Legislature(2023 - 2024)BUTROVICH 205

02/21/2023 03:30 PM Senate HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
*+ SB 53 FIVE-YEAR INVOLUNTARY COMMITMENTS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+= SB 8 REPEAL CERTIFICATE OF NEED PROGRAM TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
+= SB 45 DIRECT HEALTH AGREEMENT: NOT INSURANCE TELECONFERENCED
Scheduled but Not Heard
           SB   8-REPEAL CERTIFICATE OF NEED PROGRAM                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 3:33:49 PM                                                                                                                   
 CHAIR WILSON  announced the consideration  of SENATE  BILL NO.  8                                                              
 "An Act  repealing the  certificate of  need  program for  health                                                              
 care facilities; making conforming amendments; and providing  for                                                              
 an effective date."                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
 3:34:38 PM                                                                                                                   
 GARY  ZEPP,   Staff,   Senator   David   Wilson,   Alaska   State                                                              
 Legislature, Juneau, Alaska, provided the sectional analysis  for                                                              
 SB 8 as follows:                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
 [Original punctuation provided.]                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
      Sections 1-3: AS 12.25.030(e) & AS 12.55.155(c)(36)                                                                     
      PAGE 1, LINE 4 - PAGE 2, LINE 4:                                                                                          
      Makes conforming  amendments  to  AS 18.20.400  and  AS                                                                   
      18.20.499 to  eliminate  references  to  AS  18.07.111,                                                                   
      which is repealed under sections 9 and 10 of the bill.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
      Section 4: AS 18.20.400(c)                                                                                              
      PAGE 2, LINE 8  PAGE 4, LINE 10: Makes a conforming                                                                       
      amendment to AS 18.26.220 by removing references to                                                                       
      repealed sections of law.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
      Section 5: AS 18.20.400                                                                                                 
     PAGE 4, LINES 11 -  23: Makes a conforming amendment to                                                                    
     AS 18.20.200(c)(7)(A)(i), which  defines a "residential                                                                    
     psychiatric   treatment   center"   licensed   by   the                                                                    
     Department of Family and Community Services.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Section 6: AS 18.20.499(2)                                                                                               
     PAGE  4, LINE  24    PAGE 5,  LINE 5:  Makes conforming                                                                    
     amendments to  AS 18.20.499(2) to  eliminate references                                                                    
     to  AS 18.07.111,  which is  repealed under  sections 9                                                                    
     and 10 of the bill.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Section 7: AS 18.26.220                                                                                                  
     PAGE 5, LINES  6   16: Repeals a  section of uncodified                                                                    
     law, section  4, chapter 275, SLA  1976, which provided                                                                    
     a transition  to allow medical facilities  in existence                                                                    
     or under construction  before July 1, 1976  to obtain a                                                                    
     certificate of need.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Section 8: AS 18.35.399(9)                                                                                               
     PAGE 5,  LINES 17  - 29:  Makes a  conforming amendment                                                                    
     that  removes  the  reference to  the  "certificate  of                                                                    
     need" statute  AS 18.07.111, and  replaces it  with the                                                                    
     updated  statue  reference   under  AS  18.20.400  (d),                                                                    
     "Definitions".                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Section    9:   AS    18.07.021    -   18.07.111;    AS                                                                  
     21.86.030(c)(1);    AS    44.64.030(a)(18);   and    AS                                                                  
     47.80.140(b)                                                                                                             
     PAGE 5,  LINE 30    PAGE 6, LINE  1: Repeals all  of AS                                                                    
     18.07, which describes the  certificate of need program                                                                    
     for health care facilities,  and AS 21.86.030(c)(1), AS                                                                    
     44.64.030(a)(18),  and  AS   47.80.140(b),  which  also                                                                    
     relate to the certificate of need program.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Section 10: Section 4, ch. 275, SLA 1976, is repealed:                                                                   
     PAGE 6,  LINE 2:  Repeals section  4, chapter  275, SLA                                                                    
     1976.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Section 11: Certificate of Need; Applicability:                                                                          
     PAGE  6, LINE  3    LINE 8:  Amends uncodified  law and                                                                    
     provides  that the  Department of  Health may  not take                                                                    
     action on  or after the  effective date of  sections 1-                                                                    
     11 to revoke, enforce, or  modify a certificate of need                                                                    
     issued to  a health care facility  before the effective                                                                    
     date of sections 1-11 of this Act.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     Section 12:                                                                                                              
      PAGE 6, LINES  9 -  LINE 14: Amends  uncodified law  by                                                                   
      adding a new subsection that directs the  Department of                                                                   
      Family  and  Community  Services  to  create  necessary                                                                   
      regulations by July 1,  2025, to implement the  changes                                                                   
      made by this Act by, but not before the  effective date                                                                   
      of sections 1-11 of the Act.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
      Section 13:                                                                                                             
      PAGE 6, LINE  15: States  that section 12  of this  Act                                                                   
      takes effect immediately under AS 01.10.070(c).                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
      Section 14:                                                                                                             
      PAGE 6,  LINE 16: States  that, except  as provided  in                                                                   
      section 13 of this Act,  this Act takes effect July  1,                                                                   
      2026                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
 MR. ZEPP noted that Sections 5, 11, and 12 erroneously refer to                                                                
 the Department of Family and Community Services (DFCS) instead                                                                 
 of the Department of Health (DOH).                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
 3:40:58 PM                                                                                                                   
 CHAIR WILSON opened public testimony on SB 8.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
 3:41:21 PM                                                                                                                   
 JEFFREY SINGER, Senior Fellow, Cato Institute, Phoenix, Arizona,                                                               
 testified in support of SB 8 as follows:                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
 [Original punctuation provided.]                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
      My name is Jeffrey A.  Singer. I am a Senior Fellow  in                                                                   
      Health Policy Studies at the Cato Institute. I  am also                                                                   
      a medical  doctor specializing in  general surgery  and                                                                   
      have  been  practicing   that  specialty  in   Phoenix,                                                                   
      Arizona, for over 40  years. Thank you for allowing  me                                                                   
      to  testify  before  the   Senate  Health  and   Social                                                                   
      Services Committee  regarding  SB  8,  which  seeks  to                                                                   
      repeal health care Certificate of Need requirements.  I                                                                   
      appreciate this opportunity  to provide my  perspective                                                                   
      as a  health care  practitioner and  policy analyst  to                                                                   
      assist this committee in assessing existing policies.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
 3:41:34 PM                                                                                                                   
 MR. SINGER continued:                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
      Roughly four  decades  since  the repeal  of  the  1974                                                                   
      federal  law  that  incentivized  states  to  establish                                                                   
      "Certificate of  Need"  (CON) requirements  before  new                                                                   
     health  care facilities  can  developor  existing  ones                                                                    
     can add beds or  equipmentCON  requirements still exist                                                                    
     to varying degrees  in 35 states. A  classic example of                                                                    
     central   planning,   CON   commissions   are   heavily                                                                    
     influenced   by   incumbent  health   care   providers.                                                                    
     Attempts  to reform  or repeal  them are  often met  by                                                                    
     fierce resistance  from the incumbents who  try to make                                                                    
     the  case that  they  only have  the  interests of  the                                                                    
     general public  in mind. CON  laws render  state health                                                                    
     care  systems sclerotic  and unable  to rapidly  adjust                                                                    
     their infrastructure  to meet  the changing  demands of                                                                    
     public  health  emergencies. Many  governors  suspended                                                                    
     CON  laws during  the  public  health emergency.  State                                                                    
     legislators  should formally  repeal  the  CON laws  in                                                                    
     those states and those where they were not suspended.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:41:47 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SINGER continued:                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     Lawmakers  enacted Certificate  of Need  Laws based  on                                                                    
     the theory  that restricting the supply  of health care                                                                    
     services   would  somehow   reduce  demand   for  those                                                                    
     services  and  thus   restrain  health  care  spending.                                                                    
     However, policymakers  should have noticed  that third-                                                                    
     party payers,  private or government-run, pay  for most                                                                    
     health  care  services.  This insulates  most  patients                                                                    
     from the  actual prices of health  care services, while                                                                    
     the  third-party  payers  absorb the  costs.  Consumer-                                                                    
     patients  with   little  skin  in  the   game  have  no                                                                    
     incentive to be cost-effective.  When price signals are                                                                    
     inoperative, demand  continues despite  restrictions in                                                                    
     supply. Shortages inevitably  develop while prices paid                                                                    
     by third-party  payers increase at a  greater rate than                                                                    
     would   have   otherwise   occurred.  This   is   basic                                                                    
     economics.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:42:29 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SINGER continued:                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     The only  way to  reduce health care  expenditures when                                                                    
     health care consumers are  largely insulated from price                                                                    
     effects  is  to  decrease availability  and  access  to                                                                    
     health  care. In  a  George  Mason University  Mercatus                                                                    
     Center working  paper, a review of  20 academic studies                                                                    
     found  that CON  laws largely  failed to  achieve their                                                                    
     goal of  reducing health care costs  and concluded that                                                                    
     the  overwhelming   evidence  is  that  CON   laws  are                                                                    
      associated  with  higher  per-unit  costs  and   higher                                                                   
      expenditures.  The   numbers  speak   for   themselves.                                                                   
      National per capita health expenditures increased  from                                                                   
      $2354 in  1974 to  $12,914 in  2021  (in constant  2021                                                                   
      U.S. dollars).                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:43:04 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SINGER continued:                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
      Despite the  ineffective nature of  these laws,  states                                                                   
      still have a  variety of CON laws  on the books  today.                                                                   
      The various  states differ in  the type  and number  of                                                                   
      restricted facilities  and expenditures.  For  example,                                                                   
      Ohio restricts  only  long-term  care  services,  while                                                                   
      Kentucky restricts  more  than  24 different  types  of                                                                   
      health care facilities.  The state  where I reside  and                                                                   
      practice medicine,  Arizona, repealed  all of  the  CON                                                                   
      laws  except  for  ambulance  services  in   1990.  The                                                                   
      Arizona Hospital Association supported this action.  By                                                                   
      1990, California, Colorado,  Idaho, Kansas,  Minnesota,                                                                   
      New Mexico, South Dakota,  Texas, Utah, Wisconsin,  and                                                                   
      Wyoming repealed all of the CON laws.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
      Hospital administrators  argue  against the  repeal  of                                                                   
      CON laws  claiming these  laws allow  them to  generate                                                                   
      enough revenue  to provide  24-hour emergency  services                                                                   
      and uncompensated  care.  Physicians and  other  health                                                                   
      care practitioners also provide uncompensated care  and                                                                   
      other services.  Yet state  professional  organizations                                                                   
      don't  argue  for  creating   a  certificate  of   need                                                                   
      requirement   before   allowing   additional   doctors,                                                                   
      nurses, psychologists,  physical therapists,  etc.,  to                                                                   
      set  up  practices  in  a  state.  And  they  would  be                                                                   
      publicly derided if they did so.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
 3:43:47 PM                                                                                                                   
 MR. SINGER continued:                                                                                                          
      New health  care practitioners entering  the state  may                                                                   
      provide  competition  to   incumbents.  This  has   not                                                                   
      stunted the  growth  of  the health  care  professions.                                                                   
      Instead, it  has benefitted  health  care consumers  by                                                                   
      increasing choice and access.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
      Lawmakers should  heed the  lessons the  public  health                                                                   
      crisis provided and act now to repeal CON laws  and rid                                                                   
      their  health  care  systems  of  discredited   central                                                                   
      planning reminiscent of a bygone era.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:44:32 PM                                                                                                                    
JARED  KOSIN, Present  and CEO,  Alaska  Hospital and  Healthcare                                                               
Association, Anchorage, Alaska, testified  in opposition to SB 8.                                                               
He stated  that to  treat the  repeal of CON  as a  binary choice                                                               
grossly  over-simplifies the  issue. Healthcare  is complex.  The                                                               
wholesale  removal  of CON  directly  threatens  care access  for                                                               
vulnerable  people, transparency,  and overall  healthcare costs,                                                               
which is  why most  states still  have CON  laws. He  agreed that                                                               
healthcare costs are too high.  However, healthcare is not a free                                                               
market and  will not respond as  one because the prices  for over                                                               
50 percent of  healthcare services rendered are set  and paid for                                                               
by the government.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  KOSIN stated  that  eliminating  CONs paves  the  way for  a                                                               
proliferation  of ambulatory  services that  only serve  patients                                                               
with private  insurance. This happened in  Georgia, Pennsylvania,                                                               
Ohio, and other  states. Repeal of CON  jeopardizes patients with                                                               
Medicare and  Medicaid. It also  undermines the ability  to offer                                                               
core  services at  community hospitals.  The repeal  of CON  laws                                                               
leads  to  a  proliferation  of   surgery  and  imaging  centers;                                                               
emergency  care, labor  and  delivery, inpatient  rehabilitation,                                                               
and dialysis are impossible without  these services in hospitals.                                                               
He  stated  that people  would  not  be  better off  having  more                                                               
surgery  and  imaging  centers   when  hospitals  cannot  provide                                                               
emergency services or deliver babies.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  KOSIN opined  that balance  is  needed. The  CON program  is                                                               
flawed;  it  has  not  been  updated in  twenty  years.  All  the                                                               
regulations for  the CON program  are in  Alaska's Administrative                                                               
Code.  Modernizing  regulations is  the  solution.  He urged  the                                                               
legislature  to direct  the  Department of  Health  to work  with                                                               
stakeholders on refining the Alaska  Administrative Code and vote                                                               
no on SB 8.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:46:58 PM                                                                                                                    
BILL WARD,  representing self, Delta Junction,  Alaska, testified                                                               
in support of  SB 8. He stated  that since 2018 a  bill to repeal                                                               
CON has  been before  the legislature. He  has watched  each bill                                                               
die  due to  the legislature's  irresponsible method  of delaying                                                               
bills  to  the  end  of  a  session  for  a  budget  battle.  The                                                               
legislature  ignores action  on important  bills. Delta  Junction                                                               
needs   advanced  medical   care  facilities.   CON  restrictions                                                               
exacerbate  the situation.  Delta Junction  has two  clinics that                                                               
provide good  urgent and routine care.  Fairbanks' hospitals have                                                               
handled emergency,  advanced diagnostics, and extended  care. The                                                               
need for  medical care in  Delta Junction is recognized,  but CON                                                               
 laws prevent the expansion  of care. Delta Junction patients  are                                                              
 transported  to  Fairbanks  if  not  stabilized  within  one  day                                                              
 because  the  clinics  lack  the  proper  diagnostic   equipment.                                                              
 Ambulance transport to  Fairbanks is impeded  by the weather  and                                                              
 increased road use.  Delta Junction's  population is rising,  and                                                              
 its citizens are  aging. CON  laws keep all  eastern Alaska  from                                                              
 receiving proper healthcare.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 3:50:42 PM                                                                                                                   
 STEVE  FRANK,   Board   Member,   Foundation   Health   Partners,                                                              
 Fairbanks, Alaska,  testified in opposition  to SB  8. He  stated                                                              
 that Foundation  Health  Partners  has a  hospital,  clinic,  and                                                              
 long-term  care facility.  The  foundation  is  a  locally  owned                                                              
 nonprofit organization.  Surgery  and  imaging are  two  services                                                              
 that bring  in  money for  the  foundation. Repealing  CON  would                                                              
 allow others to take these  services from the foundation but  not                                                              
 offer the services  that would  not earn them  a profit.  Passing                                                              
 CON will hurt the foundation and cause Medicaid to  increase. CON                                                              
 is a complicated issue. He  warned the legislature to be  careful                                                              
 in their decision  because repealing CON  will not reduce  costs;                                                              
 it will increase the Medicaid budget.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
 3:52:58 PM                                                                                                                   
 PATRICK  SHIER,   Representative,   Pacific   Health   Coalition,                                                              
 Wasilla, Alaska, testified in support of SB 8 and said  he favors                                                              
 measures that  enlist the  power of  the  competitive markets  in                                                              
 pursuit of  better  healthcare access  and pricing.  The  Pacific                                                              
 Health Coalition  is a private  nonprofit coalition  of 49  self-                                                              
 funded health plans across Alaska and the Pacific  Northwest. The                                                              
 coalition assists the 240,000 members in finding ways  to provide                                                              
 the best pricing and value in quality healthcare.  Member's plans                                                              
 saved over  $721  million  in  2021, an  increase  of  over  $100                                                              
 million  from  the  prior   year.  The  coalition  did  this   by                                                              
 leveraging  available  competitive  principles.  Competition   is                                                              
 responsible  for  historic  discounts  in  many  areas,  such  as                                                              
 orthopedic surgery  in  south-central  Alaska, where  a  provider                                                              
 approached  the coalition  to  negotiate  lower  fees  to  reduce                                                              
 members' engagement  in  medical tourism.  He opined  that  CON's                                                              
 intervention in healthcare  had once been  warranted, but it  has                                                              
 since outlived its  usefulness by  creating barriers to  Alaska's                                                              
 healthcare industry.  Repealing CON would  be the  first step  in                                                              
 unraveling  many   distortions   in  the   healthcare   industry.                                                              
 Repealing CON  would help providers  and consumers  think of  new                                                              
 ways to  achieve high-quality, effective  healthcare delivery  in                                                              
 Alaska.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 3:55:08 PM                                                                                                                   
MARY  KASPARI, President,  Interior  Alaska Hospital  Foundation,                                                               
Delta  Junction,  Alaska,  testified  in  support  of  SB  8  and                                                               
provided a  brief history of CON.  She said Delta Junction  is an                                                               
underserved  healthcare area  in  Alaska where  CON  laws do  not                                                               
help. From  Delta Junction  to the Canadian  Border, there  is no                                                               
advanced health  care available for  Alaskans, only  day clinics.                                                               
The nearest hospital is 100 miles  away, and getting there can be                                                               
difficult  due   to  weather,  military  convoys,   and  trucking                                                               
services. A  person does  not realize the  severity of  the issue                                                               
until  it is  their  loved one  in  a life-threatening  situation                                                               
where time is  of the essence. Repealing CON  will increase Delta                                                               
Junction's  ability to  knit necessary  medical  services in  the                                                               
community with the vast surrounding service area.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:56:55 PM                                                                                                                    
DAWN   FRAZIER,  representing   self,  Delta   Junction,  Alaska,                                                               
testified  in support  of SB  8. She  said outlaying  communities                                                               
drive through Delta  Junction to get to a  hospital in Fairbanks.                                                               
People  in  those  communities  have  driven  in  dangerous  road                                                               
conditions   to  reach   Fairbanks  to   save  lives.   Community                                                               
volunteers   have   worked   hard  to   improve   healthcare   by                                                               
establishing  a  clinic  and pharmacy.  The  volunteers  are  now                                                               
working  to develop  a  small community  hospital  like those  in                                                               
Valdez,  Nome, Cordova,  and Wrangell.  It is  a big  task for  a                                                               
worthy  cause  but  receives  no  support  from  CON.  Healthcare                                                               
foundations, corporations, and organizations  can weigh in on the                                                               
decisions affecting Delta Junction,  while its residents pay more                                                               
for their  care, additional  for travel,  hotels, and  meals. The                                                               
CON process is  cumbersome, unfair, and influenced  by profit and                                                               
expenses. She  opined that  it is  time to do  away with  the CON                                                               
program. During COVID  hospitals did not have enough  beds due to                                                               
CON laws.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:59:58 PM                                                                                                                    
ERICK  CORDERO,  Vice  President, Alaska  Policy  Forum,  Palmer,                                                               
Alaska,  testified in  support of  SB 8.  He stated  that CON  is                                                               
detrimental  to  Alaskans.  CON   makes  opening  new  healthcare                                                               
facilities  in Alaska  difficult and  expensive because  patients                                                               
pay higher costs  for lower-quality care and  have fewer options.                                                               
CON  laws   require  businesses  to  prove   their  services  are                                                               
necessary before entering the  market, which limits accessibility                                                               
and innovation.  The laws  also make it  challenging to  adapt to                                                               
emerging  healthcare needs  quickly. Allowing  existing providers                                                               
to give input  on their potential competition is not  in the best                                                               
interest of patients.  COVID prompted Alaska and  other states to                                                               
suspend CON  requirements to  ensure healthcare  facilities could                                                               
deliver  essential services.  The  suspension of  CON created  no                                                               
 problems  but made  the  healthcare  system  more  responsive  to                                                              
 emerging needs.  Alaska needs  to follow  the  example of  states                                                              
 that have removed CON laws.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
 4:01:45 PM                                                                                                                   
 ANTONIA LEONARD,  representing self,  Wasilla, Alaska,  said  she                                                              
 supports SB 8, the repeal of CON.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
 4:02:31 PM                                                                                                                   
 CHAIR WILSON  stated  the committee  would hear  from  previously                                                              
 invited  testimony   that   could  not   testify  due   to   time                                                              
 constraints.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
 4:02:38 PM                                                                                                                   
 JAIMIE CAVANAUGH,  Attorney,  Institute for  Justice,  Arlington,                                                              
 Virginia, testified by invitation  on SB 8  and said that from  a                                                              
 policy  perspective,  several  states  with  CON  laws  purposely                                                              
 exclude  rural   areas  from   the  program.   Alabama,   Oregon,                                                              
 Tennessee, Washington,  and  Florida  excluded rural  areas  from                                                              
 their Con programs  to encourage  hospitals and other  healthcare                                                              
 facilities to expand  into new  areas. She opined  that Utah  and                                                              
 Colorado had not had a  hospital closure since 2005, and  neither                                                              
 state has  CON  laws.  Therefore,  it cannot  be  CON  laws  that                                                              
 prevent rural hospital closures.  In 1987 the federal  government                                                              
 repealed CON  laws because  findings showed  the  laws failed  to                                                              
 control  healthcare  costs  and  were  insensitive  to  community                                                              
 needs. Since then, various US government agencies  have continued                                                              
 to be  consistent and  support CON  repeal. In  2019 the  Federal                                                              
 Trade  Commission  (FTC)  and  the  Antitrust  Division   of  the                                                              
 Department of Justice  submitted testimony supporting  Congress's                                                              
 repeal. They testified that CON proponents concede that  CON laws                                                              
 allow incumbent  providers  to  earn greater  profits  than  they                                                              
 would  in a  competitive  environment.  They  argued  that  these                                                              
 providers use profits to  cross-subsidize charity care.  However,                                                              
 the evidence  does not  show  that CON  laws advance  that  goal.                                                              
 Empirical  evidence   contradicts   the  notion   that   dominant                                                              
 providers use market power  to cross-subsidize charity care.  DOJ                                                              
 and  the FTC  reviewed  empirical  evidence  in  a  peer-reviewed                                                              
 journal and  found  that CON  does  not  increase the  amount  of                                                              
 cross-subsidized charity care. They  found that CON laws lead  to                                                              
 higher costs, lower  quality, and decreased  access to care.  She                                                              
 urged support for SB 8.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
 4:05:32 PM                                                                                                                   
 ZACH YOUNG,  representing self, Anchorage,  Alaska, testified  in                                                              
 support of SB 8.  He said CON laws  are antiquated and have  done                                                              
 the opposite  of their  intent. Alaska  has  severe medical  care                                                              
needs  and a  lot  of  rural communities.  CON  has caused  undue                                                               
hardship  to   Alaska's  rural   communities  that   should  have                                                               
hospitals. He stated  his belief that repealing  CON will provide                                                               
affordable  healthcare   and  competition  within   the  hospital                                                               
system, thereby creating more efficiency  for the entire state of                                                               
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:07:16 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR WILSON closed public testimony on SB 8.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:07:34 PM                                                                                                                    
MATTHEW  MITCHELL,  Senior  Research Fellow,  Knee  Center,  West                                                               
Virginia University,  Morgantown, West  Virginia, said  he wished                                                               
to address the  comment that healthcare is not a  free market and                                                               
Medicaid costs  will increase with the  repeal of CON. He  said 3                                                               
out  of 10  Americans  live in  a state  without  CON, and  their                                                               
experience,  as  reported  through   100  different  studies,  is                                                               
greater  access to  higher quality  and lower  cost care.  Alaska                                                               
does not  have to speculate what  will happen with its  repeal. A                                                               
paper  by  Nancy  Miller,   Charlene  Harrington,  and  Elizabeth                                                               
Goldstein   titled  Access   Community-Based   Long  Term   Care:                                                               
Medicaid's Role  was published  in 2002 in  the Journal  of Aging                                                               
and Health.  They found  that CON is  associated with  higher per                                                               
capita  Medicaid  community-based  care expenditures.  Two  other                                                               
studies  found  that  CON's  repeal   does  not  affect  Medicaid                                                               
spending. Zero  studies out  of 40 found  that Con  is associated                                                               
with reduced spending on Medicaid.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:09:44 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR WILSON held SB 8 committee.                                                                                               

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 8 Singer-Written Testimony Alaska Sen. Health and Social Services Committee.docx SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8
SB 8 ADN Op-Ed_What's really crowding Alaska's hospitals_2.2.23.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8
SB 8 Providence Opposes SB 8 Repeal of CON.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8
SB 53 v A..PDF SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53 SHSS Presentation v. B.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 Sponsor Statement.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 Sectional Analysis version B.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 FN Dept Law.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 FN DFCS API.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 FN DOA OPA.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 FN DOA Public Defender.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 Research - KTUU Article 2.15.2022.pdf SFIN 5/3/2023 9:00:00 AM
SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SJUD 3/10/2023 1:30:00 PM
SJUD 3/29/2023 1:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 53 v B.PDF SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 53
SB 45 Amdmt S.1.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 45
SB 45 Amdmt S.2.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 45
SB 45 Amdmt S.3.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 45
SB 45 Amdmt S.4.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 45
SB 45 Amdmt S.6.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 45
SB 8 - FHP opposition letter to S-HSS.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8
SB 8 - Dr Mitchell's Peer Reviewed CON data.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8
SB 8 - KMC Opposes SB8 - 2.20.23.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8
SB 8 Support Hanson 2.21.23_Redacted.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8
SB 8 - NCSL - Rural Hospital Closures CON and Ambulatory Surgical Centers.pdf SHSS 2/21/2023 3:30:00 PM
SB 8