GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2007
SESSION LAW 2008-168
HOUSE BILL 2443
AN ACT to rewrite general statute provisions pertaining to health and long-term care benefits for teachers, state employees, retired state employees, and their eligible dependents.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1.(a) Effective July 1, 2008, Article 3 of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes is recodified as Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes.
SECTION 1.(b) Effective July 1, 2008, the title of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, reads as rewritten:
"Other Teacher, Employee Benefits; Child Health
Benefits.
Other Benefits for Teachers, State Employees, Retired State Employees, and Child Health."
SECTION 1.(c) Effective July 1, 2008, Part 1 of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, is recodified as Part 1A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes.
SECTION 1.(d) Effective July 1, 2008, G.S. 135-37, as amended by Section 28.22A of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-37.1 under Part 1A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-37.1. Confidentiality of information and medical records; provider contracts.
(a) Any information as herein described in this section which is in the possession of the Executive Administrator and the Board of Trustees of the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees or its Claims Processor under the Plan or the Predecessor Plan shall be confidential and shall be exempt from the provisions of Chapter 132 of the General Statutes or any other provision requiring information and records held by State agencies to be made public or accessible to the public. This section shall apply to all information concerning individuals, including the fact of coverage or noncoverage, whether or not a claim has been filed, medical information, whether or not a claim has been paid, and any other information or materials concerning a plan participant. Provided, however, such information may be released to the State Auditor, or to the Attorney General, or to the persons designated under G.S. 135-39.3 in furtherance of their statutory duties and responsibilities, or to such persons or organizations as may be designated and approved by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees of the Plan, but any information so released shall remain confidential as stated above and any party obtaining such information shall assume the same level of responsibility for maintaining such confidentiality as that of the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees of the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees.
(b) Notwithstanding the
provisions of this Article, the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees
of the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees may contract with
providers of institutional and professional medical care and services to
establish preferred provider networks. The terms pertaining to reimbursement
rates or other terms of consideration of any contract between hospitals,
hospital authorities, doctors, or other medical providers, or a pharmacy
benefit manager and the Plan, or contracts pertaining to the provision of any
medical benefit offered under the Plan, including its optional plans or
programs,optional alternative comprehensive benefit plans, and programs
available under the optional alternative plans, shall not be a public
record under Chapter 132 of the General Statutes for a period of 30 months
after the date of the expiration of the contract. Provided, however, nothing in
this subsection shall be deemed to prevent or restrict the release of any
information made not a public record under this subsection to the State
Auditor, the Attorney General, the Director of the State Budget, the Plan's
Executive Administrator, and the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical
Benefits solely and exclusively for their use in the furtherance of their
duties and responsibilities. The design, adoption, and implementation of
the preferred provider contracts, networks, and optional plans or programs optional
alternative comprehensive health benefit plans, and programs available under
the optional alternative plans, as authorized under G.S. 135-40 are
not subject to the requirements of Chapter 143 of the General Statutes. The
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall make reports as requested
to the President of the Senate, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate, the
Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Employee Hospital
and Medical Benefits on its progress in negotiating the preferred provider
contracts.Benefits."
SECTION 1.(e) Effective July 1, 2008, G.S. 135-38 is recodified as G.S. 135-37.2 under Part 1A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-37.2. Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits.
(a) The Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits shall consist of 12 members as follows:
(1) The President Pro Tempore of the Senate or a designee thereof;
(2a)(2)The Speaker of the House of
Representatives or a designee thereof;
(3a)(3)Five members of the Senate appointed by the
President Pro Tempore of the Senate; and
(4a)(4)Five members of the House of
Representatives appointed by the Speaker.
(b) The President Pro
Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, or their
designees, shall remain on the Committee for the duration of their terms in
those offices. Terms of the other Committee members are for two years and
begin on January 15 of each odd-numbered year, except the terms of the initial
members, which begin on appointment and expire January 14, 1997.years.
Members may complete a term of service on the Committee even if they do not
seek reelection or are not reelected to the General Assembly, but resignation
or removal from service in the General Assembly constitutes resignation or
removal from service on the Committee. Members shall serve until their
successors are appointed.
(c) The Committee shall
review programs of hospital, medical and related care provided by Part 3 and
Part 3A and Part 5 of this Article and programs of long-term
care benefits provided by Part 4Part 4A of this Article as
recommended by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees of the Plan.
The Executive Administrator and the Board of Trustees shall provide the
Committee with any information or assistance requested by the Committee in
performing its duties under this Article. The Committee shall meet not less
than once each quarter to review the actions of the Executive Administrator and
Board of Trustees. At each meeting, the Executive Administrator shall report to
the Committee on any administrative and medical policies which have been issued
as rules and regulations in accordance with G.S. 135-39.8,G.S. 135-38.11
and on any benefit denials, resulting from the policies, which have been
appealed to the Board of Trustees.
(d) The time members spend on Committee business shall be considered official legislative business for purposes of G.S. 120-3."
SECTION 1.(f) G.S. 135-38.1, as amended by Section 28.22A(o) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified under Part 1A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 2.(a) Effective July 1, 2008, Part 2 of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, is recodified as Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes.
SECTION 2.(b) Effective July 1, 2008, G.S. 135-39.3, as amended by S.L. 2007-323(o), is recodified as G.S. 135-37.3 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
(a) The Committee on
Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits may use employees of the Legislative
Services Office and may employ contractual services as approved by the
Legislative Services Commission to monitor the Executive Administrator and
Board of Trustees, the Claims Processor, and the State Health Plan for Teachers
and State Employees. The Director of the Budget may use employees of the Office
of State Budget and Management to monitor the Executive Administrator and Board
of Trustees, the Claims Processor, and the State Health Plan for Teachers and
State Employees. Such assistance Employees authorized by the
Legislative Services Commission and the Director of the Budget to provide
assistance to the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits and
to the Director of the Budget shall comprise an oversight team.
(b) The oversight team
shall, jointly or individually, have access to all records of the Board of
Trustees, the Executive Administrator, the Claims Processor, and the Comprehensive
Major Medical Plan. They The oversight team shall, jointly or
individually, be entitled to attend all meetings of the Board of Trustees.
(c) The oversight team shall report to the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits when requested by the Committee."
SECTION 2.(c) G.S. 135-39.9 is recodified as G.S. 135-37.4 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-37.4. Reports to the General Assembly.
(a) The Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees shall report to the General Assembly at
such times and in such forms as shall be provided designated by
the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits."
SECTION 2.(d) G.S. 135-39.11 is recodified as G.S. 135-37.5 under Part 2A of this Article, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-37.5.
Contract disputes.Contract disputes not contested case under the Administrative
Procedure Act, Chapter 150B of the General Statutes.
A dispute involving the performance, terms, or conditions of a contract between the Plan and an entity under contract with the Plan is not a contested case under Article 3 of Chapter 150B of the General Statutes."
SECTION 2.(e) G.S. 135-39, as amended by Section 28.22A(o) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-38.2 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.2. Board of Trustees established.
(a) There is hereby established
the Board of Trustees of the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees
("Board").
(a1)(b)The Board shall consist of nine members.
(b)(c) Three members shall be appointed
by the Governor. Of the initial members, one shall serve a term to expire
June 30, 1983, and two shall serve terms to expire June 30, 1984. Subsequent
termsTerms shall be for two years. Vacancies shall be filled by the
Governor. Of the members appointed by the Governor, one shall be either:
(1) An employee of a State department, agency, or institution;
(2) A teacher employed by a North Carolina public school system;
(3) A retired employee of a State department, agency, or institution; or
(4) A retired teacher from a North Carolina public school system.
(c)(d) Three members shall be appointed
by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the Speaker of the House of
Representatives in accordance with G.S. 120-121. Of the initial
members, two shall serve terms expiring June 30, 1983, and one shall serve a
term expiring June 30, 1984.Terms shall be for two years. Vacancies
shall be filled in accordance with G.S. 120-122.
(d)(e) Three members shall be appointed by
the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the President Pro Tempore of
the Senate in accordance with G.S. 120-121. Of the initial members, two
shall serve terms expiring June 30, 1983, and one shall serve a term expiring
June 30, 1984.Terms shall be for two years. Vacancies shall be
filled in accordance with G.S. 120-122.
(e)(f) The Governor shall have
the power to remove any member appointed by him under subsection (b). The
General Assembly may remove any member appointed under subsections (c) or (d).Each
appointing authority may remove any member appointed by that appointing
authority.
(f)(g) The members of the Board of
Trustees shall receive one hundred dollars ($100.00) per day, except employees
eligible to enroll in the Plan, whenever the full Board of Trustees holds a
public session, and travel allowances under G.S. 138-6 when traveling to
and from meetings of the Board of Trustees or hearings under G.S. 135-39.7,G.S. 135-38.10,
but shall not receive any subsistence allowance or per diem under G.S. 138-5,
except when holding a meeting or hearing where this section does not provide
for payment of one hundred dollars ($100.00) per day.
(h) No member of the Board of Trustees may serve more than three consecutive two-year terms.
(i) Meetings of the
Board of Trustees may be called by the Executive Administrator, the Chairman,Chair,
or by any three members."
SECTION 2.(f) G.S. 135-39.2 is recodified as G.S. 135-38.3 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.3. Officers, quorum, meetings.
(a) The Board of Trustees shall elect from its own membership such officers as it sees fit.
(b) Six members of the Board of Trustees in office shall constitute a quorum. Decisions of the Board of Trustees shall be made by a majority vote of the Trustees present, except as otherwise provided in this Part.
(c) Meetings may be
called by the Chairman,Chair, or at the written request of three members."
SECTION 2.(g) G.S. 135-39.1, as amended by Section 28.22A(o) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-38.4 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 2.(h) G.S. 135-39.4A, as amended by Section 28.22A of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-38.5 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.5. Executive Administrator.
(a) The Plan shall have an Executive Administrator and a Deputy Executive Administrator. The Executive Administrator and the Deputy Executive Administrator positions are exempt from the provisions of Chapter 126 of the General Statutes as provided in G.S. 126-5(c1).
(b) The Executive Administrator shall be appointed by the Commissioner of Insurance. The term of employment and salary of the Executive Administrator shall be set by the Commissioner of Insurance upon the advice of an executive committee of the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits.
The Executive Administrator may be removed from office by the Commissioner of Insurance, upon the advice of an executive committee of the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits, and any vacancy in the office of Executive Administrator may be filled by the Commissioner of Insurance with the term of employment and salary set upon the advice of an executive committee of the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits.
(f)(c) The Executive Administrator
shall appoint the Deputy Executive Administrator and may employ such clerical
and professional staff, and such other assistance as may be necessary to assist
the Executive Administrator and the Board of Trustees in carrying out their
duties and responsibilities under this Article. The Executive Administrator may
designate managerial, professional, or policy-making positions as exempt from
the State Personnel Act. The Executive Administrator may also negotiate,
renegotiate and execute contracts with third parties in the performance of his
the Executive Administrator's duties and responsibilities under this
Article; provided any contract negotiations, renegotiations and execution with
a Claims Processor, with an optional hospital and medical benefit plan or
program authorized under G.S. 135-40,an optional alternative
comprehensive health benefit plan, or program thereunder, authorized under
G.S. 135-39.12, with a preferred provider of institutional or
professional hospital and medical care, or with a pharmacy benefit manager
shall be done only after consultation with the Committee on Employee Hospital
and Medical Benefits.
(g)(d) The Executive Administrator shall
be responsible for:
(1) Cost management programs;
(2) Education and illness prevention programs;
(3) Training programs for Health Benefit Representatives;
(4) Membership functions;
(5) Long-range planning;
(6) Provider and participant relations; and
(7) Communications.
Managed care practices used by the Executive Administrator in cost management programs are subject to the requirements of G.S. 58-3-191, 58-3-221, 58-3-223, 58-3-235, 58-3-240, 58-3-245, 58-3-250, 58-3-265, 58-67-88, and 58-50-30.
(h)(e) The Executive Administrator shall
make reports and recommendations on the Plan to the President of the Senate,
the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Employee
Hospital and Medical Benefits."
SECTION 2.(i) G.S. 135-39.10, as amended by Section 28.22A(d),(o) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-38.6 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 2.(j) G.S. 135-39.5 is recodified as G.S. 135-38.7 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.7. Powers and duties of the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees.
The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees of the Teachers' and State Employees' Comprehensive Major Medical Plan shall have the following powers and duties:
(1) Supervising and monitoring of the Claims Processor.
(2) Providing for enrollment of employees in the Plan.
(3) Communicating with employees enrolled under the Plan.
(4) Communicating with health care providers providing services under the Plan.
(5) Making payments at appropriate intervals to the Claims Processor for benefit costs and administrative costs.
(6) Conducting
administrative reviews under G.S. 135-39.7.G.S. 135-38.10.
(7) Annually assessing the performance of the Claims Processor.
(8) Preparing and
submitting to the Governor and the General Assembly cost estimates for the health
benefits plan, Plan, including those required by Article 15 of
Chapter 120 of the General Statutes.
(9) Recommending to the
Governor and the General Assembly changes or additions to the health benefits program
programs and health care cost containment programs, programs
offered under the Plan, together with statements of financial and actuarial
effects as required by Article 15 of Chapter 120 of the General Statutes.
(10) Working with State employee groups to improve health benefit programs.
(11) Repealed by Session Laws 1985, c. 732, s. 9.
(12) Determining basis of payments to
health care providers, including payments in accordance with G.S. 58-50-56.
The Comprehensive Major Medical Plan and optional plans and programs adopted
pursuant to G.S. 135-39.5B shall comply with G.S. 58-3-225.
(13) Requiring bonding of the Claims Processor in the handling of State funds.
(14) Repealed by Session Laws 1985, c. 732, s. 7.
(15) In case of termination of the
contract under G.S. 135-39.5A, subdivision (29) of this section,
to select a new Claims Processor, after competitive bidding procedures
approved by the Department of Administration.
(16) Notwithstanding the provisions of
Part 3 Part 3A of this Article, to formulate and implement cost-containment
measures which are not in direct conflict with that Part.
(17) Implementing pilot programs
necessary to evaluate proposed cost containment measures which are not in
direct conflict with Part 3 Part 3A of this Article, and
expending funds necessary for the implementation of such the pilot
programs.
(18) Authorizing coverage for alternative forms of care not otherwise provided by the Plan in individual cases when medically necessary, medically equivalent to services covered by the Plan, and when such alternatives would be less costly than would have been otherwise.
(19) Establishing and operating a hospital and other provider bill audit program and a fraud detection program.
(20) Determining administrative and
medical policies that are not in direct conflict with Part 3 Part 3A
of this Article upon the advice of after consultation with the
Claims Processor and upon the advice of the Plan's consulting actuary
when Plan costs are involved.
(21) Supervising the payment of claims and all other disbursements under this Article, including the recovery of any disbursements that are not made in accordance with the provisions of this Article.
(22) Implementing and administering a
program of long-term care benefits pursuant to Part 4 Part 4A of
this Article.
(23) Implementing and administering a program of child health insurance benefits pursuant to Part 5 of this Article.
(24) Implementing and administering a
case management and disease management program.program and a wellness
program.
(25) Implementing and administering a pharmacy benefit management program through a third-party contract awarded after receiving competitive quotes.
(26) Increasing annually the
amount of the annual deductible and annual aggregate maximum deductible. The
increase shall be established by determining the ratio of the CPI-Medical Index
to such index one year earlier. If the ratio indicates an increase in the CPI-Medical
Index, then the amount of the annual deductible and annual aggregate maximum
deductible may be increased by not more than the percentage increase in the CPI-Medical
Index. As used in this subdivision, the term "CPI-Medical Index"
means the U.S. Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for Total Medical
Care.
(27) The Executive Administrator may establish pilot programs to measure potential cost savings and improvements in patient care available through local, provider-driven medical management.
(28) It is the intent of the General Assembly that active employees and retired employees covered under the Plan and its successor Plan shall have several opportunities in each fiscal year to attend presentations conducted by Plan management staff providing detailed information about benefits, limitations, premiums, co-payments, and other pertinent Plan matters. To this end, beginning in 2007 and annually thereafter, the Plan's management staff shall conduct multiple presentations each year to Plan members and association groups representing active and retired employees across all geographic regions of the State. Regional meetings shall be held in locations that afford reasonably convenient access to Plan members. The presentations shall be designed not only to present information about the Plan but also to hear and respond to Plan members' questions and concerns.
(29) The Executive Administrator and
Board of Trustees may terminate the contract with the Claims Processor as
provided in the request for proposal.in accordance with the terms of the
contract.
(30) The prompt pay requirements of G.S. 58-3-225 apply to the Plan."
SECTION 2.(k) G.S. 135-39.5A is recodified as G.S. 135-38.7(29), as enacted by this act.
SECTION 2.(l) G.S. 135-39.6 is recodified as G.S. 135-38.8 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.8.
Special Health benefit trust funds created.
(a) There are hereby
established two special health benefit trust funds, to be known
as the Public Employee Health Benefit Fund and the Health Benefit Reserve Fund
for the payment of hospital and medical benefits. As used in this section,
the term "health benefit trust funds" refers to the fund type
described under G.S. 143C-1-3(a)(10).
All premiums, fees, charges, rebates, refunds or any other receipts including, but not limited to, earnings on investments, occurring or arising in connection with health benefits programs established by this Article, shall be deposited into the Public Employee Health Benefit Fund. Disbursements from the Fund shall include any and all amounts required to pay the benefits and administrative costs of such programs as may be determined by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees.
Any unencumbered balance in excess of prepaid premiums or charges in the Public Employee Health Benefit Fund at the end of each fiscal year shall be used first, to provide an actuarially determined Health Benefit Reserve Fund for incurred but unpresented claims, second, to reduce the premiums required in providing the benefits of the health benefits programs, and third to improve the plan, as may be provided by the General Assembly. The balance in the Health Benefits Reserve Fund may be transferred from time to time to the Public Employee Health Benefit Fund to provide for any deficiency occurring therein.
The Public Employee Health Benefit Fund and the Health Benefit Reserve Fund shall be deposited with the State Treasurer and invested as provided in G.S. 147-69.2 and 147-69.3.
(b) Disbursement from the Public Employee Health Benefit Fund may be made by warrant drawn on the State Treasurer by the Executive Administrator, or the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may by contract authorize the Claims Processors to draw the warrant.
(c) Separate and apart
from the special health benefit trust funds authorized by
subsections (a) and (b) of this section, there shall be a Public Employee Long-Term
Care Benefit Fund if the long-term care benefits provided by Part 4 of this
Article are administered on a self-insured basis.
(d) Separate and apart from the special funds authorized by subsections (a), (b), and (c) of this section, there shall be a Child Health Insurance Fund. All premium receipts or any other receipts, including earnings on investments, occurring or arising in connection with acute medical care benefits provided under the Health Insurance Program for Children shall be deposited into the Child Health Insurance Fund. Disbursements from the Child Health Insurance Fund shall include any and all amounts required to pay the benefits and administrative costs of the Health Insurance Program for Children as may be determined by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees."
SECTION 2.(m) G.S. 135-39.6A, as amended by Section 11 of S.L. 2007-345, and as further amended by Section 28.22A(m),(o) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-38.9 under Part 2A of Article 3 of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.9. Premiums set.
(a) The Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees shall, from time to time, establish premium
rates for the Plan except as they may be established by the General Assembly in
the Current Operations Appropriations Act, and establish regulations rules
for payment of the premiums. Premium rates shall be established for
coverages where Medicare is the primary payer of health benefits separate and
apart from the rates established for coverages where Medicare is not the
primary payer of health benefits. The amount of State funds contributed for
optional coverage for employees and retirees on a partially contributory basis
shall not be more than the Plan's total noncontributory premium for Employee
Only coverage, with the person selecting the coverage paying the balance of the
partially contributory premium not paid by the Plan. The amount of State funds
contributed shall not exceed the Plan's cost for Employee Only coverage. The
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall not impose a partially
contributory premium until after it has consulted on the premium and the
optional coverage design with the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical
Benefits.
(b) The Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees shall establish separate premium rates for
the long-term care benefits provided by Part 4Part 4A of this
Article if the benefits are administered on a self-insured basis.
(c) The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall establish premium rates for benefits provided under Part 5 of this Article. The Department of Health and Human Services shall, from State and federal appropriations and from any other funds made available for the Health Insurance Program for Children established under Part 8 of Article 2 of Chapter 108A of the General Statutes, make payments to the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees as determined by the Plan for its administration, claims processing, and other services authorized to provide coverage for acute medical care for children eligible for benefits provided under Part 5 of this Article.
(d) In setting premiums
for firemen,firefighters, rescue squad workers, and members of
the national guard, and their eligible dependents, the Executive Administrator
and Board of Trustees shall establish rates separate from those affecting other
members of the Plan. These separate premium rates shall include rate factors
for incurred but unreported claim costs, for the effects of adverse selection
from voluntary participation in the Plan, and for any other actuarially
determined measures needed to protect the financial integrity of the Plan for
the benefit of its served employees, retired employees, and their eligible
dependents.
(e) The total amount of premiums due the Plan from charter schools as employing units, including amounts withheld from the compensation of Plan members, that is not remitted to the Plan by the fifteenth day of the month following the due date of remittance shall be assessed interest of one and one-half percent (1 ½%) of the amount due the Plan, per month or fraction thereof, beginning with the sixteenth day of the month following the due date of the remittance. The interest authorized by this section shall be assessed until the premium payment plus the accrued interest amount is remitted to the Plan. The remittance of premium payments under this section shall be presumed to have been made if the remittance is postmarked in the United States mail on a date not later than the fifteenth day of the month following the due date of the remittance."
SECTION 2.(n) G.S. 135-39.7 is recodified as G.S. 135-38.10 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.10. Administrative review.
(a) If, after exhaustion
of internal appeal handling as outlined in the contract with the Claims
Processors any person is aggrieved, the Claims Processors shall bring the
matter to the attention of the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees,
which shall promptly decide whether the subject matter of the appeal is a
determination subject to external review under Part 4 of Article 50 of Chapter
58 of the General Statutes. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees
shall inform the aggrieved person and the aggrieved person's provider of the
decision and shall provide the aggrieved person notice of the aggrieved
person's right to appeal that decision as provided in this subsection. If the
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees decide that the subject matter of
the appeal is not a determination subject to external review, then the
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may make a binding decision on
the matter in accordance with procedures established by the Executive Administrator
and Board of Trustees. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall
provide a written summary of the decisions made pursuant to this section to all
employing units, all health benefit representatives, the oversight team
provided for in G.S. 135-39.3,G.S. 135-37.3, all
relevant health care providers affected by a decision, and to any other parties
requesting a written summary and approved by the Executive Administrator and
Board of Trustees to receive a summary immediately following the issuance of a
decision. A decision by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees that
a matter raised on internal appeal is a determination subject to external
review as provided in subsection (b) of this section may be contested by the
aggrieved person under Chapter 150B of the General Statutes. The person
contesting the decision may proceed with external review pending a decision in
the contested case under Chapter 150B of the General Statutes.
(b) The Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees shall adopt and implement utilization
review and internal grievance procedures that are substantially equivalent to
those required under G.S. 58-50-61 and G.S. 58-50-62. External review
of determinations shall be conducted in accordance with Part 4 of Article 50 of
Chapter 58 of the General Statutes. As used in this section,
"determination" is a decision by the Executive Administrator and
Board of Trustees, the Plan's designated utilization review organization, or
a self-funded health maintenance organization or the Plan's designated
utilization review organization administrated by or under contract with the
Plan that an admission, availability of care, continued stay, or other health
care service has been reviewed and, based upon information provided, does not
meet the Plan's requirements for medical necessity, appropriateness, health
care setting, or level of care or effectiveness, and the requested service is
therefore denied, reduced, or terminated.
(c) The Board of Trustees shall make the final agency decision in all cases contested pursuant to Chapter 150B of the General Statutes. The Executive Administrator shall execute the Board's final agency decisions. For purposes of G.S. 150B-44, the Board of Trustees is an agency that is a board or commission."
SECTION 2.(o) G.S. 135-39.8 is recodified as G.S. 135-38.11 under Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-38.11.
Rules and regulations.Rules.
The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may issue
adopt rules and regulations to implement Parts 2, 3, 4,
and 5 2A, 3A, 4A, and 5A of this Article. The Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees shall provide to all employing units, all
health benefit representatives, the oversight team provided for in G.S. 135-39.3,G.S. 135-37.3,
all relevant health care providers affected by a rule or regulation,rule,
and to any other persons requesting a written description and approved by the
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees written notice and an opportunity
to comment not later than 30 days prior to adopting, amending, or rescinding a rule
or regulation,rule, unless immediate adoption of the rule or
regulation without notice is necessary in order to fully effectuate the
purpose of the rule or regulation. rule. Rules and regulations
of the Board of Trustees shall remain in effect until amended or repealed
by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees. The Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees shall provide a written description of the
rules and regulations issued adopted under this section to all
employing units, all health benefit representatives, the oversight team
provided for in G.S. 135-39.3,G.S. 135-37.3, all
relevant health care providers affected by a rule or regulation,rule,
and to any other persons requesting a written description and approved by the
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees on a timely basis. Rules
adopted by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees to implement this
Article are not subject to Article 2A of Chapter 150B of the General Statutes."
SECTION 2.1. Effective when this act becomes law, Part 2A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, is amended by adding a new section to read:
"§ 135.38.5A. State Health Plan Administrative Commission. - Creation; membership; appointments, terms, and vacancies; officers; meetings and quorum; compensation.
(a) The State Health Plan Administrative Commission (hereinafter "Commission") is created. It is composed of three members appointed by the General Assembly as follows:
(1) In 2008 and quadrennially thereafter, two members appointed for two-year terms by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the Speaker of the House of Representatives in accordance with G.S. 120-121, and in 2010 and quadrennially thereafter, one member appointed for a two-year term by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the Speaker of the House of Representatives in accordance with G.S. 120-121.
(2) In 2008 and quadrennially thereafter, one member appointed for a two-year term by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the President Pro Tempore of the Senate in accordance with G.S. 120-121, and in 2010 and quadrennially thereafter, two members appointed for two-year terms by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of the President Pro Tempore of the Senate in accordance with G.S. 120-121.
(b) Terms of office shall commence July 1 and end June 30, except that the terms of the initial members shall commence upon appointment and expire June 30, 2010.
(c) The Commissioner of Insurance or his designee serves as secretary of the Commission.
(d) Vacancies in appointments made by the General Assembly shall be filled in accordance with G.S. 120-122.
(e) The Governor may remove any member of the Commission from office after a hearing for nonfeasance, misfeasance, or malfeasance. The General Assembly may remove any member of the Commission.
(f) The Commission shall elect from its membership a chair and a vice-chair to serve terms coterminous with the terms of the members.
(g) The Commission meets at the call of the chair or upon written request of at least two members.
(h) The Commission shall be located administratively within the Department of Insurance but shall exercise all of its prescribed statutory powers independently of the Commissioner of Insurance.
(i) A majority of the Commission shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.
(j) Members of the Commission shall receive travel allowances under G.S. 138-6 when traveling to and from meetings of the Commission, but shall not receive any subsistence allowance or per diem under G.S. 138-5."
SECTION 2.2. Effective the later of 10 days after this act becoming law or the appointment of at least two members of the State Health Plan Administrative Commission as established by Section 3.1 of this act, G.S. 135-38.5(b), as recodified and rewritten by Section 2(h) of this act, reads as rewritten:
"(b) The Executive
Administrator shall be appointed by the Commissioner of Insurance. State
Health Plan Administrative Commission. The term of employment and salary of
the Executive Administrator shall be set by the Commissioner of Insurance State
Health Plan Administrative Commission upon the advice of an executive
committee of the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits.
The Executive Administrator may be removed from office by the
Commissioner of Insurance, State Health Plan Administrative
Commission, upon the advice of an executive committee of the Committee on
Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits, and any vacancy in the office of
Executive Administrator may be filled by the Commissioner of Insurance State
Health Plan Administrative Commission with the term of employment and
salary set upon the advice of an executive committee of the Committee on
Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits."
SECTION 3.(a) Effective July 1, 2008, Part 3 of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, is recodified as Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes.
SECTION 3.(b) Effective July 1, 2008, G.S. 135-40 is repealed.
SECTION 3.(c) Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, is amended by adding the following new section to read:
"§ 135-39.12. Undertaking.
(a) The State of North Carolina undertakes to make available a State Health Plan (hereinafter called the "Plan") exclusively for the benefit of eligible employees, eligible retired employees, and certain of their eligible dependents, which will pay benefits in accordance with the terms of this Article. The Plan shall have all the powers and privileges of a corporation and shall be known as the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall carry out their duties and responsibilities as fiduciaries for the Plan. The Plan shall administer one or more group health plans that are comprehensive in coverage and shall provide eligible employees and retired employees coverage on a noncontributory basis under at least one of the group plans with benefits equal to that specified in subsection (g) of this section. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may operate group plans as a preferred provider option, or health maintenance, point-of-service, or other organizational arrangement and may offer the plans to employees and retirees on a noncontributory or partially contributory basis. Plans offered on a partially contributory basis must provide benefits that are additional to that specified in subsection (g) of this section and may not be offered unless approved in an act of the General Assembly.
(b) Individuals eligible for coverage under G.S. 135-39.14 on a fully or partially contributory basis are eligible to participate in any plan authorized under this section.
(c) The State of North Carolina deems it to be in the public interest for North Carolina firefighters, rescue squad workers, and members of the national guard, and certain of their dependents, who are not eligible for any other type of comprehensive group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefits, and who have been without any form of group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage for at least six consecutive months, to be given the opportunity to participate in the benefits provided by the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees. Coverage under the Plan shall be voluntary for eligible firefighters, rescue squad workers, and members of the national guard who elect participation in the Plan for themselves and their eligible dependents.
(d) The Plan benefits shall be provided under contracts between the Plan and the claims processors selected by the Plan. The Executive Administrator may contract with a pharmacy benefits manager to administer pharmacy benefits under the Plan. Such contracts shall include the applicable provisions of G.S. 135-39.13 through G.S. 135-39.27 and the description of the Plan in the request for proposal, and shall be administered by the respective claims processor or Pharmacy Benefits Manager, which will determine benefits and other questions arising thereunder. The contracts necessarily will conform to applicable State law. If any of the provisions of G.S. 135-39.13 through G.S. 135-39.27 and the request for proposals must be modified for inclusion in the contract because of State law, such modification shall be made.
(e) Payroll deduction shall be available for coverage under this Part for subscribers able to meet the Plan's requirements for payroll deduction.
(f) Notwithstanding any other provisions of the Plan, the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees are specifically authorized to use all appropriate means to secure tax qualification of the Plan under any applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall furthermore comply with all applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code as amended, to the extent that this compliance is not prohibited by this Article.
(g) The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall not change the Plan's comprehensive health benefit coverage, co-payments, deductibles, out-of-pocket expenditures, and lifetime maximums in effect on July 1, 2008, that would result in a net increased cost to the Plan or in a reduction in benefits to Plan members unless and until the proposed changes are directed to be made in an act of the General Assembly."
SECTION 3.(d) G.S. 135-40.1 is repealed.
SECTION 3.(e) Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, is amended by adding the following new section to read:
"§ 135-39.13. General Definitions.
As used in this Article unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the following definitions apply:
(1) Allowed amount. - The charge that the Plan or its claims proessors determines is reasonable for covered services provided to a Plan member. This amount may be established in accordance with an agreement between the provider and the Plan or its claims processor. In the case of providers that have not entered into an agreement with the Plan or its claims processor, the allowed amount will be the lesser of the provider's actual charge or a reasonable charge established by the Plan or its claims processor using a methodology that is applied to comparable providers for similar services under a similar health benefit plan.
(2) Benefit period. - The period of time during which charges for covered services provided to a Plan member must be incurred in order to be eligible for payment by the Plan.
(3) Chemical dependency. - The pathological use or abuse of alcohol or other drugs in a manner or to a degree that produces an impairment in personal, social, or occupational functioning and which may, but need not, include a pattern of tolerance and withdrawal.
(4) Claims Processor. - One or more administrators, third-party administrators, or other parties contracting with the Plan to administer Plan benefits.
(5) Clinical trials. - Patient research studies designed to evaluate new treatments, including prescription drugs. Coverage for clinical trials shall be as provided in G.S. 135-39.20.
(6) Comprehensive health benefit plan. - Health care coverage that consists of inpatient and outpatient hospital and medical benefits, as well as other outpatient medical services, prescription drugs, medical supplies, and equipment that are generally available in the health insurance market.
(7) Covered service; benefit; allowable expense. - Any medically necessary, reasonable, and customary items of service, including prescription drugs, and medical supplies included in the Plan.
(8) Deductible. - The dollar amount that must be incurred for certain covered services in a benefit period before benefits are payable by the Plan.
The deductible applies separately to each covered individual in each fiscal year, subject to an aggregate maximum per employee and child, employee and spouse, or employee and family coverage contract in any fiscal year.
If two or more family members are injured in the same accident, only one deductible is required for charges related to that accident during the benefit period.
(9) Dependent. - An eligible Plan member other than the subscriber.
(10) Dependent child. - A natural, legally adopted, or foster child or children of the employee and or spouse, unmarried, up to the first of the month following his or her 19th birthday, whether or not the child is living with the employee, as long as the employee is legally responsible for such child's maintenance and support. Dependent child shall also include any child under age 19 who has reached his or her 18th birthday, provided the employee was legally responsible for such child's maintenance and support on his or her 18th birthday. Dependent children of firefighters, rescue squad workers, and members of the national guard are subject to the same terms and conditions as are other dependent children covered by this subdivision. Eligibility of dependent children is subject to the requirements of G.S. 135-39.14(d).
(11) Employee or State employee. - Any permanent full-time or permanent part-time regular employee (designated as half-time or more) of an employing unit.
(12) Employing Unit. - A North Carolina School System; Community College; State Department, Agency, or Institution; Administrative Office of the Courts; or Association or Examining Board whose employees are eligible for membership in a State-Supported Retirement System. An employing unit also shall mean a charter school in accordance with Part 6A of Chapter 115C of the General Statutes whose board of directors elects to become a participating employer in the Plan under G.S. 135-39.17. Bona fide fire departments, rescue or emergency medical service squads, and national guard units are deemed to be employing units for the purpose of providing benefits under this Article.
(13) Experimental/Investigational. - Experimental/Investigational Medical Procedures. - The use of a service, supply, drug, or device not recognized as standard medical care for the condition, disease, illness, or injury being treated as determined by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees upon the advice of the Claims Processor.
(14) Firefighter. - Eligible firefighters as defined by G.S. 58-86-25 who belong to a bona fide fire department as defined by G.S. 58-86-25 and who are not eligible for any type of comprehensive group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage and who have been without any form of group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage for at least six months. Firefighter shall also include members of the North Carolina Firemen and Rescue Squad Workers' Pension Fund who are in receipt of a monthly pension, who are not eligible for any type of comprehensive group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage, and who have been without any form of group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage for at least six months. Comprehensive group health insurance and other benefit coverage consists of inpatient and outpatient hospital and medical benefits, as well as other outpatient medical services, prescription drugs, medical supplies, and equipment that are generally available in the health insurance market. For purposes of this subdivision, comprehensive group health insurance and other benefit coverage includes Medicare benefits, CHAMPUS benefits, and other Uniformed Services benefits. North Carolina fire departments or their respective governing bodies shall certify the eligibility of their firefighters to the Plan for their participation in its benefits prior to enrollment.
(15) Health Benefits Representative. - The employee designated by the employing unit to administer the Plan for the unit and its employees. The HBR is responsible for enrolling new employees, reporting changes, explaining benefits, reconciling group statements, and remitting group fees. The State Retirement System is the Health Benefits Representative for retired State employees.
(16) Medical necessity or medically necessary. - Covered services or supplies that are:
a. Provided for the diagnosis, treatment, cure, or relief of a health condition, illness, injury, or disease; and, except for clinical trials covered under the Plan, not for experimental, investigational, or cosmetic purposes.
b. Necessary for and appropriate to the diagnosis, treatment, cure, or relief of a health condition, illness, injury, disease, or its symptoms.
c. Within generally accepted standards of medical care in the community.
d. Not solely for the convenience of the Plan member, the Plan member's family, or the provider.
For medically necessary services, the Plan or its representative may compare the cost-effectiveness of alternative services or supplies when determining which of the services or supplies will be covered and in what setting medically necessary services are eligible for coverage.
(17) National guard members. - Members of the North Carolina army and air national guard who are not eligible for any type of comprehensive group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage and who have been without any form of group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage for at least six months. Members of the North Carolina army and air national guard include those who are actively serving in the national guard as well as former members of the national guard who have completed 20 or more years of service in the national guard but have not attained the minimum age to begin receipt of a uniformed service military retirement benefit. Comprehensive group health insurance and other benefit coverage consists of inpatient and outpatient hospital and medical benefits, as well as other outpatient medical services, prescription drugs, medical supplies, and equipment that are generally available in the health insurance market. Comprehensive group health insurance and other benefit coverage includes Medicare benefits, Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS) benefits, and other Uniformed Services benefits. North Carolina national guard units shall certify the eligibility of their members to the Plan for their participation in its benefits prior to enrollment.
(18) Optional alternative comprehensive benefit plans. - Comprehensive benefit plans administered by the Plan that differ in coverage, deductibles, coinsurance from the Standard Plan providing for 80/20 coinsurance, and that are alternative choices for coverage at the option of the Plan member.
(19) Plan or State Health Plan. - The North Carolina State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees. Unless otherwise expressly provided, "Plan" includes all comprehensive health benefit plans offered under the Plan.
(20) Plan member. - A subscriber or dependent who is eligible and currently enrolled in the Plan and for whom a premium is paid.
(21) Plan year. - The period beginning July 1 and ending on June 30 of the succeeding calendar year.
(22) Predecessor plan. - The Hospital and Medical Benefits for the Teachers' and State Employees' Retirement System of the State of North Carolina and the North Carolina Teachers' and State Employees' Comprehensive Major Medical Plan.
(23) Rescue squad workers. - Eligible rescue squad workers as defined by the provisions of G.S. 58-86-30 who belong to a rescue or emergency medical services squad as defined by the same statute and who are not eligible for any type of comprehensive group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage and who have been without any form of group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage for at least six months. Rescue squad workers shall also include members of the North Carolina Firemen and Rescue Squad Workers' Pension Fund who are in receipt of a monthly pension, who are not eligible for any type of comprehensive group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage, and who have been without any form of group health insurance or other comprehensive group health benefit coverage for at least six months. Comprehensive group health insurance and other benefit coverage consists of inpatient and outpatient hospital and medical benefits, as well as other outpatient medical services, prescription drugs, medical supplies, and equipment that are generally available in the health insurance market. For purposes of this subdivision, comprehensive group health insurance and other benefit coverage includes Medicare benefits, CHAMPUS benefits, and other Uniformed Services benefits. North Carolina rescue or emergency medical services squads or their respective governing bodies shall certify the eligibility of their rescue squad workers to the Plan for their participation in its benefits prior to enrollment.
(24) Retired employee (retiree). - Retired teachers, State employees, and members of the General Assembly who are receiving monthly retirement benefits from any retirement system supported in whole or in part by contributions of the State of North Carolina, so long as the retiree is enrolled.
(25) Subscriber. - A Plan member who is not a dependent.
(26) Surviving spouse. - The spouse of a deceased Plan member who is eligible for Plan enrollment."
SECTION 3.(f) G.S. 135-40.2, as amended by Section 28.22A of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-39.14 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-39.14. Eligibility.
(a) Noncontributory
Coverage. - The following persons are eligible for coverage under the Plan,
on a noncontributory basis, subject to the provisions of G.S. 135-40.3G.S. 135-39.16:
(1) All permanent full-time employees of an employing unit who meet the following conditions:
a. Paid from general or special State funds, or
b. Paid from non-State funds and in a group for which his or her employing unit has agreed to provide coverage.
Employees of State agencies, departments, institutions, boards, and commissions not otherwise covered by the Plan who are employed in permanent job positions on a recurring basis and who work 30 or more hours per week for nine or more months per calendar year are covered by the provisions of this subdivision.
(1a)(2)Permanent hourly employees as defined in
G.S. 126-5(c4) who work at least one-half of the workdays of each pay
period.
(2)(3) Retired teachers, State employees,
members of the General Assembly, and retired State law enforcement officers who
retired under the Law Enforcement Officers' Retirement System prior to January
1, 1985. Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, on and after
January 1, 1988, a retiring employee or retiree must have completed at least
five years of contributory retirement service with an employing unit prior to
retirement from any State-supported retirement system in order to be eligible
for group benefits under this Part as a retired employee or retiree. For
employees first hired on and after October 1, 2006, and members of the General
Assembly first taking office on and after February 1, 2007, future coverage as
retired employees and retired members of the General Assembly is subject to a
requirement that the future retiree have 20 or more years of retirement service
credit in order to be covered by the provisions of this subdivision.
(2a)(4) Surviving
spouses of:
a. Deceased retired employees, provided the death of the former plan member occurred prior to October 1, 1986; and
b. Deceased teachers, State employees, and members of the General Assembly who are receiving a survivor's alternate benefit under any of the State-supported retirement programs, provided the death of the former plan member occurred prior to October 1, 1986.
(3a)(5)Employees of the General Assembly, not
otherwise covered by this section, as determined by the Legislative Services
Commission, except for legislative interns and pages.
(4)(6) Members of the General Assembly.
(5)(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of
subsection (e) of this section, employees on official leave of absence while
completing a full-time program in school administration in an approved program
as a Principal Fellow in accordance with Article 5C of Chapter 116 of the
General Statutes.
(6)(8) Notwithstanding the provisions of
G.S. 135-40.11,G.S. 135-39.24 employees formerly
covered by the provisions of this section, other than retired employees, who
have been employed for 12 or more months by an employing unit and whose jobs
are eliminated because of a reduction, in total or in part, in the funds used
to support the job or its responsibilities, provided the employees were covered
by the Plan at the time of separation from service resulting from a job elimination.
Employees covered by this subsection shall be covered for a period of up to 12
months following a separation from service because of a job elimination.
(7)(9) Any member enrolled pursuant to
subdivision (1) or (1a)(2) of this subsection who is on approved
leave of absence with pay or receiving workers' compensation.
(8)(10)Employees on approved Family and Medical
Leave.
(a2)(b) Partially
Contributory. - The following persons are eligible for coverage under the Plan
on a partially contributory basis subject to the provisions of G.S. 135-39.16:
(1) A school
employee in a job-sharing position as defined in G.S. 130-40.3.G.S. 135-39.16.
If these employees elect to participate in the Plan, the employing unit shall
pay fifty percent (50%) of the Plan's total noncontributory premiums.
Individual employees shall pay the balance of the total noncontributory
premiums not paid by the employing unit.
(2) (a3)
Subject to the provisions of G.S. 135-40.3, G.S. 135-39.16,
employees and members of the General Assembly with 10 but less than 20 years of
retirement service credit shall be eligible for coverage under the Plan on a
partially contributory basis, provided the employees were first hired on or
after October 1, 2006, and the members first took office on or after February
1, 2007. For such future retirees, the State shall pay fifty percent (50%) of
the Plan's total noncontributory premiums. Individual retirees shall pay the
balance of the total noncontributory premiums not paid by the State.
(a4) The Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees may in addition to noncontributory coverage
offer optional coverage on a partially contributory basis and may set premium
rates for the optional coverage on a partially contributory basis. The amount
of State funds contributed for optional coverage on a partially contributory
basis shall not be more than the Plan's total noncontributory premium for
Employee Only coverage, with the person selecting the coverage paying the
balance of the partially contributory premium not paid by the Plan. The amount
of State funds contributed shall not exceed the Plan's cost for Employee Only
coverage. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall not impose a
partially contributory premium until after it has consulted on the premium and
the optional coverage design with the Committee on Employee Hospital and
Medical Benefits.
(b)(c) Fully Contributory. - The following
person shall be eligible for coverage under the Plan, on a fully contributory
basis, subject to the provisions of G.S. 135-40.3:G.S. 135-39.16:
(2)(1) Former members of the General
Assembly who enroll before October 1, 1986.
(2a)(2)For enrollments after September 30, 1986,
former members of the General Assembly if covered under the Plan at termination
of membership in the General Assembly. To be eligible for coverage as a former
member of the General Assembly, application must be made within 30 days of the
end of the term of office. Only members of the General Assembly covered by the
Plan at the end of the term of office are eligible. If application is not made
within the specified time period, the member forfeits eligibility.
(3) Surviving spouses of deceased former members of the General Assembly who enroll before October 1, 1986.
(3a)(4)Employees of the General Assembly, not
otherwise covered by this section, as determined by the Legislative Services
Commission, except for legislative interns and pages.
(3b)(5)For enrollments after September 30, 1986,
surviving spouses of deceased former members of the General Assembly, if
covered under the Plan at the time of death of the former member of the General
Assembly.
(4)(6) All permanent part-time employees
(designated as half-time or more) of an employing unit who meets the conditions
outlined in subdivision (a)(1)a above, and who are not covered by the
provisions of G.S. 135-40.2(a)(1).G.S. 135-39.14(a)(1).
(5)(7) The spouses and eligible dependent
children of enrolled teachers, State employees, retirees, former members of the
General Assembly, former employees covered by the provisions of G.S. 135-40.2(a)(6),G.S. 135-39.14(a)(8),
Disability Income Plan beneficiaries, enrolled continuation members, and
members of the General Assembly. Spouses of surviving dependents are not
eligible, nor are dependent children if they were not covered at the time of
the member's death. Surviving spouses may cover their dependent children
provided the children were enrolled at the time of the member's death or enroll
within 30 90 days of the member's death.
(6)(8) Blind persons licensed by the State
to operate vending facilities under contract with the Department of Health and
Human Services, Division of Services for the Blind and its successors, who are:
a. Operating such a vending facility;
b. Former operators of such a vending facility whose service as an operator would have made these operators eligible for an early or service retirement allowance under Article 1 of this Chapter had they been members of the Retirement System; and
c. Former operators of such a vending facility who attain five or more years of service as operators and who become eligible for and receive a disability benefit under the Social Security Act upon cessation of service as an operator.
Spouses, dependent children, surviving spouses, and surviving dependent children of such members are not eligible for coverage.
(8)(9) Surviving spouses of deceased
retirees and surviving spouses of deceased teachers, State employees, and
members of the General Assembly provided the death of the former Plan member
occurred after September 30, 1986, and the surviving spouse was covered under
the Plan at the time of death.
(10) Any eligible dependent child of
the deceased retiree, teacher, State employee, member of the General Assembly,
former member of the General Assembly, or Disability Income Plan beneficiary,
provided the child was covered at the time of death of the retiree, teacher,
State employee, member of the General Assembly, former member of the General
Assembly, or Disability Income Plan beneficiary, (or was in posse at the time
and is covered at birth under this Part), or was covered under the Plan on
September 30, 1986. An eligible surviving dependent child can remain covered
until age 19, or age 26 if a full-time student, or indefinitely if certified as
incapacitated under G.S. 135-40.1(3)b.G.S. 135-39.13(5)b.
(11a)(11)
Retired teachers, State employees, and members of the General Assembly with
less than 10 years of retirement service credit, provided the teachers and
State employees were first hired on or after October 1, 2006, and the members
first took office on or after February 1, 2007.
(12) Notwithstanding the provisions of
G.S. 135-40.11,G.S. 135-39.23 former employees covered
by the provisions of G.S. 135-40.2(a)(6),G.S. 135-39.14
and their spouses and eligible dependent children who were covered by the Plan
at the time of the former employees' separation from service pursuant to G.S. 135-40.2(a)(6),
G.S. 135-39.14, following expiration of the former employees'
coverage provided by G.S. 135-40.2(a)(6). G.S. 135-39.14.
Election of coverage under this subdivision shall be made within 90 days after
the termination of coverage provided under G.S. 135-40.2(a)(6).G.S. 135-39.14.
(13) Firemen,Firefighters,
rescue squad workers, and members of the national guard, their eligible
spouses, and eligible dependent children.
(d) A foster child is covered as a dependent child (i) if living in a regular parent-child relationship with the expectation that the employee will continue to rear the child into adulthood, (ii) if at the time of enrollment, or at the time a foster child relationship is established, whichever occurs first, the employee applies for coverage for such child and submits evidence of a bona fide foster child relationship, identifying the foster child by name and setting forth all relevant aspects of the relationship, (iii) if the claims processor accepts the foster child as a participant through a separate written document identifying the foster child by name and specifically recognizing the foster child relationship, and (iv) if at the time a claim is incurred, the foster child relationship, as identified by the employee, continues to exist. Children placed in a home by a welfare agency which obtains control of, and provides for maintenance of the child, are not eligible participants.
Coverage of a dependent child may be extended beyond the 19th birthday under the following conditions:
(1) If the dependent is a full-time student, aged 19 years and one month through the end of the month following the student's 26th birthday, who is pursuing a course of study that represents at least the normal workload of a full-time student at a school or college accredited by the state of jurisdiction.
(2) The dependent is physically or mentally incapacitated to the extent that he or she is incapable of earning a living and (i) such handicap developed or began to develop before the dependent's 19th birthday, or (ii) such handicap developed or began to develop before the dependent's 26th birthday if the dependent was covered by the Plan in accordance with G.S. 135-39.14(5)a.
(c)(e) No person shall be eligible for
coverage as a dependent if eligible as an employee or retired employee, except
when a spouse is eligible on a fully contributory basis. In addition, no person
shall be eligible for coverage as a dependent of more than one employee or
retired employee at the same time.
(d)(f) Former employees who are
receiving disability retirement benefits or disability income benefits pursuant
to Article 6 of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, provided the former
employee has at least five years of retirement membership service, shall be
eligible for the benefit provisions of this Plan, as set forth in this Part, on
a noncontributory basis. Such coverage shall terminate as of the end of the
month in which such former employee is no longer eligible for disability
retirement benefits or disability income benefits pursuant to Article 6 of this
Chapter.
(e)(g) Employees on official leave of
absence without pay may elect to continue this group coverage at group cost
provided that they pay the full employee and employer contribution through the
employing unit during the leave period.
(f)(h) For the support of the
benefits made available to any member vested at the time of retirement, their
spouses or surviving spouses, and the surviving spouses of employees who are
receiving a survivor's alternate benefit under G.S. 135-5(m) of those
associations listed in G.S. 135-27(a), licensing and examining boards
under G.S. 135-1.1, the North Carolina State Art Society, Inc., and
the North Carolina Symphony Society, Inc., each association, organization or
board shall pay to the Plan the full cost of providing these benefits under
this section as determined by the Board of Trustees of the State Health Plan
for Teachers and State Employees. In addition, each association, organization
or board shall pay to the Plan an amount equal to the cost of the benefits
provided under this section to presently retired members of each association,
organization or board since such benefits became available at no cost to the
retired member. This subsection applies only to those individuals employed
prior to July 1, 1983, as provided in G.S. 135-27(d).
(g)(i) An eligible surviving spouse
and any eligible surviving dependent child of a deceased retiree, teacher,
State employee, member of the General Assembly, former member of the General
Assembly, or Disability Income Plan beneficiary shall be eligible for group
benefits under this section without waiting periods for preexisting conditions
provided coverage is elected within 90 days after the death of the former plan
member. Coverage may be elected at a later time, but will be subject to the 12-month
waiting period for preexisting conditions and will be effective the first day
of the month following receipt of the application.
(h)(j) No person shall be eligible
for coverage as an employee or retired employee or as a dependent of an
employee or retired employee upon a finding by the Executive Administrator or
Board of Trustees or by a court of competent jurisdiction that the employee or
dependent knowingly and willfully made or caused to be made a false statement
or false representation of a material fact in a claim for reimbursement of
medical services under the Plan. The Executive Administrator and Board of
Trustees may make an exception to the provisions of this subsection when
persons subject to this subsection have had a cessation of coverage for a
period of five years and have made a full and complete restitution to the Plan
for all fraudulent claim amounts. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed
to obligate the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees to make an
exception as allowed for under this subsection.
(i)(k) Any employee receiving
benefits pursuant to Article 6 of this Chapter when the employee has less than
five years of retirement membership service, or an employee on leave without
pay due to illness or injury for up to 12 months, is entitled to continued
coverage under the Plan for the employee and any eligible dependents by paying
one hundred percent (100%) of the cost."
SECTION 3.(g) Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes is amended by adding the following new section to read:
"§ 135-39.15. Enrollment.
(a) Except as otherwise required by applicable federal law, new employees must be given the opportunity to enroll or decline enrollment for themselves and their dependents within 30 days from the date of employment or from first becoming eligible on a noncontributory basis. Coverage may become effective on the first day of the month following date of entry on payroll or on the first day of the following month. New employees not enrolling themselves and their dependents within 30 days, or not adding dependents when first eligible as provided herein may enroll on the first day of any month but will be subject to a 12-month waiting period for preexisting health conditions, except for employees who elect to change their coverage in accordance with rules established by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees for optional or alternative plans available under the Plan. Children born to covered employees having coverage type (2) or (3), as outlined in G.S. 135-40.3(d) shall be automatically covered at the time of birth without any waiting period for preexisting health conditions. Children born to covered employees having coverage type (1) shall be automatically covered at birth without any waiting period for preexisting health conditions so long as the claims processor receives notification within 30 days of the date of birth that the employee desires to change from coverage (1) to coverage type (2) or (3), provided that the employee pays any additional premium required by the coverage type selected retroactive to the first day of the month in which the child was born.
(b) Newly acquired dependents (spouse/child) enrolled within 30 days of becoming an eligible dependent will not be subject to the 12-month waiting period for preexisting conditions. A dependent can become qualified due to marriage, adoption, entering a foster child relationship, due to the divorce of a dependent child or the death of the spouse of a dependent child, and at the beginning of each legislative session (applies only to enrolled legislators). Effective date for newly acquired dependents if application was made within the 30 days can be the first day of the following month. Effective date for an adopted child can be date of adoption, or date of placement in the adoptive parents' home, or the first of the month following the date of adoption or placement. Firefighters, rescue squad workers, and members of the national guard, and their eligible dependents, are subject to the same terms and conditions as are new employees and their dependents covered by this subdivision. Enrollments in these circumstances must occur within 30 days of eligibility to enroll."
SECTION 3.(h) G.S. 135-40.3, as amended by Section 28.22A of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-39.16 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-39.16. Effective dates of coverage.
(a) Employees and Retired Employees. -
(1) Employees and retired employees covered under the Predecessor Plan will continue to be covered, subject to the terms hereof.
(2) New employees may apply for coverage to be effective on the first day of the month following employment, or on a like date the following month if the employee has enrolled.
(3) Employees not
enrolling or adding dependents when first eligible in accordance with G.S. 135-40.1(7)G.S. 135-39.15
may enroll later on the first of any following month but will be subject to a
12-month waiting period for a preexisting health condition, except employees
who elect to change their coverage in accordance with rules adopted by the
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees for optional prepaid hospital
and medical benefit plans.alternative plans offered under the Plan.
(4) Members of the General Assembly, beginning with the 1985 Session, shall become first eligible with the convening of each Session of the General Assembly, regardless of a Member's service during previous Sessions. Members and their dependents enrolled when first eligible after the convening of each Session of the General Assembly will not be subject to any waiting periods for preexisting health conditions. Members of the 1983 Session of the General Assembly, not already enrolled, shall be eligible to enroll themselves and their dependents on or before October 1, 1983, without being subject to any waiting periods for preexisting health conditions.
(b) Waiting Periods and Preexisting Conditions. -
(1) New employees and dependents enrolling when first eligible are subject to no waiting period for preexisting conditions under the Plan.
(2) Employees not enrolling or not adding dependents when first eligible may enroll later on the first of any following month, but will be subject to a twelve-month waiting period for preexisting conditions except as provided in subdivision (a)(3) of this section.
(3) Retiring employees and dependents enrolled when first eligible after an employee's retirement are subject to no waiting period for preexisting conditions under the Plan. Retiring employees not enrolled or not adding dependents when first eligible after an employee's retirement may enroll later on the first of any following month, but will be subject to a 12-month waiting period for preexisting conditions except as provided in subdivision (a)(3) of this section.
(4) Employees and dependents enrolling or reenrolling within 12 months after a termination of enrollment or employment that were not enrolled at the time of this previous termination, regardless of the employing units involved, shall not be considered as newly-eligible employees or dependents for the purposes of waiting periods and preexisting conditions. Employees and dependents transferring from optional
plans in accordance with G.S. 135-39.5B; alternative plans
available under the Plan; employees and dependents immediately returning to
service from an employing unit's approved periods of leave without pay for
illness, injury, educational improvement, workers' compensation, parental
duties, or for military reasons; employees and dependents immediately returning
to service from a reduction in an employing unit's work force; retiring
employees and dependents reenrolled in accordance with G.S. 135-40.3(b)(3);G.S.135-39.16(b)(3);
formerly-enrolled dependents reenrolling as eligible employees; formerly-enrolled
employees reenrolling as eligible dependents; and employees and dependents
reenrolled without waiting periods and preexisting conditions under specific
rules and regulations adopted by the Executive Administrator and Board
of Trustees in the best interests of the Plan shall not be considered
reenrollments for the purpose of this subdivision. Furthermore, employees
accepting permanent, full-time appointments who had previously worked in a part-time
or temporary position and their qualified dependents shall not be covered by
waiting periods and preexisting conditions under this division provided
enrollment as a permanent, full-time employee is made when the employee and his
dependents are first eligible to enroll.
(5) To administer the 12-month waiting period for preexisting conditions under this Article, the Plan must give credit against the 12-month period for the time that a person was covered under a previous plan if the previous plan's coverage was continuous to a date not more than 63 days before the effective date of coverage. As used in this subdivision, a "previous plan" means any policy, certificate, contract, or any other arrangement provided by any accident and health insurer, any hospital or medical service corporation, any health maintenance organization, any preferred provider organization, any multiple employer welfare arrangement, any self-insured health benefit arrangement, any governmental health benefit or health care plan or program, or any other health benefit arrangement.
(c) Dependents of Employees and Retired Employees. -
(1) Dependents of employees and retired employees who have family coverage under the Predecessor Plan will continue to be covered subject to the terms hereof.
(2) Employees who have dependents may apply for family coverage at the time they enroll as provided in subdivisions (a)(2) and (a)(3) of this section and such dependents will be covered under the Plan beginning the same date as such employees.
(3) Employees and retired
employees may change from individual or parent/child(ren) coverage to
parent/child(ren) or family coverage or add dependents to existing family or
parent/child(ren) coverage upon acquiring a dependent one category of
coverage to a different category of coverage without a waiting period for
preexisting conditions, and and, as applicable, dependents will
be covered under the Plan the first of the month or the first of the second
month following the dependent's eligibility for coverage, provided written
application is submitted to the Health Benefits Representative within 30 days
of becoming eligible.
(4) Employees or retired
employees who wish to change from family coverage to parent/child(ren) or
individual or from parent/child(ren) to individual coverage to employee
only coverage shall give written notice to their Health Benefits
Representative within 30 days after any change in the status of dependents,
(resulting from death, divorce, etc.) that requires a change in contract type.category.
The effective date will be the first of the month following the dependent's
ineligibility event. If notification was not made within the 30 days following
the dependent's ineligibility event, the dependent will be retroactively
removed the first of the month following the dependent's ineligibility event,
and the coverage type category change will be the first of the
month following written notification, except in cases of death, in which case
the coverage type category change will be made retroactive to the
first of the month following the death.
(5) Employees not adding dependents when first eligible may enroll later on the first of any following month, but dependents will be subject to a 12-month waiting period for preexisting health conditions except as provided in subdivision (a)(3) of this section.
(6) Employees or retired
employees who wish to change to employee only coverage from family to
parent/child(ren) or individual coverage or from parent/child(ren) to
individual coverage, even though their dependents continue to be eligible,
shall give written notification to their Health Benefits Representative. Effective
Except as otherwise required by applicable federal law, the date of
this type category change will be the first of the month
following written notification or any first of the month thereafter as desired
by the employee.
(7) The effective date for
newborns or adopted children will be date of birth, date of adoption, or
placement with adoptive parent provided member is currently covered under a
family or parent/child(ren) coverage. employee and family or employee
and child coverage. If the member wishes to add a newborn or adopted child
and is currently enrolled on individual in employee only coverage,
the member must submit application for coverage and a coverage type change
within 30 days of the child's birth or date of adoption or placement. Effective
date for the coverage type category change is the first of the
month in which the child is born, adopted, or placed. Adopted children may also
be covered the first of the month following placement or adoption.
(d)
Types Categories of Coverage Available. - There are three four
types categories of coverage which an employee or retiree may
elect.
(1) Employee Only. - Covers enrolled employees only. Maternity benefits are provided to employee only.
(2) Employee and Child(ren).Child.
- Covers enrolled employee and all eligible dependent children. Maternity
benefits are provided to the employee only.
(3) Employee and Family. - Covers employee and spouse, and all eligible dependent children. Maternity benefits are provided to employee or enrolled spouse.
(4) Employee and spouse. Covers employee and spouse only. Maternity benefits are provided to the employee or the employee's enrolled spouse.
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, no coverage under the Plan shall become effective prior to the payment of premiums required by the Plan.
(f) Firemen,Firefighters,
rescue squad workers, and members of the national guard are subject to the same
terms and conditions of this section as are employees. Eligible dependents of firemen,firefighters,
rescue squad workers, and members of the national guard are subject to the same
terms and conditions of this section as are dependents of employees.
(g) Different categories of coverage may be offered for optional alternative plans or programs.
(h) If any provision of this section is in conflict with applicable federal law, federal law shall control to the extent of the conflict."
SECTION 3.(i) G.S. 135-40.3A is recodified as G.S. 135-39.17 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 3.(j) G.S. 135-40.5, as amended by Section 28.22 of S.L. 2007-323, and as further amended by Section 22.28A of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-39.18 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statues, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-39.18. Benefits not subject to deductible or coinsurance.
(c) Preadmission
Testing. - The Plan will pay one hundred percent (100%) of reasonable and
customary charges for diagnostic, laboratory and x-ray examinations performed
on an outpatient basis.
(f)(a) Immunizations. - The Plan
will pay one hundred percent (100%) of allowable medical charges for
immunizations for the prevention of contagious diseases as generally accepted
medical practices would dictate when directed by an attending physician.a
credentialed provider as determined by the claims processor.
(g)(b) Prescription Drugs. - The Plan's
allowable charges for prescription legend drugs to be used outside of a
hospital or skilled nursing facility are to be shall be as determined
by the Plan's Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees.Trustees,
which determinations are not subject to appeal under Article 3 of Chapter 150B
of the General Statutes.
The Plan will pay allowable charges for each outpatient
prescription drug less a copayment to be paid by each covered individual equal
to the following amounts: pharmacy charges up to ten dollars ($10.00) for each
generic prescription, thirty dollars ($30.00) for each preferred branded
prescription, and forty dollars ($40.00) for each preferred branded
prescription with a generic equivalent drug, and fifty dollars ($50.00) for
each nonpreferred branded or generic prescription. These co-payments apply to the
Plan's optional programs.all optional alternative plans available under
the Plan.
Allowable charges shall not be greater than a pharmacy's
usual and customary charge to the general public for a particular prescription.
Prescriptions shall be for no more than a 34-day supply for the purposes of the
copayments paid by each covered individual. By accepting the copayments and any
remaining allowable charges provided by this subsection, pharmacies shall not
balance bill an individual covered by the Plan. A prescription legend drug is
defined as an article the label of which, under the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act, is required to bear the legend: "Caution: Federal Law
Prohibits Dispensing Without Prescription." Such articles may not be sold
to or purchased by the public without a prescription order. Benefits are
provided for insulin even though a prescription is not required. The Plan may
use a pharmacy benefit manager to help manage the Plan's outpatient
prescription drug coverage. In managing the Plan's outpatient prescription drug
benefits, the Plan and its pharmacy benefit manager shall not provide coverage
for erectile sexual dysfunction, growth hormone, antiwrinkle,
weight loss, and hair growth drugs unless such coverage is medically necessary
to the health of the member. The Plan and its pharmacy benefit manager shall
not provide coverage for growth hormone and weight loss drugs and antifungal
drugs for the treatment of nail fungus and botulinium toxin without approval in
advance by the pharmacy benefit manager. Any formulary used by the Plan's
Executive Administrator and pharmacy benefit manager shall be an open
formulary. Plan members shall not be assessed more than two thousand five
hundred dollars ($2,500) per person per fiscal year in copayments required by
this subsection.
SECTION 3.(k) G.S. 135-40.6A is repealed.
SECTION 3.(l) Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes is amended by adding the following new section to read:
"§ 135-39.19. Prior approval procedures.
The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may establish procedures to require prior medical approval and may implement the procedures after consultation with the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits."
SECTION 3.(m) Effective July 1, 2008, G.S. 135-40.7, as amended by Section 28.22A(j) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-39.20 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and, as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-39.20. General limitations and exclusions.
The following shall in no event be considered covered
expenses nor will benefits described in G.S. 135-40.5 through
G.S. 135-40.11G.S. 135-39.18 through G.S. 135-39.23
be payable for:
(1) Charges for any services rendered to a person prior to the date coverage under this Plan becomes effective with respect to such person.
(2) Charges for care in a nursing home, adult care home, convalescent home, or in any other facility or location for custodial or for rest cures.
(3) Charges to the extent paid, or which the individual is entitled to have paid, or to obtain without cost, in accordance with any government laws or regulations except Medicare. If a charge is made to any such person which he or she is legally required to pay, any benefits under this Plan will be computed in accordance with its provisions, taking into account only such charge. "Any government" includes the federal, State, provincial or local government, or any political subdivision thereof, of the United States, Canada or any other country.
(4) Charges for services rendered in connection with any occupational injury or disease arising out of and in the course of employment with any employer, if (i) the employer furnishes, pays for or provides reimbursement for such charges, or (ii) the employer makes a settlement payment for such charges, or (iii) the person incurring such charges waives or fails to assert his or her rights respecting such charges.
(5) Charges for any care,
treatment, services or supplies other than those which are certified by a
physician who is attending the individual as being required for the medically
necessary treatment of the injury or disease and are deemed medically necessary
and appropriate for the treatment of the injury or disease by the Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees upon the advice of the Claims Processor.
This subdivision shall not be construed, however, to require certification by
an attending physician for a service provided by an advanced practice
registered nurse acting within the nurse's lawful scope of practice, subject
to the limitations of G.S. 135-40.6(10).practice.
(6) Charges for any services rendered as a result of injury or sickness due to an act of war, declared or undeclared, which act shall have occurred after the effective date of a person's coverage under the Plan.
(7) Charges for personal services such as barber services, guest meals, radio and TV rentals, etc.
(8) Charges for any services with respect to which there is no legal obligation to pay. For the purposes of this item, any charge which exceeds the charge that would have been made if a person were not covered under this Plan shall, to the extent of such excess, be treated as a charge for which there is no legal obligation to pay; and any charge made by any person for anything which is normally or customarily furnished by such person without payment from the recipient or user thereof shall also be treated as a charge for which there is no legal obligation to pay.
(9) Charges during a continuous hospital confinement which commenced prior to the effective date of the person's coverage under this Plan.
(10) Charges in excess of either the
usual, customary and reasonable charge for the allowed amount or the
reasonable amount, or the fair and reasonable value of the services or
supply which gives rise to the expense; provided that in each instance the
extent that a particular charge is usual, customary and reasonable or fair and
reasonable shall be measured and determined by comparing the charge with
charges made for similar things to individuals of similar age, sex, income and
medical condition in the locality concerned, and the result of such
determination shall constitute the maximum allowable as covered medical
expenses unless the Claims Processor finds that considerations of fairness and
equity in a particular set of circumstances require that greater or lesser
charges be considered as covered medical expenses in that set of circumstances.
(11) Charges for or in connection with any dental work or dental treatment except to the extent that such work or treatment is specifically provided for under the Plan. Excluded is payment for surgical benefits for tooth replacement, such as crowns, bridges or dentures; orthodontic care; filling of teeth; extraction of teeth (whether or not impacted); root canal therapy; removal of root tips from teeth; treatment for tooth decay, inflammation of gingiva, or surgical procedures on diseased gingiva or other periodontal surgery; repositioning soft tissue, reshaping bone, and removal of bony projections from the ridges preparatory to fitting of dentures; removal of cysts incidental to removal of root tips from teeth and extraction of teeth; or other dental procedures involving teeth and their bones or tissue supporting structure.
(12) Charges incurred for any medical
observations or diagnostic study when no disease or injury is revealed, unless
proof satisfactory to the Claims Processor is furnished that (i) the claim is
in order in all other respects, (ii) the covered individual had a definite
symptomatic condition of disease or injury other than hypochondria, and (iii)
the medical observation and diagnostic studies concerned were not undertaken as
a matter of routine physical examination or health checkup as provided in
G.S. 135-40.6(8)s.checkup.
(13) Charges for eyeglasses or other corrective lenses (except for cataract lenses certified as medically necessary for aphakia persons) and hearing aids or examinations for the prescription or fitting thereof.
(14) Charges for cosmetic surgery or treatment except that charges for cosmetic surgery or treatment required for correction of damage caused by accidental injury sustained by the covered individual while coverage under this plan is in force on his or her account or to correct congenital deformities or anomalies shall not be excluded if they otherwise qualify as covered medical expenses. Reconstructive breast surgery following mastectomy, as those terms are defined in G.S. 58-51-62, is not "cosmetic surgery or treatment" for purposes of this section.
(15) Admissions for diagnostic tests or procedures which could be, and generally are, performed on an outpatient basis and inpatient services or supplies which are not consistent with the diagnosis, for which admitted.
(16) Costs denied by the Claims Processor as part of its overall program of claim review and cost containment.
(16a)(17) Charges in excess of negotiated rates
allowed for preferred providers of institutional and professional medical care
and services in accordance with the provisions of G.S. 135-40.4, services,
when such preferred providers are reasonably available to provide institutional
and professional medical care.
(17)(18) If a covered service
becomes excluded from coverage under the Plan, the Executive Administrator and
Claims Processor may, in the event of exceptional situations creating undue
hardships or adverse medical conditions, allow persons enrolled in the Plan to
remain covered by the Plan's previous coverage for up to three months after the
effective date of the change in coverage, provided the persons so enrolled had
been undergoing a continuous plan of specific treatment initiated within three
months prior to the effective date of the change in coverage.
(18)(19) Charges for services unless
a claim is filed within 18 months from the date of service.
(19)(20) Any service, treatment,
facility, equipment, drug, supply, or procedure that is experimental or
investigational as defined in G.S. 135-40.1(7a).by the Plan.
Clinical trial phases III and IV are covered by the Plan as is clinical trial
phase II when approved by the Plan. Regardless of the type of trial phases
covered by the Plan, all covered trials must involve the treatment of life-threatening
medical conditions, must be clearly superior to available noninvestigational
treatment alternatives, and must have clinical and preclinical data that shows
the trials will be at least as effective as noninvestigational alternatives.
Trials must also involve determinations by treating physicians, relevant
scientific data, and opinions of experts in relevant fields of medicine.
Covered trials must be approved by the National Institutes of Health, a
National Institutes of Health cooperative group or center, the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration, the U.S. Department of Defense, or the U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs. The Plan may also cover clinical trials sponsored by other
entities. Trials must also be approved by applicable qualified institutional
review boards. All covered trials must be conducted in and by facilities and
personnel that maintain a high level of expertise because of their training,
experience, and volume of patients. To be covered by the Plan, patients
participating in clinical trials must meet substantially all protocol requirements
of the trials and exercise informed consent in the trials. Only medically
necessary costs of health care services involved in treatments provided to
patients for the purpose of the trials are covered by the Plan to the extent
that such costs are not customarily funded by national agencies, commercial
manufacturers, distributors, or other such providers. Clinical trial costs not
covered by the Plan include, but are not limited to, the costs of services that
are not health care services and costs associated with managing research in the
trials. The Plan shall not exclude benefits for covered clinical trials if the
proposed treatment is the only appropriate protocol for the condition being
treated.
(20)(21) Complications arising from
noncovered services known at the time the noncovered services were provided.services.
(21)(22) Charges related to a
noncovered service, even if the charges would have been covered if rendered in
connection with a covered service.
(22)(23) Charges for services
covered by the long-term care benefit provisions of Part 4Part 4A
of this Article.
(23)(24) Charges disallowed by the
Plan's pharmacy benefits manager."
SECTION 3.(n) G.S. 135-40.7B, as amended by Section 28.22(f) of S.L. 2007-323, and as further amended by Section 28.22A(o) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified as G.S. 135-39.21 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-39.21. Special provisions for chemical dependency and mental health benefits.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, benefits for the treatment of mental illness and chemical dependency are covered by the Plan and shall be subject to the same deductibles, durational limits, and coinsurance factors as are benefits for physical illness generally.
(b) Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Part, the following necessary services for the care and
treatment of chemical dependency and mental illness shall be covered under as
provided in this section: allowable institutional and professional charges
for inpatient care, outpatient care, intensive outpatient program services,
partial hospitalization treatment, and residential care and treatment:
(1) For mental illness treatment:
a. Licensed psychiatric hospitals;
b. Licensed psychiatric beds in licensed general hospitals;
c. Licensed residential treatment facilities that have 24-hour on-site care provided by a registered nurse who is physically located at the facility at all times and that hold current accreditation by a national accrediting body approved by the Plan's mental health case manager;
d. Area Mental
Health, Developmental Disabilities, and Substance Abuse Authorities;Authorities
or County Programs in accordance with G.S. 122C-141;
e. Licensed intensive outpatient treatment programs; and
f. Licensed partial hospitalization programs.
(2) For chemical dependency treatment:
a. Licensed chemical dependency units in licensed psychiatric hospitals;
b. Licensed chemical dependency hospitals;
c. Licensed chemical dependency treatment facilities;
d. Area Mental
Health, Developmental Disabilities, and Substance Abuse Authorities;Authorities
or County Programs in accordance with G.S. 122C-141;
e. Licensed intensive outpatient treatment programs;
f. Licensed partial hospitalization programs; and
g. Medical detoxification facilities or units.
(c) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Part, the following providers and no others may provide necessary care and treatment for mental health under this section:
(1) Psychiatrists who have completed a residency in psychiatry approved by the American Council for Graduate Medical Education and who are licensed as medical doctors or doctors of osteopathy in the state in which they perform and services covered by the Plan;
(2) Licensed or
certified doctors of psychology;
(3) Certified clinicalClinical
social workers licensed or certified by the North Carolina Social Work
Certification and Licensure Board under Chapter 90B of the General Statutes.and
licensed clinical social workers;
(3a)(4)Licensed professional counselors;
(4)(5) Certified clinical specialists in
psychiatric and mental health nursing; nursing in accordance with
Article 9A of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes;
(4a)(6)Nurses working under the employment and
direct supervision of such physicians, psychologists, or psychiatrists;
(6)(7) Licensed psychological associates;
(9)(8) Certified fee-based practicing
pastoral counselors;counselors in accordance with Article 26 of
Chapter 90 of the General Statutes;
(10)(9) Licensed
physician assistants under the supervision of a licensed psychiatrist and
acting pursuant to G.S. 90-18.1 or the applicable laws and rules of the
area in which the physician assistant is licensed or certified; and
(11)(10)Licensed marriage and family therapists.
(11) Physicians licensed under Chapter 90 of the General Statutes and certified professionals with training and experience in the care and treatment for mental health and working under the direct supervision of such physicians.
(c1)(d) Notwithstanding any other provisions of
this Part, the following providers and no others may provide necessary care and
treatment for chemical dependency under this section:
(1) The following providers with appropriate substance abuse training and experience in the field of alcohol and other drug abuse as determined by the mental health case manager, in facilities described in subdivision (b)(2) of this section, in day/night programs or outpatient treatment facilities licensed after July 1, 1984, under Article 2 of Chapter 122C of the General Statutes or in North Carolina area programs in substance abuse services are authorized to provide treatment for chemical dependency under this section:
a. Licensed physicians including, but not limited to, physicians who are certified in substance abuse by the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM);
b. Licensed or
certified psychologists;
c. Psychiatrists;
d. Certified substance abuse counselors working under the direct supervision of such physicians, psychologists, or psychiatrists;
e. Licensed psychological associates;
f. Nurses working under the direct supervision of such physicians, psychologists, or psychiatrists;
g. Certified
clinical social workers and licensed clinical social workers;Clinical
social workers licensed or certified by the North Carolina Social Work
Certification and Licensure Board under Chapter 90B of the General Statutes;
h. Certified
clinical specialists in psychiatric and mental health nursing;nursing
in accordance with Article 9A of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes;
i. Licensed professional counselors;
j.
Certified fee-based practicing pastoral counselors;counselors in
accordance with Article 26 of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes;
k. Substance abuse professionals certified under Article 5C of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes; and
l. Licensed marriage and family and therapists.
(2) The following providers with appropriate substance abuse training and experience in the field of alcohol and other drug abuse as determined by the mental health case manager are authorized to provide treatment for chemical dependency in outpatient practice settings:
a. Licensed physicians including, but not limited to, physicians who are certified in substance abuse by the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM);
b. Licensed or
certified psychologists;
c. Psychiatrists;
d. Certified substance abuse counselors working under the direct supervision of such physicians, psychologists, or psychiatrists;
e. Licensed psychological associates;
f. Nurses working under the direct supervision of such physicians, psychologists, or psychiatrists;
g. Certified
clinical social workers and licensed clinical social workers; Clinical
social workers licensed or certified by the North Carolina Social Work
Certification and Licensure Board under Chapter 90B of the General Statutes.
h. Certified
clinical specialists in psychiatric and mental health nursing;
nursing in accordance with Article 9A of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes;
i. Licensed professional counselors;
j.
Certified fee-based practicing pastoral counselors;counselors in
accordance with Article 26 of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes;
j1.k. Licensed marriage
and family and therapists;
1. Substance abuse professionals certified under Article 5C of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes;and
k.m. In the absence of
meeting one of the criteria above, the Mental Health Case Manager could
consider, on a case-by-case basis, a provider who supplies:
1. Evidence of graduate education in the diagnosis and treatment of chemical dependency, and
2. Supervised work experience in the diagnosis and treatment of chemical dependency (with supervision by an appropriately credentialed provider), and
3. Substantive past and current continuing education in the diagnosis and treatment of chemical dependency commensurate with one's profession.
(3) Physicians licensed under Chapter 90 of the General Statutes and certified professionals with training and experience in the care and treatment for chemical dependency and working under the direct supervision of such physicians.
Provided, however, that nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the Plan from requiring the most cost-effective treatment setting to be utilized by the person undergoing necessary care and treatment for chemical dependency.
(d)(e) Benefits provided under this
section shall be subject to a case management program for medical necessity and
medical appropriateness consisting of (i) precertification of outpatient visits
beyond 26 visits each Plan year, (ii) all electroconvulsive treatment, (iii)
inpatient utilization review through preadmission and length-of-stay
certification for nonemergency admissions to the following levels of care:
inpatient units, partial hospitalization programs, residential treatment
centers, chemical dependency detoxification and treatment programs, and
intensive outpatient programs, (iv) length-of-stay certification of emergency
inpatient admissions, and (v) a network of qualified, available providers of
inpatient and outpatient psychiatric and chemical dependency treatment. Care
which is not both medically necessary and medically appropriate will be
noncertified, and benefits will be denied. Where qualified preferred
providers of inpatient and outpatient care are reasonably available, use of
providers outside of the preferred network shall be subject to a twenty percent
(20%) coinsurance rate up to five thousand dollars ($5,000) per fiscal year to
be assessed against each covered individual in addition to the general
coinsurance percentage and maximum fiscal year amount specified by
G.S. 135-40.4 and G.S. 135-40.6.
(e)(f) For the purpose of this
section, "emergency" is the sudden and unexpected onset of a
condition manifesting itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity that, in
the absence of an immediate psychiatric or chemical dependency inpatient
admission, could imminently result in injury or danger to self or others.
(f)(g) For purposes ofAs
used in this section, the word "Plan" includes all optional
and alternative plans, and programs available under the optional or
alternative plans, or plans in effect under the State Health Plan
and its successor Plans."
SECTION 3.(o) G.S. 135-40.10 is recodified as G.S. 135-39.22 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and, as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-39.22.
Persons eligible for Medicare.Medicare; optional participation in
other Medicare products.
(a) Benefits payable for
covered expenses under this Plan in G.S. 135-40.5G.S. 135-39.18
through G.S. 135-40.9G.S. 135-39.22 will be reduced by
any benefits payable for the same covered expenses under Medicare, so that
Medicare will be the primary carrier except where compliance with federal law
specifies otherwise.
(b) For those participants
eligible for Medicare, the State's planPlan will be administered
on a "carve out" basis. The provisions of the plan Plan are
applied to the charges not paid by Medicare (Parts A & B). In other words,
those charges not paid by Medicare would be subject to the deductible and
coinsurance of the Plan just as if the charges not paid by Medicare were the
total bill.
(c) For those individuals eligible for Part A (at no cost to them), benefits under this program will be reduced by the amounts to which the covered individuals would be entitled to under Parts A and B of Medicare, even if they choose not to enroll for Part B.
(d) Notwithstanding the
foregoing provisions of this section or any other provisions of the Plan, the
Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may enter into negotiations with
the Health Care Financing Administration, Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, in order
to secure a more favorable coordination of the Plan's benefits with those
provided by Medicare, including but not limited to, measures by which the Plan
would provide Medicare benefits for all of its Medicare-eligible members in
return for adequate payments from the federal government in providing such
benefits. Should such negotiations result in an agreement favorable to the Plan
and its Medicare-eligible members, the Executive Administrator and Board of
Trustees may, after consultation with the Committee on Employee Hospital and
Medical Benefits, implement such an agreement which shall supersede all other
provisions of the Plan to the contrary related to its payment of claims for
Medicare-eligible members.
(e) Notwithstanding subsections (a), (b), and (c) of this section, the Plan may offer an optional Medicare Advantage plan to a Medicare eligible Plan member. A Medicare Advantage plan offered by the Plan shall be an insured product offered through a private insurance carrier authorized by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to offer Medicare Advantage plans. A Medicare Advantage plan offered by the Plan shall not be a self-funded benefit plan underwritten by the State of North Carolina. Prescription drug benefits shall not be included in the benefits offered under a Medicare Advantage insurance product but shall continue to be provided by the Plan as authorized under G.S. 135-39.18.
An eligible Plan member may choose to enroll in a Medicare Advantage plan in lieu of any other benefit coverage plan offered under the Plan to Medicare eligible Plan members. A Medicare eligible Plan member must be enrolled in Medicare Part B to participate in an optional Medicare Advantage plan. A non-Medicare eligible dependent of a Medicare Advantage eligible Plan member may enroll on a fully contributory basis in benefit plans offered under the Plan to non-Medicare eligible Plan members. If an enrolled Plan member decides not to re-enroll in an optional Medicare Advantage plan during the Plan's annual enrollment period, the Plan member may at that time re-enroll in other benefit coverage offered by the Plan in accordance with the provisions of subsections (a), (b), and (c) of this section."
SECTION 3.(p) Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, is amended by adding the following new section to read:
"§ 135-39.23. Cost-savings initiatives and incentive programs authorized.
(a) Cost-Saving Initiatives. - Coverage of Over-the-Counter Medications. - The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may authorize coverage for over-the-counter medications as recommended by the Plan's pharmacy and therapeutics committee. In approving for coverage one or more over-the-counter medications, the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall ensure that each recommended over-the-counter medication has been analyzed to ensure medical effectiveness and Plan member safety. The analysis shall also address the financial impact on the Plan. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may impose a co-payment to be paid by each covered individual for each packaged over-the-counter medication. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may adopt policies establishing limits on the amount of coverage available for over-the-counter medications for each covered individual over a 12-month period. Prior to implementing policy and co-payment changes authorized under this section, the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall submit the proposed policies and co-payments to the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits for its review.
(b) Incentive Programs. - For the purposes of helping Plan members to achieve and maintain a healthy lifestyle without impairing patient care, and to increase cost effectiveness in Plan coverage, the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may adopt programs offering incentives to Plan members to encourage changes in member behavior or lifestyle designed to improve member health and promote cost-efficiency in the Plan. Participation in one or more incentive programs is voluntary on the part of the Plan member. Before adopting an incentive program, the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall conduct an impact analysis on the proposed incentive program to determine (i) whether the program is likely to result in significant member satisfaction, (ii) that it will not adversely affect quality of care, and (iii) whether it is likely to result in significant cost savings to the Plan. The impact analysis may be conducted by a committee of the Plan, in conjunction with the Plan's consulting actuary, provided that the Plan's medical director participates in the analysis. An approved incentive plan may provide for a waiver of deductibles, co-payments, and coinsurance required under this Article in order to determine the effectiveness of the incentive program in promoting the health of members and increasing cost-effectiveness to the Plan. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees shall, before implementing incentive programs authorized under this section, submit the proposed programs to the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits for review."
SECTION 3.(q) G.S. 135-40.11 is recodified as G.S. 135-39.24 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act, and as recodified, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-39.24. Cessation of coverage.
(a) Coverage under this Plan of an employee and his or her surviving spouse or eligible dependent children or of a retired employee and his or her surviving spouse or eligible dependent children shall cease on the earliest of the following dates:
(1) The last day of the month in which an employee or retired employee dies. Provided such surviving spouse or eligible dependent children were covered under the Plan at the time of death of the former employee or retired employee, or were covered on September 30, 1986, any such surviving spouse or eligible dependent children may then elect to continue coverage under the Plan by submitting written application to the Claims Processor and by paying the cost for such coverage when due at the applicable fees. Such coverage shall cease on the last day of the month in which such surviving spouse or eligible dependent children die, except as provided by this Article.
(2) The last day of the month in which an employee's employment with the State is terminated as provided in subsection (c) of this section.
(3) The last day of the month in which a divorce becomes final.
(4) The last day of the month in which an employee or retired employee requests cancellation of coverage.
(5) The last day of the month in which a covered individual enters active military service.
(6) The last day of the month in which a covered individual is found to have knowingly and willfully made or caused to be made a false statement or false representation of a material fact in a claim for reimbursement of medical services under the Plan. The Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees may make an exception to the provisions of this subdivision when persons subject to this subdivision have had a cessation of coverage for a period of five years and have made a full and complete restitution to the Plan for all fraudulent claim amounts. Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to obligate the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees to make an exception as allowed for under this subdivision.
(7) The last day of the month in which an employee who is Medicare-eligible selects Medicare to be the primary payer of medical benefits. Coverage for a Medicare-eligible spouse of an employee shall also cease the last day of the month in which Medicare is selected to be the primary payer of medical benefits for the Medicare-eligible spouse. Such members are eligible to apply for conversion coverage.
(b) Coverage under this
Plan as a dependent child ceases when the child ceases to be a dependent child
as defined by G.S. 135-40.1(3)G.S. 135-39.13 except,
coverage may continue under this Plan for a period of not more than 36 months
after loss of dependent status on a fully contributory basis provided the
dependent child was covered under the Plan at the time of loss of dependent
status.
(b1)(c) Coverage
under the Plan as a surviving dependent child whether covered as a dependent of
a surviving spouse, or as an individual member (no living parent), ceases when
the child ceases to be a dependent child as defined by G.S. 135-40.1(3),G.S. 135-39.13,
except coverage may continue under the Plan on a fully contributory basis for a
period of not more than 36 months after loss of dependent status.
(c)(d)
Termination of employment shall mean termination for any reason, including
layoff and leave of absence, except as provided in subdivisions (a)(1)
and (2) of this section, but shall not, for purposes of this Plan, include
retirement upon which the employee is granted an immediate service or
disability pension under and pursuant to a State-supported Retirement System.
(1) In the event of termination for any reason other than death, coverage under the Plan for an employee and his or her eligible spouse or dependent children, provided the eligible spouse or dependent children were covered under the Plan at termination of employment may be continued for a period of not more than 18 months following termination of employment on a fully contributory basis. Employees who were covered under the Plan at termination of employment may be continued for a period of not more than 18 months or 29 months if determined to be disabled under the Social Security Act, Title II, OASDI or Title XVI, SSI.
(3)(2) In the event of approved leave of
absence without pay, other than for active duty in the armed forces of the
United States, coverage under this Plan for an employee and his or her
dependents may be continued during the period of such leave of absence by the
employee's paying one hundred percent (100%) of the cost.
(4)(3) If employment is terminated in the
second half of a calendar month and the covered individual has made the
required contribution for any coverage in the following month, that coverage
will be continued to the end of the calendar month following the month in which
employment was terminated.
(5)(4) Employees paid for less than 12
months in a year, who are terminated at the end of the work year and who have
made contributions for the non-work months, will continue to be covered to the
end of the period for which they have made contributions, with the
understanding that if they are not employed by another State-covered employer
under this Plan at the beginning of the next work year, the employee will
refund to the ex-employer the amount of the employer's cost paid for them
during the non-paycheck months.
(6)(5) Any employee receiving benefits
pursuant to Article 6 of this Chapter when the employee has less than five
years of retirement membership service, or an employee on leave of absence
without pay due to illness or injury for up to 12 months, is entitled to
continued coverage under the Plan for the employee and any eligible dependents
by the employee's paying one hundred percent (100%) of the cost.
(d) No benefits
will be paid by this Plan for any expenses incurred or treatment received after
cessation of coverage as provided in subsections (a) or (b) of this section,
except that in the event of hospital confinement at that time, hospitalization
benefits as described in G.S. 135-40.6 will continue to the extent
provided therein.
(e)(d) A legally divorced spouse and any
eligible dependent children of a covered employee or retired employee may
continue coverage under this Plan for a period of not more than 36 months
following the first of the month after a divorce becomes final on a fully
contributory basis, provided the former spouse and any eligible dependent
children were covered under the Plan at the time a divorce became final.
(f)(e) A legally separated spouse
of a covered employee or retired employee may continue coverage under this Plan
for a period not to exceed 36 months from the separation date on a fully
contributory basis, provided the separated spouse was covered under the Plan at
the time of separation and provided the covered employee's or retired
employee's actions result in the loss of coverage for the separated spouse.
Eligible dependent children may also continue coverage if covered under the
Plan at time of separation, provided the employee's or retired employee's
actions result in the loss of coverage for the dependent children.
(g)(f) Whenever this section gives
a right to continuation coverage, such coverage must be elected no later
than a date set by the Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees.within
the time allowed by applicable federal law.
(h)(g) Continuation coverage under this
Plan shall not be continued past the occurrence of any one of the following
events:
(1) The termination of the Plan.
(2) Failure of a Plan member to pay monthly in advance any required premiums.
(3) A person becomes a covered employee or a dependent of a covered employee under any group health plan and that group health plan has no restrictions or limitations on benefits.
(4) A person becomes eligible for Medicare benefits on or after the effective date of the continuation coverage.
(5) The person was determined to be no longer disabled, provided the 18-month coverage was extended to 29 months due to having been determined to be disabled under the Social Security Act, Title II, OASDI or Title XVI, SSI.
(6) The person reaches the maximum applicable continuation period of 18, 29, or 36 months.
(i)(h) Notice requirements
concerning continuation coverage shall be developed by the Executive
Administrator and Board of Trustees.
(j)(i) The spouse and any
eligible dependent children of a covered employee may continue coverage under
the Plan on a fully contributory basis for a period not to exceed 36 months
from the date the employee becomes eligible for Medicare benefits which results
in a loss of coverage under the Plan, provided that the spouse and eligible
dependent children were covered under the Plan at the time the employee became
eligible for Medicare benefits which results in a loss of coverage under the
Plan."
SECTION 3.(r) G.S. 135-40.12 is recodified as G.S. 135-39.25 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 3.(s) G.S. 135-40.13 is recodified as G.S. 135-39.26 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 3.(t) G.S. 135-40.13A is recodified as G.S. 135-39.27 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 3.(u) G.S. 135-40.14 is recodified as G.S. 135-39.28 under Part 3A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 3.(v) Effective July 1, 2008, the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees shall not limit the number of visits for covered services for physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy. This subsection expires July 1, 2009. Sections 28.22A(j) and (k) of S.L. 2007-323 are repealed.
SECTION 4.(a) Parts 4 and 5 of Article 3 of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes are recodified as Parts 4A and 5A, respectively, under Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 4.(b) G.S. 135-41, as amended by Section 28.22A(o) of S.L. 2007-323, is recodified under Part 4A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 4.(c) G.S. 135-41(b), as recodified by this act, and as amended by Section 28.22A(o) of S.L. 2007-323, reads as rewritten:
"(b) The long-term care
benefits provided by this Part shall be made available through the State Health
Plan for Teachers and State Employees pursuant to Article 2A and 3A of this
Chapter (hereinafter called the "Plan") and administered by the
Plan's Executive Administrator and Board of Trustees. In administering the
benefits provided by this Part, the Executive Administrator and Board of
Trustees shall have the same type of powers and duties that are provided under Part
3Part 3A of this Article for hospital and medical benefits. The
benefits provided by this Part may be offered by the Plan on a self-insured
basis, in which case a third-party claims processor shall be chosen through
competitive bids in accordance with State law,bids, or through a
contract of insurance, in which case a carrier licensed to do business in North
Carolina shall be selected on a competitive bid basis in accordance with State
law."
SECTION 4.(d) G.S. 135-41.1 is recodified under Part 4A of Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the General Statutes, as enacted by this act.
SECTION 4.(e) The lead paragraph of G.S. 135-41.1, as recodified by this act under Part 4A of this Article, reads as rewritten:
"§ 135-41.1. Long-term care benefits.
Long-term care benefits provided by this Part are subject to
elimination periods, coinsurance provisions, and other limitations separate and
apart from those provided for in Part 3 Part 3A of this Article.
No limitation on out-of-pocket expenses are provided for the benefits covered
by this section. Long-term care benefits are as follows:"
SECTION 5.(a) Effective July 1, 2008, G.S. 150B-1(d)(7), as amended by Section 28.22A(o) of S.L. 2007-323, reads as rewritten:
"(7) The State Health Plan
for Teachers and State Employees in administering the provisions of Parts 2,
3, 4, and 5 of Article 3 Article 3A of Chapter 135 of the
General Statutes."
SECTION 5.(b) G.S. 150B-44 reads as rewritten:
"§ 150B-44. Right to judicial intervention when decision unreasonably delayed.
Unreasonable delay on the part of any agency or administrative law judge in taking any required action shall be justification for any person whose rights, duties, or privileges are adversely affected by such delay to seek a court order compelling action by the agency or administrative law judge. An agency that is subject to Article 3 of this Chapter and is not a board or commission has 60 days from the day it receives the official record in a contested case from the Office of Administrative Hearings to make a final decision in the case. This time limit may be extended by the parties or, for good cause shown, by the agency for an additional period of up to 60 days. An agency that is subject to Article 3 of this Chapter and is a board or commission has 60 days from the day it receives the official record in a contested case from the Office of Administrative Hearings or 60 days after its next regularly scheduled meeting, whichever is longer, to make a final decision in the case. This time limit may be extended by the parties or, for good cause shown, by the agency for an additional period of up to 60 days. If an agency subject to Article 3 of this Chapter has not made a final decision within these time limits, the agency is considered to have adopted the administrative law judge's decision as the agency's final decision. Failure of an agency subject to Article 3A of this Chapter to make a final decision within 120 days of the close of the contested case hearing is justification for a person whose rights, duties, or privileges are adversely affected by the delay to seek a court order compelling action by the agency or, if the case was heard by an administrative law judge, by the administrative law judge. The Board of Trustees of the North Carolina State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees is a "board" for purposes of this section."
SECTION 6. Section 31.24 of S.L. 2004-124 is repealed.
SECTION 7. This act becomes effective July 1, 2008.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 15th day of July, 2008.
s/ Beverly E. Perdue
President of the Senate
s/ Joe Hackney
Speaker of the House of Representatives
s/ Michael F. Easley
Governor
Approved 2:45 p.m. this 4th day of August, 2008