HB 104-WORKERS COMP. MEDICAL TREATMENT FEES    2:00:30 PM  CHAIR PASKVAN announced HB 104 to be up for consideration. CONRAD JACKSON, staff to Representative Olson, sponsor of HB 104, explained that this bill has a zero fiscal note. LINDA HALL, Director, Division of Insurance, Department of Commerce, Community & Economic Development (DCCED), said that this is a time-sensitive bill. On March 31 of this year the medical fee schedule cap expires, which would mean there is a potential for no limit on the medical fee portions of the workers' compensation benefits. The first item in their packets is a technical analysis of the sunset done by the National Council on Compensation. She referred them to the last page, which showed the impact of this expiration. The Council is the statistical agent that does the filings of the workers compensation loss costs with her division. They have estimated a minimum impact of plus 5.2 percent. That is already in the filing that she has approved effective January 1. She is hoping if they can pass this bill and put this cap back, there can be some reduction in workers' compensation premium. MS. HALL said most of the rest of their packets are illustrative of the fact that Alaska for the last three years has been number one in the country in workers' compensation premiums. These premiums are a burden on employers; they are dropping health insurance and not doing wage increases. There are comparisons on how Alaska is higher than the national average in the percentage of benefits in the workers' compensation system that go to medical cost. This bill is not a permanent solution; it is a patch. It would cap the fee schedule with the consumer price index (CPI), also in their packet. CHAIR PASKVAN closed public testimony. SENATOR MEYER thanked Ms. Hall for her work and said he is comfortable with the bill. 2:06:01 PM SENATOR MEYER moved to report HB 104 from committee with individual recommendations and attached fiscal note. There were no objections and it was so ordered.