1     
HEALTH CARE AMENDMENTS

2     
2019 GENERAL SESSION

3     
STATE OF UTAH

4     
Chief Sponsor: James A. Dunnigan

5     
Senate Sponsor: Allen M. Christensen

6     

7     LONG TITLE
8     General Description:
9          This bill amends provisions relating to the Medical Assistance Act, the Utah Children's
10     Health Insurance Act, and the Mental Health Professional Practice Act.
11     Highlighted Provisions:
12          This bill:
13          ▸     creates and amends definitions;
14          ▸     amends provisions relating to the director of the state Medicaid program;
15          ▸     renames the Division of Health Care Financing to the Division of Medicaid and
16     Health Financing;
17          ▸     requires the Department of Health to coordinate with the Office of the Inspector
18     General for Medicaid Services;
19          ▸     changes provisions related to enrollment and renewal processes for the Medicaid
20     program and the Children's Health Insurance Program;
21          ▸     deletes provisions related to the Primary Care Network demonstration waiver;
22          ▸     amends provisions related to the spouse of an individual residing in a nursing
23     facility and receiving Medicaid services;
24          ▸     amends provisions relating to the Medicaid Expansion Fund;
25          ▸     modifies contracting provisions for the Department of Health;
26          ▸     eliminates certain reporting requirements;
27          ▸     amends benefits benchmark requirements for the Utah Children's Health Insurance
28     Program;
29          ▸     expands the scope of services that certain state entities can request from the Public

30     Employees' Health Program;
31          ▸     amends provisions relating to the licensing and scope of practice of certain mental
32     health professionals;
33          ▸     removes certain repealers;
34          ▸     repeals provisions from the Medical Assistance Act related to:
35               •     the release of financial information;
36               •     a strategic plan for health system reform; and
37               •     certain waiver provisions; and
38          ▸     makes clarifying and other technical changes.
39     Money Appropriated in this Bill:
40          None
41     Other Special Clauses:
42          None
43     Utah Code Sections Affected:
44     AMENDS:
45          26-18-2, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 1
46          26-18-2.1, as enacted by Laws of Utah 1988, Chapter 21
47          26-18-2.2, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2011, Chapter 267
48          26-18-2.3, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2012, Chapter 242
49          26-18-2.5, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2012, Chapter 279
50          26-18-3.5, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2006, Chapter 148
51          26-18-3.6, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 258
52          26-18-5, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2011, Chapter 297
53          26-18-11, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2011, Chapter 297
54          26-18-18, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 468
55          26-18-21, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 467
56          26-18-404, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2007, Chapter 190
57          26-18-408, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2017, Chapter 22

58          26-18-410, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 193
59          26-18-411, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 384
60          26-18-413, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 78
61          26-18-415, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 468
62          26-18-416, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 384
63          26-18-417, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 180
64          26-18-418, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 408
65          26-18-501, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 330
66          26-18-503, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2017, Chapter 443
67          26-36b-202, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapters 384 and 468
68          26-36b-208, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapters 384 and 468
69          26-36c-202, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 468
70          26-40-102, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapters 1 and 351
71          26-40-103, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2017, Chapter 74
72          26-40-105, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2011, Chapter 344
73          26-40-106, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 107
74          26-40-110, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 107
75          26-40-115, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 319
76          26-40-116, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013, Chapter 103
77          49-20-401, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 281
78          58-60-205, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapters 77 and 323
79          58-60-207, as enacted by Laws of Utah 1994, Chapter 32
80          58-60-305, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 77
81          58-60-307, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2001, Chapter 40
82          58-60-308, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 214
83          58-60-407, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2012, Chapter 179
84          58-60-502, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2013, Chapter 16
85          58-60-508, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2016, Chapter 238

86          62A-4a-902, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2006, Chapter 116
87          63A-13-102, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 135
88          63I-2-226, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapters 38 and 281
89          63J-1-315, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2016, Chapter 183
90     REPEALS:
91          26-18-3.2, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 347
92          26-18-10, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2017, Chapter 74
93          26-18-14, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 283
94          26-18-406, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2013, Chapter 167
95          26-18-407, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2017, Chapter 22
96     

97     Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
98          Section 1. Section 26-18-2 is amended to read:
99          26-18-2. Definitions.
100          As used in this chapter:
101          (1) "Applicant" means any person who requests assistance under the medical programs
102     of the state.
103          [(2) "Client" means a person who the department has determined to be eligible for
104     assistance under the Medicaid program or the Utah Medical Assistance Program established
105     under Section 26-18-10.]
106          (2) "CMS" means the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United
107     States Department of Health and Human Services.
108          (3) "Division" means the Division of Medicaid and Health [Care] Financing within the
109     department, established under Section 26-18-2.1.
110          (4) "Enrollee" or "member" means an individual whom the department has determined
111     to be eligible for assistance under the Medicaid program.
112          [(4)] (5) "Medicaid program" means the state program for medical assistance for
113     persons who are eligible under the state plan adopted pursuant to Title XIX of the federal

114     Social Security Act.
115          [(5)] (6) "Medical [or hospital] assistance" means services furnished or payments made
116     to or on behalf of [recipients of medical or hospital assistance under state medical programs] a
117     member.
118          [(6)] (7) (a) "Passenger vehicle" means a self-propelled, two-axle vehicle intended
119     primarily for operation on highways and used by an applicant or recipient to meet basic
120     transportation needs and has a fair market value below 40% of the applicable amount of the
121     federal luxury passenger automobile tax established in 26 U.S.C. Sec. 4001 and adjusted
122     annually for inflation.
123          (b) "Passenger vehicle" does not include:
124          (i) a commercial vehicle, as defined in Section 41-1a-102;
125          (ii) an off-highway vehicle, as defined in Section 41-1a-102; or
126          (iii) a motor home, as defined in Section 13-14-102.
127          (8) "PPACA" means the same as that term is defined in Section 31A-1-301.
128          [(7)] (9) "Recipient" means a person who has received medical [or hospital] assistance
129     under the Medicaid program [or the Utah Medical Assistance Program established under
130     Section 26-18-10].
131          Section 2. Section 26-18-2.1 is amended to read:
132          26-18-2.1. Division -- Creation.
133          There is created, within the department, the Division of Medicaid and Health [Care]
134     Financing which shall be responsible for implementing, organizing, and maintaining the
135     Medicaid program and the [Utah Medical Assistance Program established in Section 26-18-10]
136     Children's Health Insurance Program established in Section 26-40-103, in accordance with the
137     provisions of this chapter and applicable federal law.
138          Section 3. Section 26-18-2.2 is amended to read:
139          26-18-2.2. State Medicaid director -- Appointment -- Responsibilities.
140          The [director of the division] state Medicaid director shall be appointed by the
141     governor, after consultation with the executive director, with the advice and consent of the

142     Senate. The [director of the division] state Medicaid director may employ other employees as
143     necessary to implement the provisions of this chapter, and shall:
144          (1) administer the responsibilities of the division as set forth in this chapter;
145          (2) [prepare and] administer the division's budget; and
146          (3) establish and maintain a state plan for the Medicaid program in compliance with
147     federal law and regulations.
148          Section 4. Section 26-18-2.3 is amended to read:
149          26-18-2.3. Division responsibilities -- Emphasis -- Periodic assessment.
150          (1) In accordance with the requirements of Title XIX of the Social Security Act and
151     applicable federal regulations, the division is responsible for the effective and impartial
152     administration of this chapter in an efficient, economical manner. The division shall:
153          (a) establish, on a statewide basis, a program to safeguard against unnecessary or
154     inappropriate use of Medicaid services, excessive payments, and unnecessary or inappropriate
155     hospital admissions or lengths of stay;
156          (b) deny any provider claim for services that fail to meet criteria established by the
157     division concerning medical necessity or appropriateness; and
158          (c) place its emphasis on high quality care to recipients in the most economical and
159     cost-effective manner possible, with regard to both publicly and privately provided services.
160          (2) The division shall implement and utilize cost-containment methods, where
161     possible, which may include:
162          (a) prepayment and postpayment review systems to determine if utilization is
163     reasonable and necessary;
164          (b) preadmission certification of nonemergency admissions;
165          (c) mandatory outpatient, rather than inpatient, surgery in appropriate cases;
166          (d) second surgical opinions;
167          (e) procedures for encouraging the use of outpatient services;
168          (f) consistent with Sections 26-18-2.4 and 58-17b-606, a Medicaid drug program;
169          (g) coordination of benefits; and

170          (h) review and exclusion of providers who are not cost effective or who have abused
171     the Medicaid program, in accordance with the procedures and provisions of federal law and
172     regulation.
173          (3) The state medicaid director [of the division] shall periodically assess the cost
174     effectiveness and health implications of the existing Medicaid program, and consider
175     alternative approaches to the provision of covered health and medical services through the
176     Medicaid program, in order to reduce unnecessary or unreasonable utilization.
177          (4) (a) The department shall ensure Medicaid program integrity by conducting internal
178     audits of the Medicaid program for efficiencies, best practices, [fraud, waste, abuse,] and cost
179     recovery.
180          (b) The department shall coordinate with the Office of the Inspector General for
181     Medicaid Services created in Section 63A-13-201 to implement Subsection (2) and to address
182     Medicaid fraud, waste, or abuse as described in Section 63A-13-202.
183          (5) The department shall, by December 31 of each year, report to the Social Services
184     Appropriations Subcommittee regarding:
185          (a) measures taken under this section to increase:
186          (i) efficiencies within the program; and
187          (ii) cost avoidance and cost recovery efforts in the program; and
188          (b) results of program integrity efforts under Subsection (4).
189          Section 5. Section 26-18-2.5 is amended to read:
190          26-18-2.5. Simplified enrollment and renewal process for Medicaid and other
191     state medical programs -- Financial institutions.
192          (1) The department may[:(a)] apply for grants and accept donations to[: (i)] make
193     technology system improvements necessary to implement a simplified enrollment and renewal
194     process for the Medicaid program, Utah Premium Partnership, and Primary Care Network
195     Demonstration Project programs[; and].
196          [(ii) conduct an actuarial analysis of the implementation of a basic health care plan in
197     the state in 2014 to provide coverage options to individuals from 133% to 200% of the federal

198     poverty level; and]
199          [(b) if funding is available:]
200          [(i) implement the simplified enrollment and renewal process in accordance with this
201     section; and]
202          [(ii) conduct the actuarial analysis described in Subsection (1)(a)(ii).]
203          [(2) The simplified enrollment and renewal process established in this section shall, in
204     accordance with Section 59-1-403, provide an eligibility worker a process in which the
205     eligibility worker:]
206          [(a) verifies the applicant's or enrollee's identity;]
207          [(b) gets consent to obtain the applicant's adjusted gross income from the State Tax
208     Commission from:]
209          [(i) the applicant or enrollee, if the applicant or enrollee filed a single tax return; or]
210          [(ii) both parties to a joint return, if the applicant filed a joint tax return; and]
211          [(c) obtains from the State Tax Commission, the adjusted gross income of the applicant
212     or enrollee.]
213          [(3)] (2) (a) The department may enter into an agreement with a financial institution
214     doing business in the state to develop and operate a data match system to identify an applicant's
215     or enrollee's assets that:
216          (i) uses automated data exchanges to the maximum extent feasible; and
217          (ii) requires a financial institution each month to provide the name, record address,
218     Social Security number, other taxpayer identification number, or other identifying information
219     for each applicant or enrollee who maintains an account at the financial institution.
220          (b) The department may pay a reasonable fee to a financial institution for compliance
221     with this Subsection [(3)] (2), as provided in Section 7-1-1006.
222          (c) A financial institution may not be liable under any federal or state law to any person
223     for any disclosure of information or action taken in good faith under this Subsection [(3)] (2).
224          (d) The department may disclose a financial record obtained from a financial institution
225     under this section only for the purpose of, and to the extent necessary in, verifying eligibility as

226     provided in this section and Section 26-40-105.
227          Section 6. Section 26-18-3.5 is amended to read:
228          26-18-3.5. Copayments by recipients -- Employer sponsored plans.
229          (1) The department shall selectively provide for enrollment fees, premiums,
230     deductions, cost sharing or other similar charges to be paid by recipients, their spouses, and
231     parents, within the limitations of federal law and regulation.
232          [(2) (a) The department shall seek approval under the department's Section 1115
233     Medicaid waiver to cap enrollment fees for the Primary Care Network Demonstration Project
234     in accordance with Subsection (2)(b).]
235          [(b) Pursuant to a waiver obtained under Subsection (2)(a), the department shall cap
236     enrollment fees for the primary care network at $15 per year for those persons who, after July
237     1, 2003, are eligible to begin receiving General Assistance under Section 35A-3-401.]
238          [(c) Beginning July 1, 2004, and pursuant to a waiver obtained under Subsection (2)(a),
239     the department shall cap enrollment fees for the primary care network at $25 per year for those
240     persons who have an income level that is below 50% of the federal poverty level.]
241          [(3)] (2) Beginning May 1, 2006, within appropriations by the Legislature and as a
242     means to increase health care coverage among the uninsured, the department shall take steps to
243     promote increased participation in employer sponsored health insurance, including:
244          (a) maximizing the health insurance premium subsidy provided under the state's
245     [Primary Care Network Demonstration Project] 1115 demonstration waiver by:
246          (i) ensuring that state funds are matched by federal funds to the greatest extent
247     allowable; and
248          (ii) as the department determines appropriate, seeking federal approval to do one or
249     more of the following:
250          (A) eliminate or otherwise modify the annual enrollment fee;
251          (B) eliminate or otherwise modify the schedule used to determine the level of subsidy
252     provided to an enrollee each year;
253          (C) reduce the maximum number of participants allowable under the subsidy program;

254     or
255          (D) otherwise modify the program in a manner that promotes enrollment in employer
256     sponsored health insurance; and
257          (b) exploring the use of other options, including the development of a waiver under the
258     Medicaid Health Insurance Flexibility Demonstration Initiative or other federal authority.
259          Section 7. Section 26-18-3.6 is amended to read:
260          26-18-3.6. Income and resources from institutionalized spouses.
261          (1) As used in this section:
262          (a) "Community spouse" means the spouse of an institutionalized spouse.
263          (b) (i) "Community spouse monthly income allowance" means an amount by which the
264     minimum monthly maintenance needs allowance for the spouse exceeds the amount of monthly
265     income otherwise available to the community spouse, determined without regard to the
266     allowance, except as provided in Subsection (1)(b)(ii).
267          (ii) If a court has entered an order against an institutionalized spouse for monthly
268     income for the support of the community spouse, the community spouse monthly income
269     allowance for the spouse may not be less than the amount of the monthly income so ordered.
270          (c) "Community spouse resource allowance" is [an amount by which the greatest of the
271     following exceeds the amount of the resources otherwise available to the community spouse:]
272     the amount of combined resources that are protected for a community spouse living in the
273     community, which the division shall establish by rule made in accordance with Title 63G,
274     Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act, based on the amounts established by the
275     United States Department of Health and Human Services.
276          [(i) $15,804;]
277          [(ii) the lesser of the spousal share computed under Subsection (4) or $76,740;]
278          [(iii) the amount established in a hearing held under Subsection (11); or]
279          [(iv) the amount transferred by court order under Subsection (12)(c).]
280          (d) "Excess shelter allowance" for a community spouse means the amount by which the
281     sum of the spouse's expense for rent or mortgage payment, taxes, and insurance, and in the case

282     of condominium or cooperative, required maintenance charge, for the community spouse's
283     principal residence and the spouse's actual expenses for electricity, natural gas, and water
284     utilities or, at the discretion of the department, the federal standard utility allowance under
285     SNAP as defined in Section 35A-1-102, exceeds 30% of the amount described in Subsection
286     (9).
287          (e) "Family member" means a minor dependent child, dependent parents, or dependent
288     sibling of the institutionalized spouse or community spouse who are residing with the
289     community spouse.
290          (f) (i) "Institutionalized spouse" means a person who is residing in a nursing facility
291     and is married to a spouse who is not in a nursing facility.
292          (ii) An "institutionalized spouse" does not include a person who is not likely to reside
293     in a nursing facility for at least 30 consecutive days.
294          (g) "Nursing care facility" means the same as that term is defined in Section 26-21-2.
295          (2) The division shall comply with this section when determining eligibility for
296     medical assistance for an institutionalized spouse.
297          (3) For services furnished during a calendar year beginning on or after January 1, 1999,
298     the [dollar amounts specified in Subsections (1)(c)(i), (1)(c)(ii), and (10)(b)] community spouse
299     resource allowance shall be increased by the division by [the] an amount as determined
300     annually by [the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services] CMS.
301          (4) The division shall compute, as of the beginning of the first continuous period of
302     institutionalization of the institutionalized spouse:
303          (a) the total value of the resources to the extent either the institutionalized spouse or
304     the community spouse has an ownership interest; and
305          (b) a spousal share, which is 1/2 of the resources described in Subsection (4)(a).
306          (5) At the request of an institutionalized spouse or a community spouse, at the
307     beginning of the first continuous period of institutionalization of the institutionalized spouse
308     and upon the receipt of relevant documentation of resources, the division shall promptly assess
309     and document the total value described in Subsection (4)(a) and shall provide a copy of that

310     assessment and documentation to each spouse and shall retain a copy of the assessment. When
311     the division provides a copy of the assessment, it shall include a notice stating that the spouse
312     may request a hearing under Subsection (11).
313          (6) When determining eligibility for medical assistance under this chapter:
314          (a) Except as provided in Subsection (6)(b), all [the] resources held by either the
315     institutionalized spouse, community spouse, or both, are considered to be available to the
316     institutionalized spouse.
317          (b) Resources are considered to be available to the institutionalized spouse only to the
318     extent that the amount of those resources exceeds the [amounts specified in Subsections
319     (1)(c)(i) through (iv)] community spouse resource allowance at the time of application for
320     medical assistance under this chapter.
321          (7) (a) The division may not find an institutionalized spouse to be ineligible for
322     medical assistance by reason of resources determined under Subsection (5) to be available for
323     the cost of care when:
324          [(a)] (i) the institutionalized spouse has assigned to the state any rights to support from
325     the community spouse;
326          [(b) (i)] (ii) except as provided in Subsection (7)(b)[(ii)], the institutionalized spouse
327     lacks the ability to execute an assignment due to physical or mental impairment; or
328          [(ii) Subsection (7)(b)(i) does not prevent the division from seeking a court order
329     seeking an assignment of support; or]
330          [(c)] (iii) the division determines that denial of medical assistance would cause an
331     undue burden.
332          (b) Subsection (7)(a)(ii) does not prevent the division from seeking a court order for an
333     assignment of support.
334          (8) During the continuous period in which an institutionalized spouse is in an
335     institution and after the month in which an institutionalized spouse is eligible for medical
336     assistance, the resources of the community spouse may not be considered to be available to the
337     institutionalized spouse.

338          (9) When an institutionalized spouse is determined to be eligible for medical
339     assistance, in determining the amount of the spouse's income that is to be applied monthly for
340     the cost of care in the nursing care facility, the division shall deduct from the spouse's monthly
341     income the following amounts in the following order:
342          (a) a personal needs allowance, the amount of which is determined by the division;
343          (b) a community spouse monthly income allowance, but only to the extent that the
344     income of the institutionalized spouse is made available to, or for the benefit of, the community
345     spouse;
346          (c) a family allowance for each family member, equal to at least 1/3 of the amount that
347     the amount described in Subsection (10)(a)[(i)] exceeds the amount of [monthly income of that
348     family member] the family member's monthly income; and
349          (d) amounts for incurred expenses for the medical or remedial care for the
350     institutionalized spouse.
351          (10) [(a) Except as provided in Subsection (10)(b), the] The division shall establish a
352     minimum monthly maintenance needs allowance for each community spouse [which is not less
353     than the sum of] that includes:
354          (a) an amount established by the division by rule made in accordance with Title 63G,
355     Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act, based on the amounts established by the
356     United States Department of Health and Human Services; and
357          [(i) 150% of the current poverty guideline for a two-person family unit that applies to
358     this state as established by the United States Department of Health and Human Services; and]
359          [(ii)] (b) an excess shelter allowance.
360          [(b) The amount provided in Subsection (10)(a) may not exceed $1,976, unless a court
361     order establishes a higher amount.]
362          (11) (a) An institutionalized spouse or a community spouse may request a hearing with
363     respect to the determinations described in Subsections (11)(e)(i) through (v) if an application
364     for medical assistance has been made on behalf of the institutionalized spouse.
365          (b) A hearing under this subsection regarding the community spouse resource

366     allowance shall be held by the division within 90 days from the date of the request for the
367     hearing.
368          (c) If either spouse establishes that the community spouse needs income, above the
369     level otherwise provided by the minimum monthly maintenance needs allowance, due to
370     exceptional circumstances resulting in significant financial duress, there shall be substituted,
371     for the minimum monthly maintenance needs allowance provided under Subsection (10), an
372     amount adequate to provide additional income as is necessary.
373          (d) If either spouse establishes that the community spouse resource allowance, in
374     relation to the amount of income generated by the allowance is inadequate to raise the
375     community spouse's income to the minimum monthly maintenance needs allowance, there shall
376     be substituted, for the community spouse resource allowance, an amount adequate to provide a
377     minimum monthly maintenance needs allowance.
378          (e) A hearing may be held under this subsection if either the institutionalized spouse or
379     community spouse is dissatisfied with a determination of:
380          (i) the community spouse monthly income allowance;
381          (ii) the amount of monthly income otherwise available to the community spouse;
382          (iii) the computation of the spousal share of resources under Subsection (4);
383          (iv) the attribution of resources under Subsection (6); or
384          (v) the determination of the community spouse resource allocation.
385          (12) (a) An institutionalized spouse may transfer an amount equal to the community
386     spouse resource allowance, but only to the extent the resources of the institutionalized spouse
387     are transferred to or for the sole benefit of the community spouse.
388          (b) The transfer under Subsection (12)(a) shall be made as soon as practicable after the
389     date of the initial determination of eligibility, taking into account the time necessary to obtain a
390     court order under Subsection (12)(c).
391          (c) Chapter 19, Medical Benefits Recovery Act, does not apply if a court has entered an
392     order against an institutionalized spouse for the support of the community spouse.
393          Section 8. Section 26-18-5 is amended to read:

394          26-18-5. Contracts for provision of medical services -- Federal provisions
395     modifying department rules -- Compliance with Social Security Act.
396          (1) The department may contract with other public or private agencies to purchase or
397     provide medical services in connection with the programs of the division. Where these
398     programs are used by other state agencies, contracts shall provide that other state agencies
399     transfer the state matching funds to the department in amounts sufficient to satisfy needs of the
400     specified program.
401          [(2) All contracts for the provision or purchase of medical services shall be established
402     on the basis of the state's fiscal year and shall remain uniform during the fiscal year insofar as
403     possible.]
404          (2) Contract terms shall include provisions for maintenance, administration, and
405     service costs.
406          (3) If a federal legislative or executive provision requires modifications or revisions in
407     an eligibility factor established under this chapter as a condition for participation in medical
408     assistance, the department may modify or change its rules as necessary to qualify for
409     participation[; providing, the].
410          (4) The provisions of this section do not apply to department rules governing abortion.
411          [(4)] (5) The department shall comply with all pertinent requirements of the Social
412     Security Act and all orders, rules, and regulations adopted thereunder when required as a
413     condition of participation in benefits under the Social Security Act.
414          Section 9. Section 26-18-11 is amended to read:
415          26-18-11. Rural hospitals.
416          (1) For purposes of this section "rural hospital" means a hospital located outside of a
417     standard metropolitan statistical area, as designated by the United States Bureau of the Census.
418          (2) For purposes of the Medicaid program [and the Utah Medical Assistance Program],
419     the Division of Medicaid and Health [Care] Financing may not discriminate among rural
420     hospitals on the basis of size.
421          Section 10. Section 26-18-18 is amended to read:

422          26-18-18. Optional Medicaid expansion.
423          [(1) For purposes of this section:]
424          [(a) "CMS" means the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United
425     States Department of Health and Human Services.]
426          [(b) "PPACA" means the same as that term is defined in Section 31A-1-301.]
427          [(2)] (1) The department and the governor may not expand the state's Medicaid
428     program under PPACA unless:
429          (a) the department expands Medicaid in accordance with Section 26-18-415; or
430          (b) (i) the governor or the governor's designee has reported the intention to expand the
431     state Medicaid program under PPACA to the Legislature in compliance with the legislative
432     review process in [Sections 63N-11-106 and ] Section 26-18-3; and
433          (ii) the governor submits the request for expansion of the Medicaid program for
434     optional populations to the Legislature under the high impact federal funds request process
435     required by Section 63J-5-204.
436          [(3)] (2) (a) The department shall request approval from CMS for waivers from federal
437     statutory and regulatory law necessary to implement the health coverage improvement program
438     under Section 26-18-411.
439          (b) The health coverage improvement program under Section 26-18-411 is not subject
440     to the requirements in Subsection [(2)] (1).
441          Section 11. Section 26-18-21 is amended to read:
442          26-18-21. Medicaid intergovernmental transfer report -- Approval requirements.
443          (1) As used in this section:
444          (a) (i) "Intergovernmental transfer" means the transfer of public funds from:
445          (A) a local government entity to another nonfederal governmental entity; or
446          (B) from a nonfederal, government owned health care facility regulated under Chapter
447     21, Health Care Facility Licensing and Inspection Act, to another nonfederal governmental
448     entity.
449          (ii) "Intergovernmental transfer" does not include:

450          (A) the transfer of public funds from one state agency to another state agency; or
451          (B) a transfer of funds from the University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics.
452          (b) (i) "Intergovernmental transfer program" means a federally approved
453     reimbursement program or category that is authorized by the Medicaid state plan or waiver
454     authority for intergovernmental transfers.
455          (ii) "Intergovernmental transfer program" does not include the addition of a provider to
456     an existing intergovernmental transfer program.
457          (c) "Local government entity" means a county, city, town, special service district, local
458     district, or local education agency as that term is defined in Section 63J-5-102.
459          (d) "Non-state government entity" means a hospital authority, hospital district, health
460     care district, special service district, county, or city.
461          (2) (a) An entity that receives federal Medicaid dollars from the department as a result
462     of an intergovernmental transfer shall, on or before August 1, 2017, and on or before August 1
463     each year thereafter, provide the department with:
464          (i) information regarding the payments funded with the intergovernmental transfer as
465     authorized by and consistent with state and federal law;
466          (ii) information regarding the entity's ability to repay federal funds, to the extent
467     required by the department in the contract for the intergovernmental transfer; and
468          (iii) other information reasonably related to the intergovernmental transfer that may be
469     required by the department in the contract for the intergovernmental transfer.
470          (b) On or before October 15, 2017, and on or before October 15 each subsequent year,
471     the department shall prepare a report for the Executive Appropriations Committee that
472     includes:
473          (i) the amount of each intergovernmental transfer under Subsection (2)(a);
474          (ii) a summary of changes to [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services] CMS
475     regulations and practices that are known by the department regarding federal funds related to
476     an intergovernmental transfer program; and
477          (iii) other information the department gathers about the intergovernmental transfer

478     under Subsection (2)(a).
479          (3) The department shall not create a new intergovernmental transfer program after
480     July 1, 2017, unless the department reports to the Executive Appropriations Committee, in
481     accordance with Section 63J-5-206, before submitting the new intergovernmental transfer
482     program for federal approval. The report shall include information required by Subsection
483     63J-5-102(1)(d) and the analysis required in Subsections (2)(a) and (b).
484          (4) (a) The department shall enter into new Nursing Care Facility Non-State
485     Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program contracts and contract amendments adding
486     new nursing care facilities and new non-state government entity operators in accordance with
487     this Subsection (4).
488          (b) (i) If the nursing care facility expects to receive less than $1,000,000 in federal
489     funds each year from the Nursing Care Facility Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment
490     Limit program, excluding seed funding and administrative fees paid by the non-state
491     government entity, the department shall enter into a Nursing Care Facility Non-State
492     Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program contract with the non-state government
493     entity operator of the nursing care facility.
494          (ii) If the nursing care facility expects to receive between $1,000,000 and $10,000,000
495     in federal funds each year from the Nursing Care Facility Non-State Government-Owned
496     Upper Payment Limit program, excluding seed funding and administrative fees paid by the
497     non-state government entity, the department shall enter into a Nursing Care Facility Non-State
498     Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program contract with the non-state government
499     entity operator of the nursing care facility after receiving the approval of the Executive
500     Appropriations Committee.
501          (iii) If the nursing care facility expects to receive more than $10,000,000 in federal
502     funds each year from the Nursing Care Facility Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment
503     Limit program, excluding seed funding and administrative fees paid by the non-state
504     government entity, the department may not approve the application without obtaining approval
505     from the Legislature and the governor.

506          (c) A non-state government entity may not participate in the Nursing Care Facility
507     Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program unless the non-state government
508     entity is a special service district, county, or city that operates a hospital or holds a license
509     under Chapter 21, Health Care Facility Licensing and Inspection Act.
510          (d) Each non-state government entity that participates in the Nursing Care Facility
511     Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program shall certify to the department
512     that:
513          (i) the non-state government entity is a local government entity that is able to make an
514     intergovernmental transfer under applicable state and federal law;
515          (ii) the non-state government entity has sufficient public funds or other permissible
516     sources of seed funding that comply with the requirements in 42 C.F.R. Part 433, Subpart B;
517          (iii) the funds received from the Nursing Care Facility Non-State Government-Owned
518     Upper Payment Limit program are:
519          (A) for each nursing care facility, available for patient care until the end of the
520     non-state government entity's fiscal year; and
521          (B) used exclusively for operating expenses for nursing care facility operations, patient
522     care, capital expenses, rent, royalties, and other operating expenses; and
523          (iv) the non-state government entity has completed all licensing, enrollment, and other
524     forms and documents required by federal and state law to register a change of ownership with
525     the department and with [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services] CMS.
526          (5) The department shall add a nursing care facility to an existing Nursing Care Facility
527     Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program contract if:
528          (a) the nursing care facility is managed by or affiliated with the same non-state
529     government entity that also manages one or more nursing care facilities that are included in an
530     existing Nursing Care Facility Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program
531     contract; and
532          (b) the non-state government entity makes the certification described in Subsection
533     (4)(d)(ii).

534          (6) The department may not increase the percentage of the administrative fee paid by a
535     non-state government entity to the department under the Nursing Care Facility Non-State
536     Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program.
537          (7) The department may not condition participation in the Nursing Care Facility
538     Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program on:
539          (a) a requirement that the department be allowed to direct or determine the types of
540     patients that a non-state government entity will treat or the course of treatment for a patient in a
541     non-state government nursing care facility; or
542          (b) a requirement that a non-state government entity or nursing care facility post a
543     bond, purchase insurance, or create a reserve account of any kind.
544          (8) The non-state government entity shall have the primary responsibility for ensuring
545     compliance with Subsection (4)(d)(ii).
546          (9) (a) The department may not enter into a new Nursing Care Facility Non-State
547     Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit program contract before January 1, 2019.
548          (b) Subsection (9)(a) does not apply to:
549          (i) a new Nursing Care Facility Non-State Government-Owned Upper Payment Limit
550     program contract that was included in the federal funds request summary under Section
551     63J-5-201 for fiscal year 2018; or
552          (ii) a nursing care facility that is operated or managed by the same company as a
553     nursing care facility that was included in the federal funds request summary under Section
554     63J-5-201 for fiscal year 2018.
555          Section 12. Section 26-18-404 is amended to read:
556          26-18-404. Home and community-based long-term care -- Room and board
557     assistance.
558          If the department receives approval from [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
559     Services within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services] CMS to replace the
560     Medicaid program's current FlexCare program with a new program to provide long-term care
561     services in home and community-based settings rather than institutions, the department shall

562     assist in the payment of room and board costs for any person in the new program without
563     sufficient income to fully pay those costs.
564          Section 13. Section 26-18-408 is amended to read:
565          26-18-408. Incentives to appropriately use emergency department services.
566          (1) (a) This section applies to the Medicaid program and to the Utah Children's Health
567     Insurance Program created in Chapter 40, Utah Children's Health Insurance Act.
568          (b) For purposes of this section:
569          (i) "Accountable care organization" means a Medicaid or Children's Health Insurance
570     Program administrator that contracts with the Medicaid program or the Children's Health
571     Insurance Program to deliver health care through an accountable care plan.
572          (ii) "Accountable care plan" means a risk based delivery service model authorized by
573     Section 26-18-405 and administered by an accountable care organization.
574          (iii) "Nonemergent care":
575          (A) means use of the emergency department to receive health care that is nonemergent
576     as defined by the department by administrative rule adopted in accordance with Title 63G,
577     Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act, and the Emergency Medical Treatment and
578     Active Labor Act; and
579          (B) does not mean the medical services provided to a recipient required by the
580     Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act, including services to conduct a medical
581     screening examination to determine if the recipient has an emergent or nonemergent condition.
582          (iv) "Professional compensation" means payment made for services rendered to a
583     Medicaid recipient by an individual licensed to provide health care services.
584          (v) "Super-utilizer" means a Medicaid recipient who has been identified by the
585     recipient's accountable care organization as a person who uses the emergency department
586     excessively, as defined by the accountable care organization.
587          (2) (a) An accountable care organization may, in accordance with Subsections (2)(b)
588     and (c):
589          (i) audit emergency department services provided to a recipient enrolled in the

590     accountable care plan to determine if nonemergent care was provided to the recipient; and
591          (ii) establish differential payment for emergent and nonemergent care provided in an
592     emergency department.
593          (b) (i) The differential payments under Subsection (2)(a)(ii) do not apply to
594     professional compensation for services rendered in an emergency department.
595          (ii) Except in cases of suspected fraud, waste, and abuse, an accountable care
596     organization's audit of payment under Subsection (2)(a)(i) is limited to the 18-month period of
597     time after the date on which the medical services were provided to the recipient. If fraud,
598     waste, or abuse is alleged, the accountable care organization's audit of payment under
599     Subsection (2)(a)(i) is limited to three years after the date on which the medical services were
600     provided to the recipient.
601          (c) The audits and differential payments under Subsections (2)(a) and (b) apply to
602     services provided to a recipient on or after July 1, 2015.
603          (3) An accountable care organization shall:
604          (a) use the savings under Subsection (2) to maintain and improve access to primary
605     care and urgent care services for all of the recipients enrolled in the accountable care plan;
606          (b) provide viable alternatives for increasing primary care provider reimbursement
607     rates to incentivize after hours primary care access for recipients; and
608          (c) report to the department on how the accountable care organization complied with
609     this Subsection (3).
610          (4) The department shall:
611          (a) through administrative rule adopted by the department, develop quality
612     measurements that evaluate an accountable care organization's delivery of:
613          (i) appropriate emergency department services to recipients enrolled in the accountable
614     care plan;
615          (ii) expanded primary care and urgent care for recipients enrolled in the accountable
616     care plan, with consideration of the accountable care organization's:
617          (A) delivery of primary care, urgent care, and after hours care through means other than

618     the emergency department;
619          (B) recipient access to primary care providers and community health centers including
620     evening and weekend access; and
621          (C) other innovations for expanding access to primary care; and
622          (iii) quality of care for the accountable care plan members;
623          (b) compare the quality measures developed under Subsection (4)(a) for each
624     accountable care organization and share the data and quality measures developed under
625     Subsection (4)(a) with the Health Data Committee created in Chapter 33a, Utah Health Data
626     Authority Act;
627          (c) apply for a Medicaid waiver and a Children's Health Insurance Program waiver
628     with [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United States Department of
629     Health and Human Services] CMS, to:
630          (i) allow the program to charge recipients who are enrolled in an accountable care plan
631     a higher copayment for emergency department services; and
632          (ii) develop, by administrative rule, an algorithm to determine assignment of new,
633     unassigned recipients to specific accountable care plans based on the plan's performance in
634     relation to the quality measures developed pursuant to Subsection (4)(a); and
635          (d) before July 1, 2015, convene representatives from the accountable care
636     organizations, pre-paid mental health plans, an organization representing hospitals, an
637     organization representing physicians, and a county mental health and substance abuse authority
638     to discuss alternatives to emergency department care, including:
639          (i) creating increased access to primary care services;
640          (ii) alternative care settings for super-utilizers and individuals with behavioral health or
641     substance abuse issues;
642          (iii) primary care medical and health homes that can be created and supported through
643     enhanced federal match rates, a state plan amendment for integrated care models, or other
644     Medicaid waivers;
645          (iv) case management programs that can:

646          (A) schedule prompt visits with primary care providers within 72 to 96 hours of an
647     emergency department visit;
648          (B) help super-utilizers with behavioral health or substance abuse issues to obtain care
649     in appropriate care settings; and
650          (C) assist with transportation to primary care visits if transportation is a barrier to
651     appropriate care for the recipient; and
652          (v) sharing of medical records between health care providers and emergency
653     departments for Medicaid recipients.
654          (5) The Health Data Committee may publish data in accordance with Chapter 33a,
655     Utah Health Data Authority Act, which compares the quality measures for the accountable care
656     plans.
657          Section 14. Section 26-18-410 is amended to read:
658          26-18-410. Medicaid waiver for children with disabilities and complex medical
659     needs.
660          (1) As used in this section:
661          (a) "Additional eligibility criteria" means the additional eligibility criteria set by the
662     department under Subsection (4)(e).
663          (b) "Complex medical condition" means a physical condition of an individual that:
664          (i) results in severe functional limitations for the individual; and
665          (ii) is likely to:
666          (A) last at least 12 months; or
667          (B) result in death.
668          (c) "Program" means the program for children with complex medical conditions
669     created in Subsection (3).
670          (d) "Qualified child" means a child who:
671          (i) is less than 19 years old;
672          (ii) is diagnosed with a complex medical condition;
673          (iii) has a condition that meets the definition of disability in 42 U.S.C. Sec. 12102; and

674          (iv) meets the additional eligibility criteria.
675          (2) The department shall apply for a Medicaid home and community-based waiver with
676     [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United States Department of
677     Health and Human Services] CMS to implement, within the state Medicaid program, the
678     program described in Subsection (3).
679          (3) If the waiver described in Subsection (2) is approved, the department shall offer a
680     program that:
681          (a) as funding permits, provides treatment for qualified children;
682          (b) accepts applications for the program during periods of open enrollment; and
683          (c) if approved by [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services] CMS:
684          (i) requires periodic reevaluations of an enrolled child's eligibility based on the
685     additional eligibility criteria; and
686          (ii) at the time of reevaluation, allows the department to disenroll a child who does not
687     meet the additional eligibility criteria.
688          (4) The department shall:
689          (a) seek to prioritize, in the waiver described in Subsection (2), entrance into the
690     program based on the:
691          (i) complexity of a qualified child's medical condition; and
692          (ii) financial needs of a qualified child and the qualified child's family;
693          (b) convene a public process to determine:
694          (i) the benefits and services to offer a qualified child under the program; and
695          (ii) additional eligibility criteria for a qualified child;
696          (c) evaluate, on an ongoing basis, the cost and effectiveness of the program;
697          (d) if funding for the program is reduced, develop an evaluation process to reduce the
698     number of children served based on the criteria in Subsection (4)(a); and
699          (e) establish, by rule made in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
700     Administrative Rulemaking Act, additional eligibility criteria based on the factors described in
701     Subsections (4)(a)(i) and (ii).

702          [(5) The department shall annually report to the Legislature's Health and Human
703     Services Interim Committee before November 30 while the waiver is in effect regarding:]
704          [(a) the number of qualified children served under the program;]
705          [(b) the cost of the program; and]
706          [(c) the effectiveness of the program.]
707          Section 15. Section 26-18-411 is amended to read:
708          26-18-411. Health coverage improvement program -- Eligibility -- Annual report
709     -- Expansion of eligibility for adults with dependent children.
710          (1) For purposes of this section:
711          (a) "Adult in the expansion population" means an individual who:
712          (i) is described in 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396a(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII); and
713          (ii) is not otherwise eligible for Medicaid as a mandatory categorically needy
714     individual.
715          [(b) "CMS" means the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United
716     States Department of Health and Human Services.]
717          [(c)] (b) "Enhancement waiver program" means the Primary Care Network
718     enhancement waiver program described in Section 26-18-416.
719          [(d)] (c) "Federal poverty level" means the poverty guidelines established by the
720     Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services under 42 U.S.C. Sec.
721     9909(2).
722          [(e)] (d) "Health coverage improvement program" means the health coverage
723     improvement program described in Subsections (3) through (10).
724          [(f)] (e) "Homeless":
725          (i) means an individual who is chronically homeless, as determined by the department;
726     and
727          (ii) includes someone who was chronically homeless and is currently living in
728     supported housing for the chronically homeless.
729          [(g)] (f) "Income eligibility ceiling" means the percent of federal poverty level:

730          (i) established by the state in an appropriations act adopted pursuant to Title 63J,
731     Chapter 1, Budgetary Procedures Act; and
732          (ii) under which an individual may qualify for Medicaid coverage in accordance with
733     this section.
734          (2) Beginning July 1, 2016, the department shall amend the state Medicaid plan to
735     allow temporary residential treatment for substance abuse, for the traditional Medicaid
736     population, in a short term, non-institutional, 24-hour facility, without a bed capacity limit that
737     provides rehabilitation services that are medically necessary and in accordance with an
738     individualized treatment plan, as approved by CMS and as long as the county makes the
739     required match under Section 17-43-201.
740          (3) Beginning July 1, 2016, the department shall amend the state Medicaid plan to
741     increase the income eligibility ceiling to a percentage of the federal poverty level designated by
742     the department, based on appropriations for the program, for an individual with a dependent
743     child.
744          (4) Before July 1, 2016, the division shall submit to CMS a request for waivers, or an
745     amendment of existing waivers, from federal statutory and regulatory law necessary for the
746     state to implement the health coverage improvement program in the Medicaid program in
747     accordance with this section.
748          (5) (a) An adult in the expansion population is eligible for Medicaid if the adult meets
749     the income eligibility and other criteria established under Subsection (6).
750          (b) An adult who qualifies under Subsection (6) shall receive Medicaid coverage:
751          (i) through the traditional fee for service Medicaid model in counties without Medicaid
752     accountable care organizations or the state's Medicaid accountable care organization delivery
753     system, where implemented;
754          (ii) except as provided in Subsection (5)(b)(iii), for behavioral health, through the
755     counties in accordance with Sections 17-43-201 and 17-43-301;
756          (iii) that integrates behavioral health services and physical health services with
757     Medicaid accountable care organizations in select geographic areas of the state that choose an

758     integrated model; and
759          (iv) that permits temporary residential treatment for substance abuse in a short term,
760     non-institutional, 24-hour facility, without a bed capacity limit, as approved by CMS, that
761     provides rehabilitation services that are medically necessary and in accordance with an
762     individualized treatment plan.
763          (c) Medicaid accountable care organizations and counties that elect to integrate care
764     under Subsection (5)(b)(iii) shall collaborate on enrollment, engagement of patients, and
765     coordination of services.
766          (6) (a) An individual is eligible for the health coverage improvement program under
767     Subsection (5) if:
768          (i) at the time of enrollment, the individual's annual income is below the income
769     eligibility ceiling established by the state under Subsection (1)[(g)](f); and
770          (ii) the individual meets the eligibility criteria established by the department under
771     Subsection (6)(b).
772          (b) Based on available funding and approval from CMS, the department shall select the
773     criteria for an individual to qualify for the Medicaid program under Subsection (6)(a)(ii), based
774     on the following priority:
775          (i) a chronically homeless individual;
776          (ii) if funding is available, an individual:
777          (A) involved in the justice system through probation, parole, or court ordered
778     treatment; and
779          (B) in need of substance abuse treatment or mental health treatment, as determined by
780     the department; or
781          (iii) if funding is available, an individual in need of substance abuse treatment or
782     mental health treatment, as determined by the department.
783          (c) An individual who qualifies for Medicaid coverage under Subsections (6)(a) and (b)
784     may remain on the Medicaid program for a 12-month certification period as defined by the
785     department. Eligibility changes made by the department under Subsection (1)[(g)](f) or (6)(b)

786     shall not apply to an individual during the 12-month certification period.
787          (7) The state may request a modification of the income eligibility ceiling and other
788     eligibility criteria under Subsection (6) each fiscal year based on enrollment in the health
789     coverage improvement program, projected enrollment, costs to the state, and the state budget.
790          (8) Before September 30 of each year, the department shall report to the Health and
791     Human Services Interim Committee and to the Executive Appropriations Committee:
792          (a) the number of individuals who enrolled in Medicaid under Subsection (6);
793          (b) the state cost of providing Medicaid to individuals enrolled under Subsection (6);
794     and
795          (c) recommendations for adjusting the income eligibility ceiling under Subsection (7),
796     and other eligibility criteria under Subsection (6), for the upcoming fiscal year.
797          (9) The current Medicaid program and the health coverage improvement program,
798     when implemented, shall coordinate with a state prison or county jail to expedite Medicaid
799     enrollment for an individual who is released from custody and was eligible for or enrolled in
800     Medicaid before incarceration.
801          (10) Notwithstanding Sections 17-43-201 and 17-43-301, a county does not have to
802     provide matching funds to the state for the cost of providing Medicaid services to newly
803     enrolled individuals who qualify for Medicaid coverage under the health coverage
804     improvement program under Subsection (6).
805          (11) If the enhancement waiver program is implemented, the department:
806          (a) may not accept any new enrollees into the health coverage improvement program
807     after the day on which the enhancement waiver program is implemented;
808          (b) shall transition all individuals who are enrolled in the health coverage improvement
809     program into the enhancement waiver program;
810          (c) shall suspend the health coverage improvement program within one year after the
811     day on which the enhancement waiver program is implemented;
812          (d) shall, within one year after the day on which the enhancement waiver program is
813     implemented, use all appropriations for the health coverage improvement program to

814     implement the enhancement waiver program; and
815          (e) shall work with CMS to maintain any waiver for the health coverage improvement
816     program while the health coverage improvement program is suspended under Subsection
817     (11)(c).
818          (12) If, after the enhancement waiver program takes effect, the enhancement waiver
819     program is repealed or suspended by either the state or federal government, the department
820     shall reinstate the health coverage improvement program and continue to accept new enrollees
821     into the health coverage improvement program in accordance with the provisions of this
822     section.
823          Section 16. Section 26-18-413 is amended to read:
824          26-18-413. Medicaid waiver for delivery of adult dental services.
825          (1) (a) Before June 30, 2016, the department shall ask [the United States Secretary of
826     Health and Human Services] CMS to grant waivers from federal statutory and regulatory law
827     necessary for the Medicaid program to provide dental services in the manner described in
828     Subsection (2).
829          (b) Before June 30, 2018, the department shall submit to [the Centers for Medicare and
830     Medicaid Services] CMS a request for waivers, or an amendment of existing waivers, from
831     federal law necessary for the state to provide dental services, in accordance with Subsections
832     (2)(b) through (g), to an individual described in Subsection (2)(b).
833          (2) (a) To the extent funded, the department shall provide services to only blind or
834     disabled individuals, as defined in 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1382c(a)(1), who are 18 years old or older
835     and eligible for the program.
836          (b) Notwithstanding Subsection (2)(a), if a waiver is approved under Subsection (1)(b),
837     the department shall provide dental services to an individual who:
838          (i) qualifies for the health coverage improvement program described in Section
839     26-18-411; and
840          (ii) is receiving treatment in a substance abuse treatment program, as defined in Section
841     62A-2-101, licensed under Title 62A, Chapter 2, Licensure of Programs and Facilities.

842          (c) To the extent possible, services to individuals described in Subsection (2)(a) within
843     Salt Lake County shall be provided through the University of Utah School of Dentistry.
844          (d) The department shall provide the services to individuals described in Subsection
845     (2)(b):
846          (i) by contracting with an entity that:
847          (A) has demonstrated experience working with individuals who are being treated for
848     both a substance use disorder and a major oral health disease;
849          (B) operates a program, targeted at the individuals described in Subsection (2)(b), that
850     has demonstrated, through a peer-reviewed evaluation, the effectiveness of providing dental
851     treatment to those individuals described in Subsection (2)(b);
852          (C) is willing to pay for an amount equal to the program's non-federal share of the cost
853     of providing dental services to the population described in Subsection (2)(b); and
854          (D) is willing to pay all state costs associated with applying for the waiver described in
855     Subsection (1)(b) and administering the program described in Subsection (2)(b); and
856          (ii) through a fee-for-service payment model.
857          (e) The entity that receives the contract under Subsection (2)(d)(i) shall cover all state
858     costs of the program described in Subsection (2)(b).
859          (f) Each fiscal year, the University of Utah School of Dentistry shall transfer money to
860     the program in an amount equal to the program's non-federal share of the cost of providing
861     services under this section through the school during the fiscal year.
862          (g) During each general session of the Legislature, the department shall report to the
863     Social Services Appropriations Subcommittee whether the University of Utah School of
864     Dentistry will have sufficient funds to make the transfer required by Subsection (2)(f) for the
865     current fiscal year.
866          (h) Where possible, the department shall ensure that services that are not provided by
867     the University of Utah School of Dentistry are provided:
868          (i) through fee for service reimbursement until July 1, 2018; and
869          (ii) after July 1, 2018, through the method of reimbursement used by the division for

870     Medicaid dental benefits.
871          (i) Subject to appropriations by the Legislature, and as determined by the department,
872     the scope, amount, duration, and frequency of services may be limited.
873          (3) The reporting requirements of Section 26-18-3 apply to the waivers requested under
874     Subsection (1).
875          (4) (a) If the waivers requested under Subsection (1)(a) are granted, the Medicaid
876     program shall begin providing dental services in the manner described in Subsection (2) no
877     later than July 1, 2017.
878          (b) If the waivers requested under Subsection (1)(b) are granted, the Medicaid program
879     shall begin providing dental services to the population described in Subsection (2)(b) within 90
880     days from the day on which the waivers are granted.
881          (5) If the federal share of the cost of providing dental services under this section will be
882     less than 65% during any portion of the next fiscal year, the Medicaid program shall cease
883     providing dental services under this section no later than the end of the current fiscal year.
884          Section 17. Section 26-18-415 is amended to read:
885          26-18-415. Medicaid waiver expansion.
886          (1) As used in this section:
887          [(a) "CMS" means the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United
888     States Department of Health and Human Services.]
889          [(b) "Expansion population" means individuals:]
890          [(i) whose household income is less than 95% of the federal poverty level; and]
891          [(ii) who are not eligible for enrollment in the Medicaid program, with the exception of
892     the Primary Care Network program, on May 8, 2018.]
893          [(c)] (a) "Federal poverty level" means the same as that term is defined in Section
894     26-18-411.
895          [(d)] (b) "Medicaid waiver expansion" means a Medicaid expansion in accordance with
896     this section.
897          (2) (a) Before January 1, 2019, the department shall apply to CMS for approval of a

898     waiver or state plan amendment to implement the Medicaid waiver expansion.
899          (b) The Medicaid waiver expansion shall:
900          (i) expand Medicaid coverage to eligible individuals whose income is below 95% of
901     the federal poverty level;
902          (ii) obtain maximum federal financial participation under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396d(y) for
903     enrolling an individual in the Medicaid program;
904          (iii) provide Medicaid benefits through the state's Medicaid accountable care
905     organizations in areas where a Medicaid accountable care organization is implemented;
906          (iv) integrate the delivery of behavioral health services and physical health services
907     with Medicaid accountable care organizations in select geographic areas of the state that
908     choose an integrated model;
909          (v) include a path to self-sufficiency, including work activities as defined in 42 U.S.C.
910     Sec. 607(d), for qualified adults;
911          (vi) require an individual who is offered a private health benefit plan by an employer to
912     enroll in the employer's health plan;
913          (vii) sunset in accordance with Subsection (5)(a); and
914          (viii) permit the state to close enrollment in the Medicaid waiver expansion if the
915     department has insufficient funding to provide services to additional eligible individuals.
916          (3) If the Medicaid waiver described in Subsection [(1)] (2)(a) is approved, the
917     department may only pay the state portion of costs for the Medicaid waiver expansion with
918     appropriations from:
919          (a) the Medicaid Expansion Fund, created in Section 26-36b-208;
920          (b) county contributions to the non-federal share of Medicaid expenditures; and
921          (c) any other contributions, funds, or transfers from a non-state agency for Medicaid
922     expenditures.
923          (4) Medicaid accountable care organizations and counties that elect to integrate care
924     under Subsection (2)(b)(iv) shall collaborate on enrollment, engagement of patients, and
925     coordination of services.

926          (5) (a) If federal financial participation for the Medicaid waiver expansion is reduced
927     below 90%, the authority of the department to implement the Medicaid waiver expansion shall
928     sunset no later than the next July 1 after the date on which the federal financial participation is
929     reduced.
930          (b) The department shall close the program to new enrollment if the cost of the
931     Medicaid waiver expansion is projected to exceed the appropriations for the fiscal year that are
932     authorized by the Legislature through an appropriations act adopted in accordance with Title
933     63J, Chapter 1, Budgetary Procedures Act.
934          (6) If the Medicaid waiver expansion is approved by CMS, the department shall report
935     to the Social Services Appropriations Subcommittee on or before November 1 of each year that
936     the Medicaid waiver expansion is operational:
937          (a) the number of individuals who enrolled in the Medicaid waiver program;
938          (b) costs to the state for the Medicaid waiver program;
939          (c) estimated costs for the current and following state fiscal year; and
940          (d) recommendations to control costs of the Medicaid waiver expansion.
941          Section 18. Section 26-18-416 is amended to read:
942          26-18-416. Primary Care Network enhancement waiver program.
943          (1) As used in this section:
944          [(a) "CMS" means the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United
945     States Department of Health and Human Services.]
946          [(b)] (a) "Enhancement waiver program" means the Primary Care Network
947     enhancement waiver program described in this section.
948          [(c)] (b) "Federal poverty level" means the poverty guidelines established by the
949     secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services under 42 U.S.C. Sec.
950     9902(2).
951          [(d)] (c) "Health coverage improvement program" means the same as that term is
952     defined in Section 26-18-411.
953          [(e)] (d) "Income eligibility ceiling" means the percentage of federal poverty level:

954          (i) established by the Legislature in an appropriations act adopted pursuant to Title 63J,
955     Chapter 1, Budgetary Procedures Act; and
956          (ii) under which an individual may qualify for coverage in the enhancement waiver
957     program in accordance with this section.
958          [(f)] (e) "Optional population" means the optional expansion population under PPACA
959     if the expansion provides coverage for individuals at or above 95% of the federal poverty level.
960          [(g) "PPACA" means the same as that term is defined in Section 31A-1-301.]
961          [(h)] (f) "Primary Care Network" means the state Primary Care Network program
962     created by the Medicaid primary care network demonstration waiver obtained under Section
963     26-18-3.
964          (2) The department shall continue to implement the Primary Care Network program for
965     qualified individuals under the Primary Care Network program.
966          (3) (a) The division shall apply for a Medicaid waiver or a state plan amendment with
967     CMS to implement, within the state Medicaid program, the enhancement waiver program
968     described in this section within six months after the day on which:
969          (i) the division receives a notice from CMS that the waiver for the Medicaid waiver
970     expansion submitted under Section 26-18-415, Medicaid waiver expansion, will not be
971     approved; or
972          (ii) the division withdraws the waiver for the Medicaid waiver expansion submitted
973     under Section 26-18-415, Medicaid waiver expansion.
974          (b) The division may not apply for a waiver under Subsection (3)(a) while a waiver
975     request under Section 26-18-415, Medicaid waiver expansion, is pending with CMS.
976          (4) An individual who is eligible for the enhancement waiver program may receive the
977     following benefits under the enhancement waiver program:
978          (a) the benefits offered under the Primary Care Network program;
979          (b) diagnostic testing and procedures;
980          (c) medical specialty care;
981          (d) inpatient hospital services;

982          (e) outpatient hospital services;
983          (f) outpatient behavioral health care, including outpatient substance abuse care; and
984          (g) for an individual who qualifies for the health coverage improvement program, as
985     approved by CMS, temporary residential treatment for substance abuse in a short term,
986     non-institutional, 24-hour facility, without a bed capacity limit, that provides rehabilitation
987     services that are medically necessary and in accordance with an individualized treatment plan.
988          (5) An individual is eligible for the enhancement waiver program if, at the time of
989     enrollment:
990          (a) the individual is qualified to enroll in the Primary Care Network or the health
991     coverage improvement program;
992          (b) the individual's annual income is below the income eligibility ceiling established by
993     the Legislature under Subsection (1)[(e)](d); and
994          (c) the individual meets the eligibility criteria established by the department under
995     Subsection (6).
996          (6) (a) Based on available funding and approval from CMS and subject to Subsection
997     (6)(d), the department shall determine the criteria for an individual to qualify for the
998     enhancement waiver program, based on the following priority:
999          (i) adults in the expansion population, as defined in Section 26-18-411, who qualify for
1000     the health coverage improvement program;
1001          (ii) adults with dependent children who qualify for the health coverage improvement
1002     program under Subsection 26-18-411(3) ;
1003          (iii) adults with dependent children who do not qualify for the health coverage
1004     improvement program; and
1005          (iv) if funding is available, adults without dependent children.
1006          (b) The number of individuals enrolled in the enhancement waiver program may not
1007     exceed 105% of the number of individuals who were enrolled in the Primary Care Network on
1008     December 31, 2017.
1009          (c) The department may only use appropriations from the Medicaid Expansion Fund

1010     created in Section 26-36b-208 to fund the state portion of the enhancement waiver program.
1011          [(d) The money deposited into the Medicaid Expansion Fund under Subsections
1012     26-36b-208(g) and (h) may only be used to pay the cost of enrolling individuals who qualify for
1013     the enhancement waiver program under Subsections (6)(a)(iii) and (iv).]
1014          (7) The department may request a modification of the income eligibility ceiling and the
1015     eligibility criteria under Subsection (6) from CMS each fiscal year based on enrollment in the
1016     enhancement waiver program, projected enrollment in the enhancement waiver program, costs
1017     to the state, and the state budget.
1018          (8) The department may implement the enhancement waiver program by contracting
1019     with Medicaid accountable care organizations to administer the enhancement waiver program.
1020          (9) In accordance with Subsections 26-18-411(11) and (12), the department may use
1021     funds that have been appropriated for the health coverage improvement program to implement
1022     the enhancement waiver program.
1023          (10) If the department expands the state Medicaid program to the optional population,
1024     the department:
1025          (a) except as provided in Subsection (11), may not accept any new enrollees into the
1026     enhancement waiver program after the day on which the expansion to the optional population
1027     is effective;
1028          (b) shall suspend the enhancement waiver program within one year after the day on
1029     which the expansion to the optional population is effective; and
1030          (c) shall work with CMS to maintain the waiver for the enhancement waiver program
1031     submitted under Subsection (3) while the enhancement waiver program is suspended under
1032     Subsection (10)(b).
1033          (11) If, after the expansion to the optional population described in Subsection (10)
1034     takes effect, the expansion to the optional population is repealed by either the state or the
1035     federal government, the department shall reinstate the enhancement waiver program and
1036     continue to accept new enrollees into the enhancement waiver program in accordance with the
1037     provisions of this section.

1038          Section 19. Section 26-18-417 is amended to read:
1039          26-18-417. Limited family planning services for low-income individuals.
1040          (1) As used in this section:
1041          (a) (i) "Family planning services" means family planning services that are provided
1042     under the state Medicaid program, including:
1043          (A) sexual health education and family planning counseling; and
1044          (B) other medical diagnosis, treatment, or preventative care routinely provided as part
1045     of a family planning service visit.
1046          (ii) "Family planning services" do not include an abortion, as that term is defined in
1047     Section 76-7-301.
1048          (b) "Low-income individual" means an individual who:
1049          (i) has an income level that is equal to or below 95% of the federal poverty level; and
1050          (ii) does not qualify for full coverage under the Medicaid program.
1051          (2) Before July 1, 2018, the division shall apply for a Medicaid waiver or a state plan
1052     amendment with [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United States
1053     Department of Health and Human Services] CMS to:
1054          (a) offer a program that provides family planning services to low-income individuals;
1055     and
1056          (b) receive a federal match rate of 90% of state expenditures for family planning
1057     services provided under the waiver or state plan amendment.
1058          (3) If the waiver or state plan amendment described in Subsection (2) is approved, the
1059     department shall report to the Health and Human Services Interim Committee each year before
1060     November 30 while the waiver or state plan amendment is in effect regarding:
1061          (a) the number of qualified individuals served under the program;
1062          (b) the cost of the program; and
1063          (c) the effectiveness of the program, including:
1064          (i) any savings to the state Medicaid program from reductions in enrollment;
1065          (ii) any reduction in the number of abortions;

1066          (iii) any reduction in the number of unintended pregnancies;
1067          (iv) any reduction in the number of individuals requiring services from the Women,
1068     Infants, and Children Program established in 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1786; and
1069          (v) any other costs and benefits as a result of the program.
1070          Section 20. Section 26-18-418 is amended to read:
1071          26-18-418. Medicaid waiver for mental health crisis lines and mobile crisis
1072     outreach teams.
1073          (1) As used in this section:
1074          (a) "Local mental health crisis line" means the same as that term is defined in Section
1075     63C-18-102.
1076          (b) "Mental health crisis" means:
1077          (i) a mental health condition that manifests itself in an individual by symptoms of
1078     sufficient severity that a prudent layperson who possesses an average knowledge of mental
1079     health issues could reasonably expect the absence of immediate attention or intervention to
1080     result in:
1081          (A) serious danger to the individual's health or well-being; or
1082          (B) a danger to the health or well-being of others; or
1083          (ii) a mental health condition that, in the opinion of a mental health therapist or the
1084     therapist's designee, requires direct professional observation or the intervention of a mental
1085     health therapist.
1086          (c) (i) "Mental health crisis services" means direct mental health services and on-site
1087     intervention that a mobile crisis outreach team provides to an individual suffering from a
1088     mental health crisis, including the provision of safety and care plans, prolonged mental health
1089     services for up to 90 days, and referrals to other community resources.
1090          (ii) "Mental health crisis services" includes:
1091          (A) local mental health crisis lines; and
1092          (B) the statewide mental health crisis line.
1093          (d) "Mental health therapist" means the same as that term is defined in Section

1094     58-60-102.
1095          (e) "Mobile crisis outreach team" or "MCOT" means a mobile team of medical and
1096     mental health professionals that, in coordination with local law enforcement and emergency
1097     medical service personnel, provides mental health crisis services.
1098          (f) "Statewide mental health crisis line" means the same as that term is defined in
1099     Section 63C-18-102.
1100          (2) In consultation with the Department of Human Services and the Mental Health
1101     Crisis Line Commission created in Section 63C-18-202, the department shall develop a
1102     proposal to amend the state Medicaid plan to include mental health crisis services, including
1103     the statewide mental health crisis line, local mental health crisis lines, and mobile crisis
1104     outreach teams.
1105          (3) By January 1, 2019, the department shall apply for a Medicaid waiver with [the
1106     Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the United States Department of Health
1107     and Human Services] CMS, if necessary to implement, within the state Medicaid program, the
1108     mental health crisis services described in Subsection (2).
1109          Section 21. Section 26-18-501 is amended to read:
1110          26-18-501. Definitions.
1111          As used in this part:
1112          (1) "Certified program" means a nursing care facility program with Medicaid
1113     certification.
1114          (2) "Director" means the [director of the Division of Health Care Financing] state
1115     Medicaid director appointed under Section 26-18-2.2.
1116          (3) "Medicaid certification" means the right of a nursing care facility, as a provider of a
1117     nursing care facility program, to receive Medicaid reimbursement for a specified number of
1118     beds within the facility.
1119          (4) (a) "Nursing care facility" means the following facilities licensed by the department
1120     under Chapter 21, Health Care Facility Licensing and Inspection Act:
1121          (i) skilled nursing facilities;

1122          (ii) intermediate care facilities; and
1123          (iii) an intermediate care facility for people with an intellectual disability.
1124          (b) "Nursing care facility" does not mean a critical access hospital that meets the
1125     criteria of 42 U.S.C. 1395i-4(c)(2) (1998).
1126          (5) "Nursing care facility program" means the personnel, licenses, services, contracts
1127     and all other requirements that shall be met for a nursing care facility to be eligible for
1128     Medicaid certification under this part and division rule.
1129          (6) "Physical facility" means the buildings or other physical structures where a nursing
1130     care facility program is operated.
1131          (7) "Rural county" means a county with a population of less than 50,000, as determined
1132     by:
1133          (a) the most recent official census or census estimate of the United States Bureau of
1134     the Census; or
1135          (b) the most recent population estimate for the county from the Utah Population
1136     Committee, if a population figure for the county is not available under Subsection (7)(a).
1137          (8) "Service area" means the boundaries of the distinct geographic area served by a
1138     certified program as determined by the division in accordance with this part and division rule.
1139          (9) "Urban county" means a county that is not a rural county.
1140          Section 22. Section 26-18-503 is amended to read:
1141          26-18-503. Authorization to renew, transfer, or increase Medicaid certified
1142     programs -- Reimbursement methodology.
1143          (1) (a) The division may renew Medicaid certification of a certified program if the
1144     program, without lapse in service to Medicaid recipients, has its nursing care facility program
1145     certified by the division at the same physical facility as long as the licensed and certified bed
1146     capacity at the facility has not been expanded, unless the director has approved additional beds
1147     in accordance with Subsection (5).
1148          (b) The division may renew Medicaid certification of a nursing care facility program
1149     that is not currently certified if:

1150          (i) since the day on which the program last operated with Medicaid certification:
1151          (A) the physical facility where the program operated has functioned solely and
1152     continuously as a nursing care facility; and
1153          (B) the owner of the program has not, under this section or Section 26-18-505,
1154     transferred to another nursing care facility program the license for any of the Medicaid beds in
1155     the program; and
1156          (ii) the number of beds granted renewed Medicaid certification does not exceed the
1157     number of beds certified at the time the program last operated with Medicaid certification,
1158     excluding a period of time where the program operated with temporary certification under
1159     Subsection 26-18-504[(4)](3).
1160          (2) (a) The division may issue a Medicaid certification for a new nursing care facility
1161     program if a current owner of the Medicaid certified program transfers its ownership of the
1162     Medicaid certification to the new nursing care facility program and the new nursing care
1163     facility program meets all of the following conditions:
1164          (i) the new nursing care facility program operates at the same physical facility as the
1165     previous Medicaid certified program;
1166          (ii) the new nursing care facility program gives a written assurance to the director in
1167     accordance with Subsection (4);
1168          (iii) the new nursing care facility program receives the Medicaid certification within
1169     one year of the date the previously certified program ceased to provide medical assistance to a
1170     Medicaid recipient; and
1171          (iv) the licensed and certified bed capacity at the facility has not been expanded, unless
1172     the director has approved additional beds in accordance with Subsection (5).
1173          (b) A nursing care facility program that receives Medicaid certification under the
1174     provisions of Subsection (2)(a) does not assume the Medicaid liabilities of the previous nursing
1175     care facility program if the new nursing care facility program:
1176          (i) is not owned in whole or in part by the previous nursing care facility program; or
1177          (ii) is not a successor in interest of the previous nursing care facility program.

1178          (3) The division may issue a Medicaid certification to a nursing care facility program
1179     that was previously a certified program but now resides in a new or renovated physical facility
1180     if the nursing care facility program meets all of the following:
1181          (a) the nursing care facility program met all applicable requirements for Medicaid
1182     certification at the time of closure;
1183          (b) the new or renovated physical facility is in the same county or within a five-mile
1184     radius of the original physical facility;
1185          (c) the time between which the certified program ceased to operate in the original
1186     facility and will begin to operate in the new physical facility is not more than three years;
1187          (d) if Subsection (3)(c) applies, the certified program notifies the department within 90
1188     days after ceasing operations in its original facility, of its intent to retain its Medicaid
1189     certification;
1190          (e) the provider gives written assurance to the director in accordance with Subsection
1191     (4) that no third party has a legitimate claim to operate a certified program at the previous
1192     physical facility; and
1193          (f) the bed capacity in the physical facility has not been expanded unless the director
1194     has approved additional beds in accordance with Subsection (5).
1195          (4) (a) The entity requesting Medicaid certification under Subsections (2) and (3) shall
1196     give written assurances satisfactory to the director or the director's designee that:
1197          (i) no third party has a legitimate claim to operate the certified program;
1198          (ii) the requesting entity agrees to defend and indemnify the department against any
1199     claims by a third party who may assert a right to operate the certified program; and
1200          (iii) if a third party is found, by final agency action of the department after exhaustion
1201     of all administrative and judicial appeal rights, to be entitled to operate a certified program at
1202     the physical facility the certified program shall voluntarily comply with Subsection (4)(b).
1203          (b) If a finding is made under the provisions of Subsection (4)(a)(iii):
1204          (i) the certified program shall immediately surrender its Medicaid certification and
1205     comply with division rules regarding billing for Medicaid and the provision of services to

1206     Medicaid patients; and
1207          (ii) the department shall transfer the surrendered Medicaid certification to the third
1208     party who prevailed under Subsection (4)(a)(iii).
1209          (5) (a) As provided in Subsection 26-18-502(2)(b), the director may approve additional
1210     nursing care facility programs for Medicaid certification, or additional beds for Medicaid
1211     certification within an existing nursing care facility program, if a nursing care facility or other
1212     interested party requests Medicaid certification for a nursing care facility program or additional
1213     beds within an existing nursing care facility program, and the nursing care facility program or
1214     other interested party complies with this section.
1215          (b) The nursing care facility or other interested party requesting Medicaid certification
1216     for a nursing care facility program or additional beds within an existing nursing care facility
1217     program under Subsection (5)(a) shall submit to the director:
1218          (i) proof of the following as reasonable evidence that bed capacity provided by
1219     Medicaid certified programs within the county or group of counties impacted by the requested
1220     additional Medicaid certification is insufficient:
1221          (A) nursing care facility occupancy levels for all existing and proposed facilities will
1222     be at least 90% for the next three years;
1223          (B) current nursing care facility occupancy is 90% or more; or
1224          (C) there is no other nursing care facility within a 35-mile radius of the nursing care
1225     facility requesting the additional certification; and
1226          (ii) an independent analysis demonstrating that at projected occupancy rates the nursing
1227     care facility's after-tax net income is sufficient for the facility to be financially viable.
1228          (c) Any request for additional beds as part of a renovation project are limited to the
1229     maximum number of beds allowed in Subsection (7).
1230          (d) The director shall determine whether to issue additional Medicaid certification by
1231     considering:
1232          (i) whether bed capacity provided by certified programs within the county or group of
1233     counties impacted by the requested additional Medicaid certification is insufficient, based on

1234     the information submitted to the director under Subsection (5)(b);
1235          (ii) whether the county or group of counties impacted by the requested additional
1236     Medicaid certification is underserved by specialized or unique services that would be provided
1237     by the nursing care facility;
1238          (iii) whether any Medicaid certified beds are subject to a claim by a previous certified
1239     program that may reopen under the provisions of Subsections (2) and (3);
1240          (iv) how additional bed capacity should be added to the long-term care delivery system
1241     to best meet the needs of Medicaid recipients; and
1242          (v) (A) whether the existing certified programs within the county or group of counties
1243     have provided services of sufficient quality to merit at least a two-star rating in the Medicare
1244     Five-Star Quality Rating System over the previous three-year period; and
1245          (B) information obtained under Subsection (9).
1246          (6) The department shall adopt administrative rules in accordance with Title 63G,
1247     Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act, to adjust the Medicaid nursing care facility
1248     property reimbursement methodology to:
1249          (a) only pay that portion of the property component of rates, representing actual bed
1250     usage by Medicaid clients as a percentage of the greater of:
1251          (i) actual occupancy; or
1252          (ii) (A) for a nursing care facility other than a facility described in Subsection
1253     (6)(a)(ii)(B), 85% of total bed capacity; or
1254          (B) for a rural nursing care facility, 65% of total bed capacity; and
1255          (b) not allow for increases in reimbursement for property values without major
1256     renovation or replacement projects as defined by the department by rule.
1257          (7) (a) Notwithstanding Subsection 26-18-504[(4)](3), if a nursing care facility does
1258     not seek Medicaid certification for a bed under Subsections (1) through (6), the department
1259     shall grant Medicaid certification for additional beds in an existing Medicaid certified nursing
1260     care facility that has 90 or fewer licensed beds, including Medicaid certified beds, in the facility
1261     if:

1262          (i) the nursing care facility program was previously a certified program for all beds but
1263     now resides in a new facility or in a facility that underwent major renovations involving major
1264     structural changes, with 50% or greater facility square footage design changes, requiring review
1265     and approval by the department;
1266          (ii) the nursing care facility meets the quality of care regulations issued by [the Center
1267     for Medicare and Medicaid Services] CMS; and
1268          (iii) the total number of additional beds in the facility granted Medicaid certification
1269     under this section does not exceed 10% of the number of licensed beds in the facility.
1270          (b) The department may not revoke the Medicaid certification of a bed under this
1271     Subsection (7) as long as the provisions of Subsection (7)(a)(ii) are met.
1272          (8) (a) If a nursing care facility or other interested party indicates in its request for
1273     additional Medicaid certification under Subsection (5)(a) that the facility will offer specialized
1274     or unique services, but the facility does not offer those services after receiving additional
1275     Medicaid certification, the director shall revoke the additional Medicaid certification.
1276          (b) The nursing care facility program shall obtain Medicaid certification for any
1277     additional Medicaid beds approved under Subsection (5) or (7) within three years of the date of
1278     the director's approval, or the approval is void.
1279          (9) (a) If the director makes an initial determination that quality standards under
1280     Subsection (5)(d)(v) have not been met in a rural county or group of rural counties over the
1281     previous three-year period, the director shall, before approving certification of additional
1282     Medicaid beds in the rural county or group of counties:
1283          (i) notify the certified program that has not met the quality standards in Subsection
1284     (5)(d)(v) that the director intends to certify additional Medicaid beds under the provisions of
1285     Subsection (5)(d)(v); and
1286          (ii) consider additional information submitted to the director by the certified program
1287     in a rural county that has not met the quality standards under Subsection (5)(d)(v).
1288          (b) The notice under Subsection (9)(a) does not give the certified program that has not
1289     met the quality standards under Subsection (5)(d)(v), the right to legally challenge or appeal the

1290     director's decision to certify additional Medicaid beds under Subsection (5)(d)(v).
1291          Section 23. Section 26-36b-202 is amended to read:
1292          26-36b-202. Collection of assessment -- Deposit of revenue -- Rulemaking.
1293          (1) The collecting agent for the assessment imposed under Section 26-36b-201 is the
1294     department.
1295          (2) The department is vested with the administration and enforcement of this chapter,
1296     and may make rules in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking
1297     Act, necessary to:
1298          (a) collect the assessment, intergovernmental transfers, and penalties imposed under
1299     this chapter;
1300          (b) audit records of a facility that:
1301          (i) is subject to the assessment imposed by this chapter; and
1302          (ii) does not file a Medicare cost report; and
1303          (c) select a report similar to the Medicare cost report if Medicare no longer uses a
1304     Medicare cost report.
1305          (3) The department shall:
1306          (a) administer the assessment in this chapter separately from the assessment in Chapter
1307     [36a] 36d, Hospital Provider Assessment Act; and
1308          (b) deposit assessments collected under this chapter into the Medicaid Expansion Fund
1309     created by Section 26-36b-208.
1310          Section 24. Section 26-36b-208 is amended to read:
1311          26-36b-208. Medicaid Expansion Fund.
1312          (1) There is created an expendable special revenue fund known as the Medicaid
1313     Expansion Fund.
1314          (2) The fund consists of:
1315          (a) assessments collected under this chapter;
1316          (b) intergovernmental transfers under Section 26-36b-206;
1317          (c) savings attributable to the health coverage improvement program as determined by

1318     the department;
1319          (d) savings attributable to the enhancement waiver program as determined by the
1320     department;
1321          (e) savings attributable to the Medicaid waiver expansion as determined by the
1322     department;
1323          (f) savings attributable to the inclusion of psychotropic drugs on the preferred drug list
1324     under Subsection 26-18-2.4(3) as determined by the department;
1325          [(g) savings attributable to the services provided by the Public Employees' Health Plan
1326     under Subsection 49-20-401(1)(u);]
1327          [(h)] (g) gifts, grants, donations, or any other conveyance of money that may be made
1328     to the fund from private sources;
1329          [(i)] (h) interest earned on money in the fund; and
1330          [(j)] (i) additional amounts as appropriated by the Legislature.
1331          (3) (a) The fund shall earn interest.
1332          (b) All interest earned on fund money shall be deposited into the fund.
1333          (4) (a) A state agency administering the provisions of this chapter may use money from
1334     the fund to pay the costs, not otherwise paid for with federal funds or other revenue sources, of:
1335          (i) the health coverage improvement program;
1336          (ii) the enhancement waiver program;
1337          (iii) the Medicaid waiver expansion; and
1338          (iv) the outpatient upper payment limit supplemental payments under Section
1339     26-36b-210.
1340          (b) A state agency administering the provisions of this chapter may not use:
1341          (i) funds described in Subsection (2)(b) to pay the cost of private outpatient upper
1342     payment limit supplemental payments; or
1343          (ii) money in the fund for any purpose not described in Subsection (4)(a).
1344          Section 25. Section 26-36c-202 is amended to read:
1345          26-36c-202. Collection of assessment -- Deposit of revenue -- Rulemaking.

1346          (1) The department shall act as the collecting agent for the assessment imposed under
1347     Section 26-36c-201.
1348          (2) The department shall administer and enforce the provisions of this chapter, and may
1349     make rules, in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act,
1350     necessary to:
1351          (a) collect the assessment, intergovernmental transfers, and penalties imposed under
1352     this chapter;
1353          (b) audit records of a facility that:
1354          (i) is subject to the assessment imposed under this chapter; and
1355          (ii) does not file a Medicare cost report; and
1356          (c) select a report similar to the Medicare cost report if Medicare no longer uses a
1357     Medicare cost report.
1358          (3) The department shall:
1359          (a) administer the assessment in this part separately from the assessments in Chapter
1360     [36a] 36d, Hospital Provider Assessment Act, and Chapter 36b, Inpatient Hospital Assessment
1361     Act; and
1362          (b) deposit assessments collected under this chapter into the Medicaid Expansion Fund.
1363          (4) (a) Hospitals shall pay the quarterly assessments imposed by this chapter to the
1364     division within 15 business days after the original invoice date that appears on the invoice
1365     issued by the division.
1366          (b) The department may make rules creating requirements to allow the time for paying
1367     the assessment to be extended.
1368          Section 26. Section 26-40-102 is amended to read:
1369          26-40-102. Definitions.
1370          As used in this chapter:
1371          (1) "Child" means a person who is under 19 years of age.
1372          (2) "Eligible child" means a child who qualifies for enrollment in the program as
1373     provided in Section 26-40-105.

1374          (3) ["Enrollee] "Member" means [any] a child enrolled in the program.
1375          (4) "Plan" means the department's plan submitted to the United States Department of
1376     Health and Human Services pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1397ff.
1377          (5) "Program" means the Utah Children's Health Insurance Program created by this
1378     chapter.
1379          Section 27. Section 26-40-103 is amended to read:
1380          26-40-103. Creation and administration of the Utah Children's Health Insurance
1381     Program.
1382          (1) There is created the Utah Children's Health Insurance Program to be administered
1383     by the department in accordance with the provisions of:
1384          (a) this chapter; and
1385          (b) the State Children's Health Insurance Program, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1397aa et seq.
1386          (2) The department shall:
1387          (a) prepare and submit the state's children's health insurance plan before May 1, 1998,
1388     and any amendments to the federal Department of Health and Human Services in accordance
1389     with 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1397ff; and
1390          (b) make rules in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative
1391     Rulemaking Act regarding:
1392          (i) eligibility requirements consistent with Section 26-18-3;
1393          (ii) program benefits;
1394          (iii) the level of coverage for each program benefit;
1395          (iv) cost-sharing requirements for [enrollees] members, which may not:
1396          (A) exceed the guidelines set forth in 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1397ee; or
1397          (B) impose deductible, copayment, or coinsurance requirements on [an enrollee] a
1398     member for well-child, well-baby, and immunizations;
1399          (v) the administration of the program; and
1400          (vi) a requirement that:
1401          (A) [enrollees] members in the program shall participate in the electronic exchange of

1402     clinical health records established in accordance with Section 26-1-37 unless the [enrollee]
1403     member opts out of participation;
1404          (B) prior to enrollment in the electronic exchange of clinical health records the
1405     [enrollee] member shall receive notice of the enrollment in the electronic exchange of clinical
1406     health records and the right to opt out of participation at any time; and
1407          (C) beginning July 1, 2012, when the program sends enrollment or renewal information
1408     to the [enrollee] member and when the [enrollee] member logs onto the program's website, the
1409     [enrollee] member shall receive notice of the right to opt out of the electronic exchange of
1410     clinical health records.
1411          Section 28. Section 26-40-105 is amended to read:
1412          26-40-105. Eligibility.
1413          (1) A child is eligible to enroll in the program if the child:
1414          (a) is a bona fide Utah resident;
1415          (b) is a citizen or legal resident of the United States;
1416          (c) is under 19 years of age;
1417          (d) does not have access to or coverage under other health insurance, including any
1418     coverage available through a parent or legal guardian's employer;
1419          (e) is ineligible for Medicaid benefits;
1420          (f) resides in a household whose gross family income, as defined by rule, is at or below
1421     200% of the federal poverty level; and
1422          (g) is not an inmate of a public institution or a patient in an institution for mental
1423     diseases.
1424          (2) A child who qualifies for enrollment in the program under Subsection (1) may not
1425     be denied enrollment due to a diagnosis or pre-existing condition.
1426          (3) (a) The department shall determine eligibility and send notification of the eligibility
1427     decision within 30 days after receiving the application for coverage.
1428          (b) If the department cannot reach a decision because the applicant fails to take a
1429     required action, or because there is an administrative or other emergency beyond the

1430     department's control, the department shall:
1431          (i) document the reason for the delay in the applicant's case record; and
1432          (ii) inform the applicant of the status of the application and time frame for completion.
1433          (4) The department may not close enrollment in the program for a child who is eligible
1434     to enroll in the program under the provisions of Subsection (1).
1435          (5) [(a)] The program shall:
1436          [(i)] (a) apply for grants to make technology system improvements necessary to
1437     implement a simplified enrollment and renewal process in accordance with [this] Subsection
1438     (5)(b); and
1439          [(ii)] (b) if funding is available, implement [the] a simplified enrollment and renewal
1440     process [in accordance with this Subsection (5)].
1441          [(b) The simplified enrollment and renewal process:]
1442          [(i) shall, in accordance with Section 59-1-403, provide an eligibility worker a process
1443     in which the eligibility worker:]
1444          [(A) verifies the applicant's identity;]
1445          [(B) gets consent to obtain the applicant's adjusted gross income from the State Tax
1446     Commission from:]
1447          [(I) the applicant, if the applicant filed a single tax return; or]
1448          [(II) both parties to a joint return, if the applicant filed a joint tax return; and]
1449          [(C) obtains from the Utah State Tax Commission, the adjusted gross income of the
1450     applicant; and]
1451          [(ii) may not change the eligibility requirements for the program.]
1452          Section 29. Section 26-40-106 is amended to read:
1453          26-40-106. Program benefits.
1454          (1) Except as provided in Subsection [(4)] (3), medical and dental program benefits
1455     shall be benchmarked, in accordance with 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1397cc, [to be actuarially equivalent]
1456     as follows:
1457          (a) medical program benefits, including behavioral health care benefits, shall be

1458     benchmarked on July 1, 2019, and on July 1 every third year thereafter, to:
1459          (i) be substantially equal to a health benefit plan with the largest insured commercial
1460     enrollment offered by a health maintenance organization in the state[.]; and
1461          (ii) comply with the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, Pub. L. No.
1462     110-343; and
1463          [(2) Except as provided in Subsection (4):]
1464          [(a) medical program benefits may not exceed the benefit level described in Subsection
1465     (1); and]
1466          [(b) medical program benefits shall be adjusted every July 1 to meet the benefit level
1467     described in Subsection (1).]
1468          [(3) The dental benefit plan shall be benchmarked,]
1469          (b) dental program benefits shall be benchmarked on July 1, 2019, and on July 1 every
1470     third year thereafter in accordance with the Children's Health Insurance Program
1471     Reauthorization Act of 2009, to be [equivalent] substantially equal to a dental benefit plan that
1472     has the largest insured, commercial, non-Medicaid enrollment of covered lives that is offered in
1473     the state, except that the utilization review mechanism for orthodontia shall be based on
1474     medical necessity. [Dental program benefits shall be adjusted on July 1, 2012, and on July 1
1475     every three years thereafter to meet the benefit level required by this Subsection (3).]
1476          (2) On or before January 31 of each year, the department shall publish the benchmark
1477     for dental program benefits established under Subsection (1)(b).
1478          [(4)] (3) The program benefits for enrollees who are at or below 100% of the federal
1479     poverty level are exempt from the benchmark requirements of Subsections (1) and (2).
1480          Section 30. Section 26-40-110 is amended to read:
1481          26-40-110. Managed care -- Contracting for services.
1482          (1) Program benefits provided to [enrollees] a member under the program, as described
1483     in Section 26-40-106, shall be delivered by a managed care organization if the department
1484     determines that adequate services are available where the [enrollee] member lives or resides.
1485          (2) The department may contract with a managed care organization to provide program

1486     benefits. The department shall [use the following criteria to] evaluate a potential contract with
1487     a managed care organization based on:
1488          (a) the managed care organization's:
1489          (i) ability to manage medical expenses, including mental health costs;
1490          (ii) proven ability to handle accident and health insurance;
1491          (iii) efficiency of claim paying procedures;
1492          (iv) proven ability for managed care and quality assurance;
1493          (v) provider contracting and discounts;
1494          (vi) pharmacy benefit management;
1495          (vii) estimated total charges for administering the pool;
1496          (viii) ability to administer the pool in a cost-efficient manner;
1497          (ix) ability to provide adequate providers and services in the state; and
1498          (x) ability to meet quality measures for emergency room use and access to primary care
1499     established by the department under Subsection 26-18-408(4); and
1500          (b) other [criteria] factors established by the department.
1501          (3) The department may enter into separate managed care organization contracts to
1502     provide dental benefits required by Section 26-40-106.
1503          (4) The department's contract with a [health or dental plan] managed care organization
1504     for the program's benefits shall include risk sharing provisions in which the plan shall accept at
1505     least 75% of the risk for any difference between the department's premium payments per
1506     [client] member and actual medical expenditures.
1507          (5) (a) The department may contract with the Group Insurance Division within the
1508     Utah State Retirement Office to provide services under Subsection (1) if no [other health or
1509     dental plan] managed care organization is willing to contract with the department or the
1510     department determines no [other plan] managed care organization meets the criteria established
1511     under Subsection (2).
1512          (b) In accordance with Section 49-20-201, a contract awarded under Subsection (5)(a)
1513     is not subject to the risk sharing required by Subsection (4).

1514          Section 31. Section 26-40-115 is amended to read:
1515          26-40-115. State contractor -- Employee and dependent health benefit plan
1516     coverage.
1517          (1) For purposes of Sections 17B-2a-818.5, 19-1-206, 63A-5-205.5, 63C-9-403,
1518     72-6-107.5, and 79-2-404, "qualified health insurance coverage" means, at the time the contract
1519     is entered into or renewed:
1520          (a) a health benefit plan and employer contribution level with a combined actuarial
1521     value at least actuarially equivalent to the combined actuarial value of the benchmark plan
1522     determined by the program under Subsection 26-40-106(1)(a), and a contribution level at
1523     which the employer pays at least 50% of the premium for the employee and the dependents of
1524     the employee who reside or work in the state; or
1525          (b) a federally qualified high deductible health plan that, at a minimum:
1526          (i) has a deductible that is:
1527          (A) the lowest deductible permitted for a federally qualified high deductible health
1528     plan; or
1529          (B) a deductible that is higher than the lowest deductible permitted for a federally
1530     qualified high deductible health plan, but includes an employer contribution to a health savings
1531     account in a dollar amount at least equal to the dollar amount difference between the lowest
1532     deductible permitted for a federally qualified high deductible plan and the deductible for the
1533     employer offered federally qualified high deductible plan;
1534          (ii) has an out-of-pocket maximum that does not exceed three times the amount of the
1535     annual deductible; and
1536          (iii) provides that the employer pays 60% of the premium for the employee and the
1537     dependents of the employee who work or reside in the state.
1538          (2) The department shall:
1539          (a) on or before July 1, 2016:
1540          (i) determine the commercial equivalent of the benchmark plan described in Subsection
1541     (1)(a); and

1542          (ii) post the commercially equivalent benchmark plan described in Subsection (2)(a)(i)
1543     on the department's website, noting the date posted; and
1544          (b) update the posted commercially equivalent benchmark plan annually and at the
1545     time of any change in the benchmark.
1546          Section 32. Section 26-40-116 is amended to read:
1547          26-40-116. Program to encourage appropriate emergency room use -- Application
1548     for waivers.
1549          The program is subject to the provisions of Section 26-18-408 and shall apply for
1550     waivers in accordance with Subsection 26-18-408[(5)](4)(c).
1551          Section 33. Section 49-20-401 is amended to read:
1552          49-20-401. Program -- Powers and duties.
1553          (1) The program shall:
1554          (a) act as a self-insurer of employee benefit plans and administer those plans;
1555          (b) enter into contracts with private insurers or carriers to underwrite employee benefit
1556     plans as considered appropriate by the program;
1557          (c) indemnify employee benefit plans or purchase commercial reinsurance as
1558     considered appropriate by the program;
1559          (d) provide descriptions of all employee benefit plans under this chapter in cooperation
1560     with covered employers;
1561          (e) process claims for all employee benefit plans under this chapter or enter into
1562     contracts, after competitive bids are taken, with other benefit administrators to provide for the
1563     administration of the claims process;
1564          (f) obtain an annual actuarial review of all health and dental benefit plans and a
1565     periodic review of all other employee benefit plans;
1566          (g) consult with the covered employers to evaluate employee benefit plans and develop
1567     recommendations for benefit changes;
1568          (h) annually submit a budget and audited financial statements to the governor and
1569     Legislature which includes total projected benefit costs and administrative costs;

1570          (i) maintain reserves sufficient to liquidate the unrevealed claims liability and other
1571     liabilities of the employee benefit plans as certified by the program's consulting actuary;
1572          (j) submit, in advance, its recommended benefit adjustments for state employees to:
1573          (i) the Legislature; and
1574          (ii) the executive director of the state Department of Human Resource Management;
1575          (k) determine benefits and rates, upon approval of the board, for [multiemployer]
1576     multi-employer risk pools, retiree coverage, and conversion coverage;
1577          (l) determine benefits and rates based on the total estimated costs and the employee
1578     premium share established by the Legislature, upon approval of the board, for state employees;
1579          (m) administer benefits and rates, upon ratification of the board, for [single employer]
1580     single-employer risk pools;
1581          (n) request proposals for provider networks or health and dental benefit plans
1582     administered by [third party] third-party carriers at least once every three years for the purposes
1583     of:
1584          (i) stimulating competition for the benefit of covered individuals;
1585          (ii) establishing better geographical distribution of medical care services; and
1586          (iii) providing coverage for both active and retired covered individuals;
1587          (o) offer proposals which meet the criteria specified in a request for proposals and
1588     accepted by the program to active and retired state covered individuals and which may be
1589     offered to active and retired covered individuals of other covered employers at the option of the
1590     covered employer;
1591          (p) perform the same functions established in Subsections (1)(a), (b), (e), and (h) for
1592     the Department of Health if the program provides program benefits to children enrolled in the
1593     Utah Children's Health Insurance Program created in Title 26, Chapter 40, Utah Children's
1594     Health Insurance Act;
1595          (q) establish rules and procedures governing the admission of political subdivisions or
1596     educational institutions and their employees to the program;
1597          (r) contract directly with medical providers to provide services for covered individuals;

1598          (s) take additional actions necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes of this
1599     chapter;
1600          (t) (i) require state employees and their dependents to participate in the electronic
1601     exchange of clinical health records in accordance with Section 26-1-37 unless the enrollee opts
1602     out of participation; and
1603          (ii) prior to enrolling the state employee, each time the state employee logs onto the
1604     program's website, and each time the enrollee receives written enrollment information from the
1605     program, provide notice to the enrollee of the enrollee's participation in the electronic exchange
1606     of clinical health records and the option to opt out of participation at any time; and
1607          (u) [provide services for drugs or medical devices] at the request of a procurement unit,
1608     as that term is defined in Section 63G-6a-103, that administers benefits to program recipients
1609     who are not covered by Title 26, Utah Health Code[.], provide services for:
1610          (i) drugs;
1611          (ii) medical devices; or
1612          (iii) other types of medical care.
1613          (2) (a) Funds budgeted and expended shall accrue from rates paid by the covered
1614     employers and covered individuals.
1615          (b) Administrative costs shall be approved by the board and reported to the governor
1616     and the Legislature.
1617          (3) The Department of Human Resource Management shall include the benefit
1618     adjustments described in Subsection (1)(j) in the total compensation plan recommended to the
1619     governor required under Subsection 67-19-12(5)(a).
1620          Section 34. Section 58-60-205 is amended to read:
1621          58-60-205. Qualifications for licensure or certification as a clinical social worker,
1622     certified social worker, and social service worker.
1623          (1) An applicant for licensure as a clinical social worker shall:
1624          (a) submit an application on a form provided by the division;
1625          (b) pay a fee determined by the department under Section 63J-1-504;

1626          (c) be of good moral character;
1627          (d) produce certified transcripts from an accredited institution of higher education
1628     recognized by the division in collaboration with the board verifying satisfactory completion of
1629     an education and an earned degree as follows:
1630          (i) a master's degree in a social work program accredited by the Council on Social
1631     Work Education or by the Canadian Association of Schools of Social Work; or
1632          (ii) a doctoral degree that contains a clinical social work concentration and practicum
1633     approved by the division, by rule, in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
1634     Administrative Rulemaking Act, that is consistent with Section 58-1-203;
1635          (e) have completed a minimum of 4,000 hours of clinical social work training as
1636     defined by division rule under Section 58-1-203:
1637          (i) in not less than two years;
1638          (ii) under the supervision of a [clinical social worker] supervisor approved by the
1639     division in collaboration with the board who is a:
1640          (A) clinical mental health counselor;
1641          (B) psychiatrist;
1642          (C) psychologist;
1643          (D) registered psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner;
1644          (E) marriage and family therapist; or
1645          (F) clinical social worker; and
1646          (iii) including a minimum of two hours of training in suicide prevention via a course
1647     that the division designates as approved;
1648          (f) document successful completion of not less than 1,000 hours of supervised training
1649     in mental health therapy obtained after completion of the education requirement in Subsection
1650     (1)(d), which training may be included as part of the 4,000 hours of training in Subsection
1651     (1)(e), and of which documented evidence demonstrates not less than 100 of the hours were
1652     obtained under the direct supervision [of a clinical social worker], as defined by rule, of a
1653     supervisor described in Subsection (1)(e)(ii);

1654          (g) have completed a case work, group work, or family treatment course sequence with
1655     a clinical practicum in content as defined by rule under Section 58-1-203; and
1656          (h) pass the examination requirement established by rule under Section 58-1-203.
1657          (2) An applicant for licensure as a certified social worker shall:
1658          (a) submit an application on a form provided by the division;
1659          (b) pay a fee determined by the department under Section 63J-1-504;
1660          (c) be of good moral character;
1661          (d) produce certified transcripts from an accredited institution of higher education
1662     recognized by the division in collaboration with the board verifying satisfactory completion of
1663     an education and an earned degree as follows:
1664          (i) a master's degree in a social work program accredited by the Council on Social
1665     Work Education or by the Canadian Association of Schools of Social Work; or
1666          (ii) a doctoral degree that contains a clinical social work concentration and practicum
1667     approved by the division, by rule, in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
1668     Administrative Rulemaking Act, that is consistent with Section 58-1-203; and
1669          (e) pass the examination requirement established by rule under Section 58-1-203.
1670          (3) (a) An applicant for certification as a certified social worker intern shall meet the
1671     requirements of Subsections (2)(a), (b), (c), and (d).
1672          (b) Certification under Subsection (3)(a) is limited to the time necessary to pass the
1673     examination required under Subsection (2)(e) or six months, whichever occurs first.
1674          (c) A certified social worker intern may provide mental health therapy under the
1675     general supervision [of a clinical social worker], as defined by rule, of a supervisor described in
1676     Subsection (1)(e)(ii).
1677          (4) An applicant for licensure as a social service worker shall:
1678          (a) submit an application on a form provided by the division;
1679          (b) pay a fee determined by the department under Section 63J-1-504;
1680          (c) be of good moral character;
1681          (d) produce certified transcripts from an accredited institution of higher education

1682     recognized by the division in collaboration with the board verifying satisfactory completion of
1683     an education and an earned degree as follows:
1684          (i) a bachelor's degree in a social work program accredited by the Council on Social
1685     Work Education or by the Canadian Association of Schools of Social Work;
1686          (ii) a master's degree in a field approved by the division in collaboration with the
1687     board;
1688          (iii) a bachelor's degree in any field if the applicant:
1689          (A) has completed at least three semester hours, or the equivalent, in each of the
1690     following areas:
1691          (I) social welfare policy;
1692          (II) human growth and development; and
1693          (III) social work practice methods, as defined by rule; and
1694          (B) provides documentation that the applicant has completed at least 2,000 hours of
1695     qualifying experience under the supervision of a mental health therapist, which experience is
1696     approved by the division in collaboration with the board, and which is performed after
1697     completion of the requirements to obtain the bachelor's degree required under this Subsection
1698     (4); or
1699          (iv) successful completion of the first academic year of a Council on Social Work
1700     Education approved master's of social work curriculum and practicum; and
1701          (e) pass the examination requirement established by rule under Section 58-1-203.
1702          (5) The division shall ensure that the rules for an examination described under
1703     Subsections (1)(h), (2)(e), and (4)(e) allow additional time to complete the examination if
1704     requested by an applicant who is:
1705          (a) a foreign born legal resident of the United States for whom English is a second
1706     language; or
1707          (b) an enrolled member of a federally recognized Native American tribe.
1708          Section 35. Section 58-60-207 is amended to read:
1709          58-60-207. Scope of practice -- Limitations.

1710          (1) (a) A clinical social worker may engage in all acts and practices defined as the
1711     practice of clinical social work without supervision, in private and independent practice, or as
1712     an employee of another person, limited only by the licensee's education, training, and
1713     competence.
1714          (b) A clinical social worker may not supervise more than six individuals who are
1715     lawfully engaged in training for the practice of mental health therapy, unless granted an
1716     exception in writing from the division in collaboration with the board.
1717          (2) To the extent an individual is professionally prepared by the education and training
1718     track completed while earning a master's or doctor of social work degree, a licensed certified
1719     social worker may engage in all acts and practices defined as the practice of certified social
1720     work consistent with the licensee's education, clinical training, experience, and competence:
1721          (a) under supervision of [a clinical social worker] an individual described in
1722     Subsection 58-60-205(1)(e)(ii) and as an employee of another person when engaged in the
1723     practice of mental health therapy;
1724          (b) without supervision and in private and independent practice or as an employee of
1725     another person, if not engaged in the practice of mental health therapy;
1726          (c) including engaging in the private, independent, unsupervised practice of social
1727     work as a self-employed individual, in partnership with other [licensed clinical or certified
1728     social workers] mental health therapists, as a professional corporation, or in any other capacity
1729     or business entity, so long as he does not practice unsupervised psychotherapy; and
1730          (d) supervising social service workers as provided by division rule.
1731          Section 36. Section 58-60-305 is amended to read:
1732          58-60-305. Qualifications for licensure.
1733          (1) All applicants for licensure as marriage and family therapists shall:
1734          (a) submit an application on a form provided by the division;
1735          (b) pay a fee determined by the department under Section 63J-1-504;
1736          (c) be of good moral character;
1737          (d) produce certified transcripts evidencing completion of a masters or doctorate degree

1738     in marriage and family therapy from:
1739          (i) a program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family
1740     Therapy Education; or
1741          (ii) an accredited institution meeting criteria for approval established by rule under
1742     Section 58-1-203;
1743          (e) have completed a minimum of 4,000 hours of marriage and family therapy training
1744     as defined by division rule under Section 58-1-203:
1745          (i) in not less than two years;
1746          (ii) under the supervision of a [marriage and family] mental health therapist supervisor
1747     who meets the requirements of Section 58-60-307;
1748          (iii) obtained after completion of the education requirement in Subsection (1)(d); and
1749          (iv) including a minimum of two hours of training in suicide prevention via a course
1750     that the division designates as approved;
1751          (f) document successful completion of not less than 1,000 hours of supervised training
1752     in mental health therapy obtained after completion of the education requirement described in
1753     Subsection (1)(d)(i) or (1)(d)(ii), which training may be included as part of the 4,000 hours of
1754     training described in Subsection (1)(e), and of which documented evidence demonstrates not
1755     less than 100 of the supervised hours were obtained during direct, personal supervision, as
1756     defined by rule, by a [marriage and family] mental health therapist supervisor qualified under
1757     Section 58-60-307[, as defined by rule]; and
1758          (g) pass the examination requirement established by division rule under Section
1759     58-1-203.
1760          (2) (a) All applicants for licensure as an associate marriage and family therapist shall
1761     comply with the provisions of Subsections (1)(a), (b), (c), and (d).
1762          (b) An individual's license as an associate marriage and family therapist is limited to
1763     the period of time necessary to complete clinical training as described in Subsections (1)(e) and
1764     (f) and extends not more than one year from the date the minimum requirement for training is
1765     completed, unless the individual presents satisfactory evidence to the division and the

1766     appropriate board that the individual is making reasonable progress toward passing of the
1767     qualifying examination for that profession or is otherwise on a course reasonably expected to
1768     lead to licensure, but the period of time under this Subsection (2)(b) may not exceed two years
1769     past the date the minimum supervised clinical training requirement has been completed.
1770          Section 37. Section 58-60-307 is amended to read:
1771          58-60-307. Supervisors of marriage and family therapists -- Qualifications.
1772          (1) Each person acting as a supervisor of a marriage and family therapist [supervisor]
1773     shall:
1774          (a) have at least two years of clinical experience [as a marriage and family therapist],
1775     since the date of first licensure, as a [marriage and family therapist; and]:
1776          (i) clinical mental health counselor;
1777          (ii) psychiatrist;
1778          (iii) psychologist;
1779          (iv) registered psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner;
1780          (v) marriage and family therapist; or
1781          (vi) clinical social worker;
1782          (b) either:
1783          (i) be approved as a supervisor by a national marriage and family therapist professional
1784     organization; or
1785          (ii) meet the criteria established by rule[.]; and
1786          (c) provide supervision for no more than six individuals who are lawfully engaged in
1787     training for the practice of mental health therapy, unless granted an exception in writing from
1788     the division in collaboration with the board.
1789          (2) Persons who act as a supervisor without meeting the requirements of this section
1790     are subject to discipline for unprofessional conduct.
1791          Section 38. Section 58-60-308 is amended to read:
1792          58-60-308. Scope of practice -- Limitations.
1793          (1) A licensed marriage and family therapist may engage in all acts and practices

1794     defined as the practice of marriage and family therapy without supervision, in private and
1795     independent practice, or as an employee of another person, limited only by the licensee's
1796     education, training, and competence.
1797          (2) (a) To the extent an individual has completed the educational requirements of
1798     Subsection 58-60-305(1)(d), a licensed associate marriage and family therapist may engage in
1799     all acts and practices defined as the practice of marriage and family therapy if the practice is:
1800          (i) within the scope of employment as a licensed associate marriage and family
1801     therapist with a public agency or a private clinic as defined by division rule; and
1802          (ii) under the supervision of a licensed [marriage and family] mental health therapist
1803     who is qualified as a supervisor under Section 58-60-307.
1804          (b) A licensed associate marriage and family therapist may not engage in the
1805     independent practice of marriage and family therapy.
1806          Section 39. Section 58-60-407 is amended to read:
1807          58-60-407. Scope of practice -- Limitations.
1808          (1) (a) A licensed clinical mental health counselor may engage in all acts and practices
1809     defined as the practice of clinical mental health counseling without supervision, in private and
1810     independent practice, or as an employee of another person, limited only by the licensee's
1811     education, training, and competence.
1812          (b) A licensed clinical mental health counselor may not supervise more than six
1813     individuals who are lawfully engaged in training for the practice of mental health therapy,
1814     unless granted an exception in writing from the division in collaboration with the board.
1815          (2) (a) To the extent an individual has completed the educational requirements of
1816     Subsection 58-60-305(1)(d), a licensed associate clinical mental health counselor may engage
1817     in all acts and practices defined as the practice of clinical mental health counseling if the
1818     practice is:
1819          (i) within the scope of employment as a licensed clinical mental health counselor with
1820     a public agency or private clinic as defined by division rule; and
1821          (ii) under supervision of a qualified licensed mental health therapist as defined in

1822     Section 58-60-102.
1823          (b) A licensed associate clinical mental health counselor may not engage in the
1824     independent practice of clinical mental health counseling.
1825          Section 40. Section 58-60-502 is amended to read:
1826          58-60-502. Definitions.
1827          In addition to the definitions in Sections 58-1-102 and 58-60-102, as used in this part:
1828          (1) "Board" means the Substance Use Disorder Counselor Licensing Board created in
1829     Section 58-60-503.
1830          (2) (a) "Counseling" means a collaborative process that facilitates the client's progress
1831     toward mutually determined treatment goals and objectives.
1832          (b) "Counseling" includes:
1833          (i) methods that are sensitive to an individual client's characteristics, to the influence of
1834     significant others, and to the client's cultural and social context; and
1835          (ii) an understanding, appreciation, and ability to appropriately use the contributions of
1836     various addiction counseling models as the counseling models apply to modalities of care for
1837     individuals, groups, families, couples, and significant others.
1838          (3) "Direct supervision" means:
1839          (a) a minimum of one hour of supervision by a supervisor of the substance use disorder
1840     counselor for every 40 hours of client care provided by the substance use disorder counselor,
1841     which supervision may include group supervision;
1842          (b) the supervision is conducted in a face-to-face manner, unless otherwise approved
1843     on a case-by-case basis by the division in collaboration with the board; and
1844          (c) a supervisor is available for consultation with the counselor at all times.
1845          (4) "General supervision" shall be defined by division rule.
1846          (5) "Group supervision" means more than one counselor licensed under this part meets
1847     with the supervisor at the same time.
1848          (6) "Individual supervision" means only one counselor licensed under this part meets
1849     with the supervisor at a given time.

1850          (7) "Practice as a certified advanced substance use disorder counselor" and "practice as
1851     a certified advanced substance use disorder counselor intern" means providing services
1852     described in Subsection (9) under the direct supervision of a mental health therapist or licensed
1853     advanced substance use disorder counselor.
1854          (8) "Practice as a certified substance use disorder counselor" and "practice as a certified
1855     substance use disorder counselor intern" means providing the services described in Subsections
1856     (10)(a) and (b) under the direct supervision of a mental health therapist or licensed advanced
1857     substance use disorder counselor.
1858          (9) "Practice as a licensed advanced substance use disorder counselor" means:
1859          (a) providing the services described in Subsections (10)(a) and (b);
1860          (b) screening and assessing of individuals, including identifying substance use disorder
1861     symptoms and behaviors and co-occurring mental health issues; [and]
1862          (c) treatment planning for substance use disorders, including initial planning, ongoing
1863     intervention, continuity of care, discharge planning, planning for relapse prevention, and long
1864     term recovery support[.]; and
1865          (d) supervising a certified substance use disorder counselor, certified substance use
1866     disorder counselor intern, certified advanced substance use disorder counselor, certified
1867     advanced substance use disorder counselor intern, or licensed substance use disorder counselor
1868     in accordance with Subsection 58-60-508(2).
1869          (10) (a) "Practice as a substance use disorder counselor" means providing services as
1870     an employee of a substance use disorder agency under the general supervision of a licensed
1871     mental health therapist to individuals or groups of persons, whether in person or remotely, for
1872     conditions of substance use disorders consistent with the education and training of a substance
1873     use disorder counselor required under this part, and the standards and ethics of the profession
1874     as approved by the division in collaboration with the board.
1875          (b) "Practice as a substance use disorder counselor" includes:
1876          (i) administering the screening process by which a client is determined to need
1877     substance use disorder services, which may include screening, brief intervention, and treatment

1878     referral;
1879          (ii) conducting the administrative intake procedures for admission to a program;
1880          (iii) conducting orientation of a client, including:
1881          (A) describing the general nature and goals of the program;
1882          (B) explaining rules governing client conduct and infractions that can lead to
1883     disciplinary action or discharge from the program;
1884          (C) explaining hours during which services are available in a nonresidential program;
1885          (D) treatment costs to be borne by the client, if any; and
1886          (E) describing the client's rights as a program participant;
1887          (iv) conducting assessment procedures by which a substance use disorder counselor
1888     gathers information related to an individual's strengths, weaknesses, needs, and substance use
1889     disorder symptoms for the development of the treatment plan;
1890          (v) participating in the process of treatment planning, including recommending specific
1891     interventions to support existing treatment goals and objectives developed by the substance use
1892     disorder counselor, the mental health therapist, and the client to:
1893          (A) identify and rank problems needing resolution;
1894          (B) establish agreed upon immediate and long term goals; and
1895          (C) decide on a treatment process and the resources to be utilized;
1896          (vi) monitoring compliance with treatment plan progress;
1897          (vii) providing substance use disorder counseling services to alcohol and drug use
1898     disorder clients and significant people in the client's life as part of a comprehensive treatment
1899     plan, including:
1900          (A) leading specific task-oriented groups, didactic groups, and group discussions;
1901          (B) cofacilitating group therapy with a licensed mental health therapist; and
1902          (C) engaging in one-on-one interventions and interactions coordinated by a mental
1903     health therapist;
1904          (viii) performing case management activities that bring services, agencies, resources, or
1905     people together within a planned framework of action toward the achievement of established

1906     goals, including, when appropriate, liaison activities and collateral contacts;
1907          (ix) providing substance use disorder crisis intervention services;
1908          (x) providing client education to individuals and groups concerning alcohol and other
1909     substance use disorders, including identification and description of available treatment services
1910     and resources;
1911          (xi) identifying the needs of the client that cannot be met by the substance use disorder
1912     counselor or substance use disorder agency and referring the client to appropriate services and
1913     community resources;
1914          (xii) developing and providing effective reporting and recordkeeping procedures and
1915     services, which include charting the results of the assessment and treatment plan, writing
1916     reports, progress notes, discharge summaries, and other client-related data; and
1917          (xiii) consulting with other professionals in regard to client treatment and services to
1918     assure comprehensive quality care for the client.
1919          (c) "Practice as a substance use disorder counselor" does not include:
1920          (i) the diagnosing of mental illness, including substance use disorders, as defined in
1921     Section 58-60-102;
1922          (ii) engaging in the practice of mental health therapy as defined in Section 58-60-102;
1923     or
1924          (iii) the performance of a substance use disorder diagnosis, other mental illness
1925     diagnosis, or psychological testing.
1926          (11) "Program" means a substance use disorder agency that provides substance use
1927     disorder services, including recovery support services.
1928          (12) "Recovery support services" means services provided to an individual who is
1929     identified as having need of substance use disorder preventive or treatment services, either
1930     before, during, or after an episode of care that meets the level of care standards established by
1931     division rule.
1932          (13) "Substance use disorder agency" means a public or private agency, health care
1933     facility, or health care practice that:

1934          (a) provides substance use disorder services, recovery support services, primary health
1935     care services, or substance use disorder preventive services; and
1936          (b) employs qualified mental health therapists in sufficient number to:
1937          (i) evaluate the condition of clients being treated by each counselor licensed under this
1938     part and employed by the substance use disorder agency; and
1939          (ii) ensure that appropriate substance use disorder services are being given.
1940          (14) "Substance use disorder education program" means a formal program of substance
1941     use disorder education offered by an accredited institution of higher education that meets
1942     standards established by division rule.
1943          Section 41. Section 58-60-508 is amended to read:
1944          58-60-508. Substance use disorder counselor supervisor's qualifications --
1945     Functions.
1946          (1) A mental health therapist supervisor of a substance use disorder counselor shall:
1947          (a) be qualified by education or experience to treat substance use disorders;
1948          (b) be currently working in the substance use disorder treatment field;
1949          (c) review substance use disorder counselor assessment procedures and
1950     recommendations;
1951          (d) provide substance use disorder diagnosis and other mental health diagnoses in
1952     accordance with Subsection 58-60-102(7);
1953          (e) supervise the development of a treatment plan;
1954          (f) approve the treatment plan; and
1955          (g) provide direct supervision for not more than [five] six persons, unless granted an
1956     exception in writing from the board and the division.
1957          (2) A licensed advanced substance use disorder counselor may act as the supervisor of
1958     a certified substance use disorder counselor, certified substance use disorder counselor intern,
1959     certified advanced substance use disorder counselor, or certified advanced substance use
1960     disorder counselor intern[, or licensed substance use disorder counselor shall] if the licensed
1961     advanced substance use disorder counselor:

1962          [(a) be a licensed advanced substance use disorder counselor;]
1963          [(b)] (a) [have] has at least two years of experience as a licensed advanced substance
1964     use disorder counselor;
1965          [(c)] (b) [be] is currently working in the substance use disorder field; and
1966          [(d)] (c) [provide] provides direct supervision for no more than [three persons] six
1967     individuals, unless granted an exception in writing from the board and the division.
1968          Section 42. Section 62A-4a-902 is amended to read:
1969          62A-4a-902. Definitions.
1970          (1) (a) "Adoption assistance" means direct financial subsidies and support to adoptive
1971     parents of a child with special needs or whose need or condition has created a barrier that
1972     would prevent a successful adoption.
1973          (b) "Adoption assistance" may include state medical assistance, reimbursement of
1974     nonrecurring adoption expenses, or monthly subsidies.
1975          (2) "Child who has a special need" means a child who cannot or should not be returned
1976     to the home of his biological parents and who meets at least one of the following conditions:
1977          (a) the child is five years of age or older;
1978          (b) the child is under the age of 18 with a physical, emotional, or mental disability; or
1979          (c) the child is a member of a sibling group placed together for adoption.
1980          (3) "Monthly subsidy" means financial support to assist with the costs of adopting and
1981     caring for a child who has a special need.
1982          (4) "Nonrecurring adoption expenses" means reasonably necessary adoption fees, court
1983     costs, attorney's fees, and other expenses which are directly related to the legal adoption of a
1984     child who has a special need.
1985          (5) "State medical assistance" means the Medicaid program and medical assistance as
1986     those terms are defined in [Subsections 26-18-2(4) and (5)] Section 26-18-2.
1987          (6) "Supplemental adoption assistance" means financial support for extraordinary,
1988     infrequent, or uncommon documented needs not otherwise covered by a monthly subsidy, state
1989     medical assistance, or other public benefits for which a child who has a special need is eligible.

1990          Section 43. Section 63A-13-102 is amended to read:
1991          63A-13-102. Definitions.
1992          As used in this chapter:
1993          (1) "Abuse" means:
1994          (a) an action or practice that:
1995          (i) is inconsistent with sound fiscal, business, or medical practices; and
1996          (ii) results, or may result, in unnecessary Medicaid related costs; or
1997          (b) reckless or negligent upcoding.
1998          (2) "Claimant" means a person that:
1999          (a) provides a service; and
2000          (b) submits a claim for Medicaid reimbursement for the service.
2001          (3) "Department" means the Department of Health, created in Section 26-1-4.
2002          (4) "Division" means the Division of Medicaid and Health [Care] Financing, created in
2003     Section 26-18-2.1.
2004          (5) "Extrapolation" means a method of using a mathematical formula that takes the
2005     audit results from a small sample of Medicaid claims and projects those results over a much
2006     larger group of Medicaid claims.
2007          (6) "Fraud" means intentional or knowing:
2008          (a) deception, misrepresentation, or upcoding in relation to Medicaid funds, costs, a
2009     claim, reimbursement, or services; or
2010          (b) a violation of a provision of Sections 26-20-3 through 26-20-7.
2011          (7) "Fraud unit" means the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the attorney general's
2012     office.
2013          (8) "Health care professional" means a person licensed under:
2014          (a) Title 58, Chapter 5a, Podiatric Physician Licensing Act;
2015          (b) Title 58, Chapter 16a, Utah Optometry Practice Act;
2016          (c) Title 58, Chapter 17b, Pharmacy Practice Act;
2017          (d) Title 58, Chapter 24b, Physical Therapy Practice Act;

2018          (e) Title 58, Chapter 31b, Nurse Practice Act;
2019          (f) Title 58, Chapter 40, Recreational Therapy Practice Act;
2020          (g) Title 58, Chapter 41, Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Licensing Act;
2021          (h) Title 58, Chapter 42a, Occupational Therapy Practice Act;
2022          (i) Title 58, Chapter 44a, Nurse Midwife Practice Act;
2023          (j) Title 58, Chapter 49, Dietitian Certification Act;
2024          (k) Title 58, Chapter 60, Mental Health Professional Practice Act;
2025          (l) Title 58, Chapter 67, Utah Medical Practice Act;
2026          (m) Title 58, Chapter 68, Utah Osteopathic Medical Practice Act;
2027          (n) Title 58, Chapter 69, Dentist and Dental Hygienist Practice Act;
2028          (o) Title 58, Chapter 70a, Physician Assistant Act; and
2029          (p) Title 58, Chapter 73, Chiropractic Physician Practice Act.
2030          (9) "Inspector general" means the inspector general of the office, appointed under
2031     Section 63A-13-201.
2032          (10) "Office" means the Office of Inspector General of Medicaid Services, created in
2033     Section 63A-13-201.
2034          (11) "Provider" means a person that provides:
2035          (a) medical assistance, including supplies or services, in exchange, directly or
2036     indirectly, for Medicaid funds; or
2037          (b) billing or recordkeeping services relating to Medicaid funds.
2038          (12) "Upcoding" means assigning an inaccurate billing code for a service that is
2039     payable or reimbursable by Medicaid funds, if the correct billing code for the service, taking
2040     into account reasonable opinions derived from official published coding definitions, would
2041     result in a lower Medicaid payment or reimbursement.
2042          (13) "Waste" means overutilization of resources or inappropriate payment.
2043          Section 44. Section 63I-2-226 is amended to read:
2044          63I-2-226. Repeal dates -- Title 26.
2045          (1) Subsection 26-7-8(3) is repealed January 1, 2027.

2046          [(2) Subsection 26-7-9(5) is repealed January 1, 2019.]
2047          [(3)] (2) Section 26-8a-107 is repealed July 1, 2019.
2048          [(4)] (3) Subsection 26-8a-203(3)(a)(i) is repealed January 1, 2023.
2049          [(5)] (4) Subsection 26-18-2.3(5) is repealed January 1, 2020.
2050          [(6)] (5) Subsection 26-18-2.4(3)(e) is repealed January 1, 2023.
2051          [(7) Subsection 26-18-408(6) is repealed January 2, 2019.]
2052          [(8) Subsection 26-18-410(5) is repealed January 1, 2026.]
2053          [(9)] (6) Subsection [26-18-411(5)] 26-18-411(8), related to reporting on the health
2054     coverage improvement program, is repealed January 1, 2023.
2055          [(10)] (7) Subsection 26-18-604(2) is repealed January 1, 2020.
2056          [(11)] (8) Subsection 26-21-28(2)(b) is repealed January 1, 2021.
2057          [(12)] (9) Subsection 26-33a-106.1(2)(a) is repealed January 1, 2023.
2058          [(13)] (10) Subsection 26-33a-106.5(6)(c)(iii) is repealed January 1, 2020.
2059          [(14)] (11) Title 26, Chapter 46, Utah Health Care Workforce Financial Assistance
2060     Program, is repealed July 1, 2027.
2061          [(15)] (12) Subsection 26-50-202(7)(b) is repealed January 1, 2020.
2062          [(16)] (13) Subsections 26-54-103(6)(d)(ii) and (iii) are repealed January 1, 2020.
2063          [(17)] (14) Subsection 26-55-107(8) is repealed January 1, 2021.
2064          [(18)] (15) Subsection 26-56-103(9)(d) is repealed January 1, 2020.
2065          [(19)] (16) Title 26, Chapter 59, Telehealth Pilot Program, is repealed January 1, 2020.
2066          [(20)] (17) Subsection 26-61-202(4)(b) is repealed January 1, 2022.
2067          [(21)] (18) Subsection 26-61-202(5) is repealed January 1, 2022.
2068          Section 45. Section 63J-1-315 is amended to read:
2069          63J-1-315. Medicaid Growth Reduction and Budget Stabilization Account --
2070     Transfers of Medicaid growth savings -- Base budget adjustments.
2071          (1) As used in this section:
2072          (a) "Department" means the Department of Health created in Section 26-1-4.
2073          (b) "Division" means the Division of Medicaid and Health [Care] Financing created

2074     [within the department under] in Section 26-18-2.1.
2075          (c) "General Fund revenue surplus" means a situation where actual General Fund
2076     revenues collected in a completed fiscal year exceed the estimated revenues for the General
2077     Fund for that fiscal year that were adopted by the Executive Appropriations Committee of the
2078     Legislature.
2079          (d) "Medicaid growth savings" means the Medicaid growth target minus Medicaid
2080     program expenditures, if Medicaid program expenditures are less than the Medicaid growth
2081     target.
2082          (e) "Medicaid growth target" means Medicaid program expenditures for the previous
2083     year multiplied by 1.08.
2084          (f) "Medicaid program" is as defined in Section 26-18-2.
2085          (g) "Medicaid program expenditures" means total state revenue expended for the
2086     Medicaid program from the General Fund, including restricted accounts within the General
2087     Fund, during a fiscal year.
2088          (h) "Medicaid program expenditures for the previous year" means total state revenue
2089     expended for the Medicaid program from the General Fund, including restricted accounts
2090     within the General Fund, during the fiscal year immediately preceding a fiscal year for which
2091     Medicaid program expenditures are calculated.
2092          (i) "Operating deficit" means that, at the end of the fiscal year, the unassigned fund
2093     balance in the General Fund is less than zero.
2094          (j) "State revenue" means revenue other than federal revenue.
2095          (k) "State revenue expended for the Medicaid program" includes money transferred or
2096     appropriated to the Medicaid Growth Reduction and Budget Stabilization Account only to the
2097     extent the money is appropriated for the Medicaid program by the Legislature.
2098          (2) There is created within the General Fund a restricted account to be known as the
2099     Medicaid Growth Reduction and Budget Stabilization Account.
2100          (3) (a) (i) Except as provided in Subsection (6), if, at the end of a fiscal year, there is a
2101     General Fund revenue surplus, the Division of Finance shall transfer an amount equal to

2102     Medicaid growth savings from the General Fund to the Medicaid Growth Reduction and
2103     Budget Stabilization Account.
2104          (ii) If the amount transferred is reduced to prevent an operating deficit, as provided in
2105     Subsection (6), the Legislature shall include, to the extent revenue is available, an amount
2106     equal to the reduction as an appropriation from the General Fund to the account in the base
2107     budget for the second fiscal year following the fiscal year for which the reduction was made.
2108          (b) If, at the end of a fiscal year, there is not a General Fund revenue surplus, the
2109     Legislature shall include, to the extent revenue is available, an amount equal to Medicaid
2110     growth savings as an appropriation from the General Fund to the account in the base budget for
2111     the second fiscal year following the fiscal year for which the reduction was made.
2112          (c) Subsections (3)(a) and (3)(b) apply only to the fiscal year in which the department
2113     implements the proposal developed under Section 26-18-405 to reduce the long-term growth in
2114     state expenditures for the Medicaid program, and to each fiscal year after that year.
2115          (4) The Division of Finance shall calculate the amount to be transferred under
2116     Subsection (3):
2117          (a) before transferring revenue from the General Fund revenue surplus to:
2118          (i) the General Fund Budget Reserve Account under Section 63J-1-312;
2119          (ii) the Wildland Fire Suppression Fund created in Section 65A-8-204, as described in
2120     Section 63J-1-314; and
2121          (iii) the State Disaster Recovery Restricted Account under Section 63J-1-314;
2122          (b) before earmarking revenue from the General Fund revenue surplus to the Industrial
2123     Assistance Account under Section 63N-3-106; and
2124          (c) before making any other year-end contingency appropriations, year-end set-asides,
2125     or other year-end transfers required by law.
2126          (5) (a) If, at the close of any fiscal year, there appears to be insufficient money to pay
2127     additional debt service for any bonded debt authorized by the Legislature, the Division of
2128     Finance may hold back from any General Fund revenue surplus money sufficient to pay the
2129     additional debt service requirements resulting from issuance of bonded debt that was

2130     authorized by the Legislature.
2131          (b) The Division of Finance may not spend the hold back amount for debt service
2132     under Subsection (5)(a) unless and until it is appropriated by the Legislature.
2133          (c) If, after calculating the amount for transfer under Subsection (3), the remaining
2134     General Fund revenue surplus is insufficient to cover the hold back for debt service required by
2135     Subsection (5)(a), the Division of Finance shall reduce the transfer to the Medicaid Growth
2136     Reduction and Budget Stabilization Account by the amount necessary to cover the debt service
2137     hold back.
2138          (d) Notwithstanding Subsections (3) and (4), the Division of Finance shall hold back
2139     the General Fund balance for debt service authorized by this Subsection (5) before making any
2140     transfers to the Medicaid Growth Reduction and Budget Stabilization Account or any other
2141     designation or allocation of General Fund revenue surplus.
2142          (6) Notwithstanding Subsections (3) and (4), if, at the end of a fiscal year, the Division
2143     of Finance determines that an operating deficit exists and that holding back earmarks to the
2144     Industrial Assistance Account under Section 63N-3-106, transfers to the Wildland Fire
2145     Suppression Fund and State Disaster Recovery Restricted Account under Section 63J-1-314,
2146     transfers to the General Fund Budget Reserve Account under Section 63J-1-312, or earmarks
2147     and transfers to more than one of those accounts, in that order, does not eliminate the operating
2148     deficit, the Division of Finance may reduce the transfer to the Medicaid Growth Reduction and
2149     Budget Stabilization Account by the amount necessary to eliminate the operating deficit.
2150          (7) The Legislature may appropriate money from the Medicaid Growth Reduction and
2151     Budget Stabilization Account only:
2152          (a) if Medicaid program expenditures for the fiscal year for which the appropriation is
2153     made are estimated to be 108% or more of Medicaid program expenditures for the previous
2154     year; and
2155          (b) for the Medicaid program.
2156          (8) The Division of Finance shall deposit interest or other earnings derived from
2157     investment of Medicaid Growth Reduction and Budget Stabilization Account money into the

2158     General Fund.
2159          Section 46. Repealer.
2160          This bill repeals:
2161          Section 26-18-3.2, Release of financial information.
2162          Section 26-18-10, Utah Medical Assistance Program -- Policies and standards.
2163          Section 26-18-14, Strategic plan for health system reform -- Medicaid program.
2164          Section 26-18-406, Medicaid waiver for community service pilot program.
2165          Section 26-18-407, Medicaid waiver for autism spectrum disorder.