Big Day for Health Care Bill Passage

Big Day for Health Care Bill Passage

Along with the big-ticket proposal to provide coverage for undocumented immigrants, a number of health care bills cleared floor votes in the California Legislature yesterday. A few others did not survive.

Floor sessions on Tuesday in the state Senate and Assembly were fast-paced affairs. The deadline to pass bills out of their house of origin is June 5 so the legislation queue on Tuesday was pretty long and resulted in a rapid-fire pace.

The Senate passed a high-profile measure to expand coverage to some undocumented immigrants. A scaled-back version of SB 4, by Sen. Ricardo Lara (D-Bell Gardens), would extend full-scope Medi-Cal benefits to undocumented children under age 19 in low-income families and could extend benefits to some undocumented adults, as well, if there is room under a certain capped budget level. That level has not yet been set, but the Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Analysis proposed $40 million for expansion of coverage to the undocumented.

The bill also would require the Department of Health Care Services to submit a waiver request to allow undocumented adults to pay for coverage through Covered California. Affordable Care Act regulations forbid health benefit exchanges from offering coverage to the undocumented.

For more on the passage of SB 4, see today’s top story.

Among the other health-related bills that moved yesterday:

SB 137, by Sen. Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina), has not yet hit the Senate floor, but is expected to be heard this week. It would require more-accurate provider network directories.

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