02/01/2010 01:30 PM Senate HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES
| Audio | Topic |
|---|---|
| Start | |
| SB238 | |
| Adjourn |
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
| *+ | SB 238 | TELECONFERENCED | |
ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE
SENATE HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES STANDING COMMITTEE
February 1, 2010
1:32 p.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT
Senator Bettye Davis, Chair
Senator Joe Paskvan, Vice Chair
Senator Johnny Ellis
Senator Joe Thomas
Senator Fred Dyson
MEMBERS ABSENT
All members present
COMMITTEE CALENDAR
SENATE BILL NO. 238
"An Act amending the eligibility threshold for medical
assistance for persons in a medical or intermediate care
facility."
- MOVED SB 238 OUT OF COMMITTEE
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION
BILL: SB 238
SHORT TITLE: MEDICAID FOR MEDICAL & INTERMEDIATE CARE
SPONSOR(s): SENATOR(s) DAVIS
01/22/10 (S) READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS
01/22/10 (S) HSS, FIN
02/01/10 (S) HSS AT 1:30 PM BUTROVICH 205
WITNESS REGISTER
TOM OBERMEYER, staff to Senator Davis
Alaska State Legislature
Juneau, AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided an overview of SB 238.
JON SHERWOOD, Medical Assistant Administrator
Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS)
Juneau, AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Explained the Medicaid long-term services
income eligibility limit and calculations.
VANCE L. SANDERS, Attorney at Law
Representing himself
Juneau, AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Supported SB 238.
MARIE DARLIN, President
AARP Capital City Task Force
Juneau, AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Supported SB 238.
HOLLY HANDLER, Attorney at Law
Juneau, AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Supported SB 238.
DENISE DANIELLO, Executive Director
Alaska Commission on Aging
Juneau, AK
POSITION STATEMENT: Supported SB 238.
ACTION NARRATIVE
1:32:04 PM
CHAIR BETTYE DAVIS called the Senate Health and Social Services
Standing Committee meeting to order at 1:32 p.m. Present at the
call to order were Senators Dyson, Ellis, Paskvan, and Davis.
SB 238-MEDICAID FOR MEDICAL & INTERMEDIATE CARE
1:32:43 PM
CHAIR DAVIS announced consideration of SB 238. This bill mirrors
a bill in the House and was introduced on the Senate side at the
request of members of that body.
1:33:38 PM
TOM OBERMEYER, aide to Senator Davis, presented the sponsor
statement for SB 238. SB 238 amends the eligibility threshold
for medical assistance for persons in a medical or intermediate
care facility. In 2003 the legislature changed Alaska Statute
Sec. 47.07.020(b)(6), the Medicaid long-term services income
eligibility limit for persons in medical or intermediate care
facilities from 300 percent supplemental income security to an
equivalent fixed dollar amount of $1656 per month. This change
created an income ceiling for waiver eligibility, effectively
freezing the eligibility limit for the last seven years rather
than allowing the limit to adjust annually in tandem with the
federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI) limit. The result was
that small Social Security cost-of-living adjustments have
disqualified many needy disabled people from the program.
He said that near the end of 2008, many individuals who are
aged, blind, or disabled and requiring institutional care,
received notices that they would no longer be eligible for the
Home and Community-Based Services waivers after the 2009 cost-
of-living adjustment went into effect. Because the waiver
eligibility limits no longer increase with the cost of living,
it placed a number of people over the $1656 per month limit,
which is 300 percent of the 2003 SSI benefit rate. The 2009
income equivalent at 300 percent SSI was $2022 per month. (He
referred members to the attached fiscal note.) Alternatives for
preserving eligibility, particularly for those requiring
lifetime or long-term care, include creation of a Medicaid
Qualifying Income Trust, also known as a Miller Trust. Trusts
have procedural drawbacks including numerous responsibilities
and restrictions, limited access to income, the need for an
attorney, and the need for a trustee to manage trust assets.
The Supplemental Security Income program is a federal needs-
based disability program for low income adults over age 65,
blind, or disabled. For an adult, the SSI disability requirement
is based on the ability to work. An adult is considered disabled
if the person cannot do the work that he or she performed before
the disability occurred and cannot do alternate work because of
a severe physical or mental condition. For a child to be
eligible, he or she must suffer from serious physical and/or
mental problems. For both adults and children the disability
must last, or be expected to last, at least a year. Medicaid
services are critical to the wellbeing of Alaska's most
vulnerable citizens. Supporting SB 238 will ensure that eligible
Alaskans can continue to receive nursing home care and in-home
services. It will also save the legislature from amending
statutes every year or two as the federal poverty-level
guidelines and supplemental security levels increase with the
cost of living.
1:36:58 PM
MR. OBERMEYER noted that SB 238 has a zero fiscal note
accompanied by a good deal of written analysis from the
Department of Health and Social Services.
1:37:15 PM
CHAIR DAVIS called John Sherwood to represent the
administration.
1:37:26 PM
JON SHERWOOD, Medical Assistant Administrator, Department of
Health and Social Services (DHSS) said, as stated previously,
this bill would increase the income standard used to determine
Medicaid eligibility for people who are in nursing homes or
receiving Home and Community Based Waiver (HCBW) services.
Basically, these are people who need an institutional level of
care. It would allow the income standard to increase according
to cost-of-living increases granted under the federal
Supplemental Security Income program. Those are the same kind of
cost-of-living increases people get in their Social Security
payments.
Currently, people who are over income for this category of
Medicaid, because of the large expense of providing services,
use a device called a Qualifying Income Trust (QIT) or Miller
Trust to reduce their countable income for Medicaid to below the
income standard ($1656 per month) and qualify for Medicaid. As a
result of this standard being fixed in law, he has not seen
people losing Medicaid eligibility, however they are subject to
significant inconvenience and expense in setting up the trust,
and management can impose hardships on themselves and their
families. The Department of Health and Social Services does not
anticipate that raising the need standard will add more people
to the Medicaid program; therefore they are assuming a zero
fiscal note.
MR. SHERWOOD pointed out that people who meet this institutional
level of care and are in a nursing home or on a waiver program
are subject to a calculation called a cost-of-care calculation
that takes place after HSS determines their eligibility. This
calculation takes into effect all of their income and provides
some deductions including a Personal Needs Allowance (PNA), a
deduction to cover the cost of a spouse or other dependents
living in the community, medical expenses that are not covered
by the Medicaid program, and some others. Once they have
completed that calculation, HSS determines what amount of money
individuals must pay for their cost of care; that is, what
portion they must pay their providers for the cost of care. That
in turn reduces the amount the state pays to providers for their
care. He said he raises that issue because this proposed change
in the statute would not affect the Personal Needs Allowance;
the PNA is set in regulation, and they assume they will keep it
at its current levels for the time being.
He stressed that if they were to increase the Personal Needs
Allowance, it would decrease the amount of money people are
paying for their cost of care and would have a fiscal impact on
the program.
MR. SHERWOOD said this change would prevent a number of people
from having to get a trust, and it would allow the standard to
move with adjustments to the cost of living on the SSI program.
He reiterated that the cost of care and Personal Needs Allowance
are separate, and they are not proposing to change the Personal
Needs Allowances as part of this bill.
1:41:19 PM
SENATOR DYSON asked Mr. Sherwood from what sources a person who
is institutionalized might receive income.
MR. SHERWOOD replied that the most common source of income is a
Social Security payment or another retirement payment such as
state, federal, or private retirement. Some people would qualify
for Social Security Disability Insurance benefits. If people are
receiving cash assistance from the state, they don't fall under
this category; they fall under another category of Medicaid, so
they are not subject to these standards or the cost of care
calculation.
1:42:41 PM
SENATOR DYSON questioned why the legislature wouldn't want them
to exhaust this other source of income to pay their bills first.
MR. SHERWOOD explained that they are required to use their
income to pay toward the cost of their care after certain income
deductions are applied. Some of those deductions are explicit
under federal law. The Personal Needs Allowance is subject to
some degree of flexibility by the state; but the state has set
levels that should afford people enough funds to support
themselves in their living situation. It is slightly higher for
nursing homes than for assisted living homes and persons being
cared for in their own homes. In nursing homes, the Medicaid
payment includes a payment for room and board. In other
settings, by federal law, the state is prohibited from paying
for room and board; in some of these situations people have to
pay rent or a separate fee for room and board that isn't
reimbursed by Medicaid. The idea is to give people a Personal
Needs Allowance that is sufficient to meet their living expenses
in the community. Those allowances will not increase if this
bill passes.
1:44:59 PM
SENATOR DYSON said he was unclear about whether SB 238 proposes
to raise the limit so people can have more personal income and
not be disqualified from these categories of public income.
MR. SHERWOOD said that is correct, but explained that the bill
increases the standard the state uses to determine whether
people are eligible for Medicaid; it does not change the amount
of money they can keep before they have to start paying their
providers for the cost of their care.
1:46:23 PM
MR. SHERWOOD expanded that in federal terms, the cost-of-care
calculation is referred to as "post-eligibility." After the
determination of eligibility, Medicaid calculates how much money
a person has to pay for his care. Those are two separate
calculations; they are not done at the same time, and they don't
use the same rules.
1:47:01 PM
SENATOR THOMAS joined the meeting.
SENATOR PASKVAN asked Mr. Sherwood approximately what the net
amount of monies is in these Miller Trusts and if he is correct
that these funds are used to pay living expenses separate and
apart from the program.
MR. SHERWOOD replied that there are limits on the amount of
money that can be made available to individuals through the
Miller Trusts directly. That money is typically used to pay room
and board and other living expenses; each trust is tailored to
the needs of the individual. The cost-of-care calculation
ignores the existence of a Miller Trust. The trust is used to
determine eligibility and after the state determines the cost of
care, they have access to all of the funds that go into the
Miller Trust.
1:49:11 PM
SENATOR PASKVAN asked what happens to any money within the
Miller Trust upon death.
MR. SHERWOOD said people in this income group tend not to
accumulate money in this trust; if they do, the balance is used
to reimburse the Medicaid program for expenses incurred on their
behalf.
SENATOR PASKVAN responded "So this isn't a savings account."
MR. SHERWOOD concurred. He said the Miller Trust has been
referred to as a "flush trust" by one attorney he knows, because
money comes in and goes out each month.
1:50:39 PM
SENATOR PASKVAN ventured that if SB 238 passes, a person with an
income of less than $2022 will not have to open a Miller Trust.
MR. SHERWOOD responded "That is correct".
SENATOR PASKVAN asked what the typical cost of setting up and
administering a Miller Trust would be.
MR. SHERWOOD answered that when he was working more closely with
trust policy, the cost ran between approximately $800 and $2000
to set up the trust.
1:52:19 PM
SENATOR PASKVAN said he understands that by raising the limit,
recipients won't have to spend that money. They can earn up to
$2022 per month to pay for other costs of living.
MR. SHERWOOD affirmed that if recipients' income falls below the
$2022 per month they would not have to open a trust. This would
save them the expense of setting it up; it would save them the
burden of trust accounting; and it would save them from having
to find a reputable person to act as their trustee.
SENATOR THOMAS joined the meeting.
1:53:26 PM
SENATOR THOMAS said his only experience with Miller Trusts has
been that they are a simple arrangement and generally apply to
people who have have Social Security income and have divested
themselves of most of their possessions. He asked if other
groups of people qualify for these trusts and have assets in
excess of what is generally allowed under state assistance laws.
MR. SHERWOOD answered that a Miller Trust is used only for
income. The asset test that affects this category of Medicaid
allows a maximum of $2000. There is a generous spousal deduction
and some assets are exempt such as a home and car, so to use the
trust people still have to divest themselves of accountable
assets beyond the asset standard. Generally, people who use a
Miller Trust have some kind of retirement or disability income
in excess of the standard. It is most commonly used by people
who are in nursing homes or qualify for Home and Community Based
Waivers.
1:55:59 PM
SENATOR THOMAS wondered if any additional funds are usually
directed to the care facility, since those funds have to be
accounted for and used to pay for individuals' care at the end
of the year.
MR. SHERWOOD replied that people, especially those in nursing
homes, have to pay most of their income toward their cost-of-
care, so they tend not to accumulate money. If they do
accumulate money that takes them over the $2000, then they need
to spend that money in a way that will not also create problems
for their eligibility; they cannot convert that money to another
accountable asset. If they have no other needs to be met, DHSS
would typically recommend that people pay their provider an
additional sum toward their cost of care.
1:57:42 PM
VANCE L. SANDERS, Attorney at Law, Juneau, Alaska, started out
with Alaska Legal Services in 1984 and has been practicing law
here for many years. He is also the President of Alaska Legal
Services Corporation but was speaking on this issue as an
individual and expressed strong support for SB 238.
This is a complicated area of the law, he said. There are three
things people have to do to qualify for Medicaid. First, their
accountable resources have to be below a certain limit,
depending on whether they are married or single. That limit is
$2000 per single individual; for married persons it is $109,640
per community spouse this year. Certain things are not counted
such as a car or a home valued at less than $500,000. Second,
their level of care has to be either skilled nursing or
intermediate, which means that they cannot care for themselves.
The third criterion is that their income must be below a certain
amount that was frozen in time by the state of Alaska in 2003 at
$1656 per month, the SSI limit at that time.
MR. SANDERS explained that SSI is a federal payment program for
people who are determined by the federal government to be
disabled, have not paid money into the insurance system, are low
income and have few resources but meet the disability test. That
is Title 16 of the federal Social Security Act and is called
"the SSI limit." Title 2 is the insurance status. It applies the
same disability test, but resources are not relevant; it is just
like a federal insurance program for people who are disabled.
The state of Alaska made a policy decision in 2003 to freeze the
income limit for people to qualify for Medicaid. These are
primarily people on Home and Community Based Waivers, so they
are at home getting Medicaid, those in long-term care facilities
such as Wildflower Court in Juneau, and now in pioneers' homes.
Since that time, as those people's income has gone up due to
cost-of-living adjustments or other factors, they have no longer
qualified and have had to use a Miller Trust to artificially
reduce their income.
That sounds easy, but these are people who are already at home
and unable to care for themselves, in a nursing home or
pioneers' home, or are in triage; now they have to face the
difficulty of creating a trust. These trusts are not easy to set
up and average from $500 to $1000, which for people who are
making $1700 to $2000 per month is a lot. In Anchorage, that fee
can be up to $2000 for a single trust fee. They are 24-page
documents that have to incorporate not only federal and state
law, but anticipate that these people's health status may
change. When he does a trust, he anticipates three different
scenarios: walking around Medicaid, home and community-based
Medicaid, or nursing home Medicaid. So they have a 24-page
trust, a family in crisis, and in Juneau, unless a person is
fortunate enough to have the Office of Public Advocacy appointed
as his conservator or guardian, there are no trustees. That is a
chronic problem throughout Alaska. Once a trust is created, it
has to be registered with the superior court; it has to be
assigned an Employer Identification Number (EIN) by the IRS
because it is a separate legal entity; it requires a separate
bank account, and there is an annual review by the state of
Alaska. He reiterated that these are complicated things and the
people who have to deal with them are generally not qualified by
education or inclination to administer them. It is an amazingly
difficult thing for these families to pull off.
2:04:04 PM
MR. SANDERS said he sees this as a pro-family bill. SB 238
raises that artificial income limit and ties it to the federal
SSI limit; as that goes up, the income limit goes up. That will
obviate the need for many families to come up with the money to
pay for these trusts and go through this trust experience. He
agrees with Mr. Sherwood that it should be a zero fiscal note.
It will not change the cost-of-care calculation for post-
eligibility.
2:05:30 PM
MARIE DARLIN, President, AARP Capital City Task Force, Juneau,
Alaska, said AARP supports SB 238 and urges the committee to
pass this legislation. She expressed her appreciation for Mr.
Sanders's clear explanation of Miller Trusts. She related that
several people at Fireweed Place were affected by the increase
in Social Security last year and had to begin looking at trusts.
They were very upset because they did not have the money to pay
for it and some gave up. Those who were able to create one with
the support of family found the process very difficult. AARP has
been concerned about this since the limit was fixed in 2003.
Most beneficiaries of this bill not well off financially; they
are at risk both economically and from a health standpoint. If
they don't get the care they need and are not able to stay at
home, it will increase the cost to the state more when they end
up in long-term care facilities.
She concluded by emphasizing that this bill supports the home
and community based services the state is trying to promote and
that are so badly needed.
2:09:20 PM
HOLLY HANDLER, Attorney at Law, Juneau, Alaska, said she sets up
Miller Trusts for clients and assists them with problems that
occur during the lifetime of these trusts. In December 2008,
because no adjustment to the Medicaid standard to SSI was in
place, dozens of Alaskans across the state received notification
that their benefits were being cancelled because of a small cost
of living increase in Social Security. Some of the people she
represented exceeded the income limit by only a few dollars.
Because of this problem, they had to set up Miller Trusts. These
are irrevocable trusts, which means they last for the lifetime
of the creator unless they are dissolved in court.
MS. HANDLER said that, while some people are fortunate to have
caring family members who will serve as trustee to manage the
trust account, others have no family or friends they can trust
with the whole of their finances. She emphasized that when a
trustee becomes responsible for a Miller Trust, they become
responsible for administering the person's entire income, and
for SSI eligibility. If the trustee manages the trust
irresponsibly or incorrectly, it can jeopardize Medicaid
eligibility.
In December 2008 when the most recent Social Security COLA went
into effect, she represented two people who had no family to
serve as trustee. One of these individuals found a niece out of
state to manage the trust; but between December 2008 and now,
that niece decided her financial needs were more important to
her and took all of the money. This 70-year-old individual could
not take care of himself and, due to this horrendous financial
exploitation, could no longer pay rent or utilities. Rectifying
the situation was not a simple matter of changing the trustee;
it was a matter of finding an attorney to petition the court,
explaining in court affidavits why the trustee had to be
changed, obtaining a court order, registering that change in
trustee with the courts, submitting the documents to public
assistance for approval, submitting legal documents to the bank
to change all of the trustee information, and dealing with the
credit agencies to repair this person's credit.
In another instance in Ketchikan, a gentleman with end-stages of
Parkinson's disease had to use a person he did not know well as
a trustee. That trustee proceeded to mismanage the Medicaid
account so that his Medicaid was jeopardized within months after
setting up the trust.
MS. HANDLER stated that she is testifying in strong support of
this bill because, not only will it make it easier for existing
Medicaid recipients to maintain their eligibility, it will go a
long way toward preventing the kind of financial exploitation
and abuse of the disabled and elderly that is already a problem
in the state and is made worse by the need to have these Miller
Trusts in place. She added that she has had the pleasure of
working with a number of fine employees at the Department of
Public Assistance, Jim Steele included. Their workloads are
increased whenever these Social Security COLAs go into effect.
2:16:05 PM
SENATOR PASKVAN asked what the typical cost to maintain a
trustee is if it isn't the Office of Public Assistance (OPA) or
a family member.
MS. HANDLER answered that in the cases she handled, the trustee
charged approximately $50 per month; for those who exceed the
income limit by only a few dollars, that takes them below the
$1656 per month allowed to pay for food, shelter, and basic
living expenses.
2:17:01 PM
DENISE DANIELLO, Executive Director, Alaska Commission on Aging,
Juneau, Alaska, said the commission is very much in support of
this bill. They first became aware of this issue last December,
when her office received a number of calls from seniors who had
gotten letters advising that, because of the 5.8 percent Social
Security cost-of-living increase, they were disqualified from
their Medicaid Waiver programs. Her office told them about the
Miller Trusts and made referrals to local attorneys and Alaska
Legal Services; luckily Holly Handler in Juneau was available to
help many of these individuals.
MS. DANIELLO pointed out that one of the commission's concerns
with the Miller Trusts, in addition to the things already
mentioned, has to do with allowable expenses; according to the
Personal Cost Allowance, a person can have the amount of $1656 per
month. Even though they've received a cost-of-living increase to
help them pay for increases in food and housing, none of these
additional funds over the $1656 may be used to pay for those
expenses. For an elderly person living in Fairbanks or another
cold area of the state, the price of fuel is very high.
She said that since the income limit was set at $1656 in 2003,
these people have been increasingly less able to meet their
basic living expenses. She commented that she hopes the
Department of Health and Social Services and this committee will
consider raising the amount of the personal care allowance at
some point, to give people additional funds to cover the
increased costs of food and housing.
MS. DANIELLO closed by saying this is a good investment. If the
state is able to keep people healthy, allow them to keep decent
housing and warmth, there is a better chance they will be able
to stay in their homes, and for every year a person is able to
remain independent, the state saves from $80,000 to $181,000.
The cost for an older Alaskans waiver is only roughly $23,000
per year.
2:21:52 PM
CHAIR DAVIS called Mr. Sherwood back to address Ms. Daniello's
comment that the money cannot be used for food or fuel.
MR. SHERWOOD said the limiting factor is the personal needs
allowance in the cost-of-care allowance. It can be used for
anything but is capped at $1656. If they have funds in excess of
that amount they have to qualify for another deduction such as
disabled dependent, spouse, or uncovered medical. Basically, to
pay for their own food shelter and other living expenses, they
are allowed only $1656 per month. That can be changed only
through state regulation.
2:23:48 PM
CHAIR DAVIS closed public testimony. She said she believes that
her questions have been answered and said she would be
comfortable moving SB 238 out of committee.
2:25:05 PM
SENATOR PASKVAN moved to report SB 238, labeled 26-LS1362\A, out
of committee with individual recommendations and attached fiscal
note(s). There being no objection, SB 238 moved from committee.
2:26:40 PM
There being no further business to come before the committee,
Chair Davis adjourned the meeting at 2:26 PM.
| Document Name | Date/Time | Subjects |
|---|