  she would  need that                                                               
predictability.   The  legislature needs  to find  ways to  raise                                                               
revenues other than from veterans and elders who may be frail.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:21:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SUSAN MILLER  testified in support of  HB 96.  She  said the bill                                                               
attempts to  restrain the effort  of DHSS  to raise the  rates at                                                               
the  Pioneer Homes  well  beyond what  an  average Alaskan  could                                                               
possibly afford.  Because the  rates in the department's proposed                                                               
regulations are  so extraordinarily high, she  can only speculate                                                               
that the goal  is not to pay  the full cost of  all services, but                                                               
rather  to  eliminate the  Pioneer  Homes  entirely or  privatize                                                               
them.   By focusing on  costs, the department ignores  the reason                                                               
for  having  and  needing  the  Pioneer  Homes.    Based  on  her                                                               
experience, people  do not  choose to live  in the  Pioneer Homes                                                               
because they are  looking for a comfortable place to  stay.  They                                                               
live  there  because they  desperately  need  the services  these                                                               
homes provide.   They live there because they can  no longer live                                                               
at home, they  can no longer receive the care  they need at home.                                                               
Her mother  lived in  the Anchorage  Pioneer Home  from 2000-2008                                                               
because  she had  Alzheimer's disease,  a form  of dementia  that                                                               
gradually and inevitably destroys  a person's ability to function                                                               
and eventually kills  them.  She visited her  mother almost every                                                               
night  for  eight  years,  so  she is  quite  familiar  with  and                                                               
appreciative of the Anchorage Pioneer  Home.  She hopes she never                                                               
needs the  facility, but it  would be a  tragedy to take  it away                                                               
from those  Alaskans who do  and will  need those services.   The                                                               
department may  argue that  it has  a payment  assistance program                                                               
that helps  those who cannot afford  the rates they set.   But to                                                               
get that payment  assistance a person must first  pay every penny                                                               
of the person's savings and then  pay all their monthly income if                                                               
they have  any, making the person  a pauper.  The  bill is needed                                                               
to  protect  Alaskans  from  the   unreasonable  fees  that  DHSS                                                               
proposes.   The bill,  however, is  not without  its flaws.   The                                                               
fees in  Section 5 are  too high, especially the  $10,000 monthly                                                               
rate.    She is  also  concerned  that  there  appears to  be  no                                                               
definition of  the terms used  to describe the  services provided                                                               
at  each level.   The  terms for  those services  in the  statute                                                               
differ from those used in  the department's proposed regulations.                                                               
She  receives many  services from  the state  for which  she pays                                                               
nothing, and she  is not sure why her government  has chosen such                                                               
an important  service as the Pioneer  Homes as one for  which its                                                               
users must pay full costs.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:24:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SHARON LONG testified in support of  HB 96.  She said her husband                                                               
came to Alaska with  the U.S. Air Force in the  1960s and fell in                                                               
love with  Alaska.  After two  tours he knew Alaska  was home and                                                               
left the Air Force rather than  be transferred.  Now 84 years old                                                               
he  has  spent his  entire  professional  career in  the  private                                                               
sector in  Alaska.  Due  to advancing Parkinson's Disease  he now                                                               
requires the  assisted living services  of the  Anchorage Pioneer                                                               
Home.  She is relating this  so the committee will understand the                                                               
depth of importance  and meaning to her family of  the concept of                                                               
pioneer and home.  The  new supposedly comparable rates suggested                                                               
by  the administration  and, frankly,  the compromise  bill [CSHB
96(STA)]  before the  committee,  reflect  rates in  institutions                                                               
that  offer individual  rooms  with  considerably greater  square                                                               
footage with  kitchenettes or full kitchens,  private rather than                                                               
shared  bathrooms, heating  and cooling  controls that  work, bed                                                               
sheets  changed  weekly,  ceilings   that  don't  leak  into  the                                                               
residents' rooms, and dependable hot  water for bathing, which is                                                               
not the case  in the Anchorage Pioneer Home.   The administration                                                               
has  not  done  an  apples-to-apples  assessment.    She  thanked                                                               
members   for   attempting   a  legislative   solution   to   the                                                               
unconscionable  approach the  administration  is  pursuing.   She                                                               
encouraged the  committee to craft a  bill that:  1)  repeals the                                                               
regulatory  authority under  which the  administration is  making                                                               
these unprecedented,  ham fisted,  and draconian changes  to both                                                               
the  mission and  the  operation  of the  Pioneer  Homes; and  2)                                                               
confirms the current  existing rates in statute  and links future                                                               
increases  to  the  Social  Security  cost-of-living  adjustment,                                                               
which  is a  rational approach  to increases  and something  that                                                               
families could plan for.  Her  husband of 40 years and his fellow                                                               
residents who write a check every  month to the state are fearful                                                               
of these machinations which threaten  to drive them from the only                                                               
place they call home and  financially break their families.  They                                                               
are scared  and bewildered.   She is  at the Pioneer  Home nearly                                                               
every  day and  has  come  to know  and  appreciate  many of  the                                                               
residents who  are truly pioneers  and dedicated Alaskans  who in                                                               
many cases  have served the state  long and well.   She urged the                                                               
committee to do right by them.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:27:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ROCKY PLOTNICK  testified in support  of HB  96.  She  stated she                                                               
lives  in her  own home  while her  husband is  currently in  the                                                               
Anchorage Pioneer Home.  She agreed  with Ms. Long that people in                                                               
the Pioneer Home are afraid.   They fear the proposed regulations                                                               
will  go  forward  and  be  implemented  and  these  people  feel                                                               
helpless.   She  encouraged the  committee to  move forward  with                                                               
some version of HB 96.  While the  bill may not be perfect, it is                                                               
a  limit, and  somewhat of  a compromise.   Knowing  the timeline                                                               
with the  legislature and that  the public comment  [deadline] on                                                               
the regulations is 5/28/19, time is  ticking.  So she hopes HB 96                                                               
will be moved soon or that there  will be a companion bill in the                                                               
Senate because a bill is hope to the seniors.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:29:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JANET MACCLARENCE  testified in support of  HB 96.  She  said she                                                               
is currently  a resident of  the Pioneer  Home and will  be until                                                               
4/25/19.   She  has  given  notice that  she  is  moving into  an                                                               
apartment with one bedroom and one  bath for $1,300 a month, plus                                                               
$100  in utilities,  plus whatever  she adds  to it  for support.                                                               
The combination of  expenses for herself and her  husband will be                                                               
less  than the  $5,000  a  month they  are  currently paying  and                                                               
certainly much less than the $7,200  a month they would be paying                                                               
with the  proposed increase.   She has Crohn's Disease,  which is                                                               
aggravated by  stress, and  she is the  caretaker of  her husband                                                               
who is  the survivor of  a massive stroke.   She and  her husband                                                               
were  co-presidents of  the Resident  Council but  had to  resign                                                               
because  they  needed  to  be   in  a  less  stressful  and  more                                                               
predictable environment.   The bill would  go a long way  to make                                                               
the Pioneer Homes a more  predictable environment.  She concurred                                                               
that the  atmosphere in the  Pioneer Home is fearful,  people are                                                               
very  concerned about  their ability  to continue  to retain  any                                                               
kind  of dignity  in an  environment that  forces them  to become                                                               
complete paupers  in order  to receive services.   She  urged the                                                               
committee to support  and honor the people who have  done so much                                                               
and who deserve an honorable exit.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:33:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JUSTIN PARISH testified in support of HB  96.  He said it is only                                                               
right to  provide some assurance  to elders that the  rates won't                                                               
be  doubled at  the whim  of  the state.    It is  a clear  moral                                                               
imperative to  take care of  the state's  elders, as is  done for                                                               
the state's  youth.  Some  degree of assurance must  be provided,                                                               
and the bill would  do a great job of that.   The automatic price                                                               
adjustment with  time is appreciated  and he hopes it  won't need                                                               
to be revisited in the future.  He thanked the bill's sponsors.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:35:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DEBBIE TILSWORTH testified  in support of HB 96.   She stated the                                                               
bill is a thoughtful piece of  legislation and an attempt to find                                                               
middle  ground  between  Mr.  Lasley's  proposed  rates  and  the                                                               
current  rate  structure.    She  said  bravo  to  Representative                                                               
Spohnholz'  statement  about  dignity  and  respect.    When  her                                                               
mother, who self-pays,  moved into the Pioneer Home  no one asked                                                               
her how  much money she had.   The new model  worries her because                                                               
she  can foresee  a  day when  seniors are  looked  at as  either                                                               
assets or  liabilities.  If  the state starts treating  people as                                                               
transactions rather than valued elders,  then the state will be a                                                               
colder and  poorer place to  be.   Increases of the  magnitude in                                                               
the bill,  which are  20-30 percent,  need to  be phased  in over                                                               
time.    Current  residents  should  be  grandfathered  into  the                                                               
current  rate structure  with  annual cost  of  living or  modest                                                               
increases.  Fifteen  years ago, the University  of Alaska changed                                                               
its  benefits   structure  and   it  grandfathered   the  current                                                               
employees with benefits in effect  at that time; future employees                                                               
would come  in under  different rules.   The university  ended up                                                               
with  Tier 1,  2,  and 3  benefits; the  rules  did not  suddenly                                                               
change  for  existing  employees.   The  state  wisely  used  the                                                               
approach of  phasing in the new  structure and she asks  for that                                                               
same wisdom  now.  She does  not buy into the  governor's premise                                                               
or Mr. Lasley's  shock therapy that huge  increases are necessary                                                               
in one year.  It would  create havoc with the residents' personal                                                               
budgets, and  it would not  gain the  state much money  after the                                                               
first year  or two.   While  [the administration]  estimated $5.7                                                               
million,  she came  up with  $4.8  million; and  while the  state                                                               
might get that in year one, what  about years two and three?  The                                                               
state won't gain what [the  administration] thinks it will and it                                                               
will  drive self-paying  residents  like her  mother  out of  the                                                               
Pioneer Home.   One thing she  does agree with in  the governor's                                                               
approach, as well as the  co-sponsors of the legislation, is that                                                               
the current services of the Pioneer  Homes need to continue.  The                                                               
staff is excellent,  the care is superb, and she  has nothing but                                                               
admiration for  the way the Fairbanks  Pioneer Home is run.   She                                                               
applauded the committee for taking  the concerns of the residents                                                               
and their  families into account  as the committee  goes forward.                                                               
She  urged the  committee  to  take a  reasoned  approach to  the                                                               
rising  costs of  care at  Alaska's  Pioneer Homes,  which are  a                                                               
treasure that need to be protected for future generations.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:38:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
URBAN RAHOI testified  in support of HB  96.  He said  he and his                                                               
wife  married in  1940 and  lived happily  on $100  a month.   He                                                               
added he agrees  with the previous testimony because he  is a 73-                                                               
year resident  of Fairbanks and  has done  a lot for  the country                                                               
and appreciates  being in the Pioneer  Home because it is  a good                                                               
place  for  people  who  need  help.   He  thanked  the  previous                                                               
witnesses for saying the things he would like to say.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:39:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BARBARA PARKER testified in support of  HB 96.  She stated she is                                                               
a  current resident  of  the  Fairbanks Pioneer  Home.   She  has                                                               
noticed a  great deal of concern  and downright fear in  the home                                                               
over  the  proposed changes,  especially  in  the monthly  rates.                                                               
Most of the  residents don't have a lot and  when legislators are                                                               
talking  about tying  it  to the  Social  Security increase,  she                                                               
thinks what increase?  She has  $18 a month extra, which is eaten                                                               
by  her Part  D payment.   The  care and  staff at  the Fairbanks                                                               
Pioneer Home  are wonderful.  She  is single and 74  and moved in                                                               
voluntarily.   She is healthy  but came  to the home  because she                                                               
wanted to  have a safe,  clean, healthy environment as  she ages.                                                               
She hopes she  doesn't hurt herself, but knows that  if she does,                                                               
she  will get  care.   She asked  the committee  to consider  the                                                               
residents who are  on fixed incomes and alone and  who have lived                                                               
in the state  40-50 years.  Other countries respect  and care for                                                               
their elders and Alaska should do the same.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:41:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SUSAN CARTER  testified that she  is a resident of  the Fairbanks                                                               
Pioneer Home.   She  related that  a friend of  hers, as  well as                                                               
many residents,  have had to  turn over their  homes, properties,                                                               
savings, and investment income.   She asked what happens to those                                                               
assets and  to that money because  it is never mentioned,  but it                                                               
always has to  be turned over to the state  if a resident doesn't                                                               
have enough  money to  self-pay.  Those  assets are  an important                                                               
consideration  and should  be put  into the  budget, given  those                                                               
assets are thousands  of dollars for each person and  most of the                                                               
homes and  properties have  been paid  off because  the residents                                                               
lived in them for so long.  She  is in her eighties and she heard                                                               
that the average  age in her home  is 88.  That  means people are                                                               
coming  into  the   home  in  their  eighties,   not  sixties  or                                                               
seventies,  and  that  means  they are  staying  in  their  homes                                                               
because they  cannot yet  afford the  Pioneer Home  charges until                                                               
they are forced to come in and  turn over all their assets to the                                                               
state.   She  urged that  these  assets are  considered and  that                                                               
information about these  assets and what has been  done with that                                                               
money be provided somewhere.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:43:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CAROL KLOPF  testified she lives  in the Fairbanks  Pioneer Home.                                                               
She apologized  for not  being informed  of what  HB 96  would do                                                               
except raise rates.   She urged that any new  rates be applied to                                                               
the future  residents and that  everyone now living in  the homes                                                               
be grandfathered  into the rates  that they understood  when they                                                               
applied  and moved  in.    She saved  and  planned  for what  she                                                               
estimated her  costs would be  and then  chose her time  to enter                                                               
accordingly.  She thinks she has  enough to pay for her estimated                                                               
lifespan, she is 85, but if  the rates are doubled, which is what                                                               
the threat seems to  be, she is going to run  out of money, which                                                               
is scary.  Others are justifiably  scared as well.  Residents are                                                               
told "no  worries, the state  will pay for it  if you run  out of                                                               
money."   However, it's not that  easy.  A person  must apply for                                                               
state assistance  and there are  requirements.  She had  a friend                                                               
who  didn't know  some  of  the requirements  and  was unable  to                                                               
control some  of the others and  got denied.  What  happens then?                                                               
It is  scary and  unfair, and  residents should  be grandfathered                                                               
into what they agreed to and  understood when they moved in.  The                                                               
new rules  should be  applied to  people who are  not yet  in the                                                               
Pioneer Homes.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:46:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WILLIAM  HARRINGTON  testified he  is  70  years  old and  is  an                                                               
"unaffiliated old  person."  He  said he  did not hear  the words                                                               
"boomer tsunami"  or discussions  of its effect  and that  of the                                                               
vastly increasing longevity.  Subsidizing  elders for a dignified                                                               
sunset of life is a fine  goal and with money available should be                                                               
a real  bonus.  He  said [state]  spending priorities as  a whole                                                               
are under  attack and some  amendments are needed:   1) privatize                                                               
the system;  2) build  1,000-1,500 more units;  and 3)  the state                                                               
needs to govern and not involve itself in private businesses.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR ZULKOSKY left public testimony open.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
[HB 96 was held over.]                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                

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