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Good stuff (Updated x1)

Sunday, May 26, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Peter Hancock at Capitol News Illinois has been ably following the governor’s proposed health insurance changes this spring and the last time I saw him at a Pritzker press conference, he asked very informed questions. His latest from yesterday

A package of health insurance reform measures that Gov. JB Pritzker called for at the beginning of the legislative session will soon be headed to his desk for his signature.

The Illinois House gave final approval Saturday to a pair of bills that limit the ability of insurance companies to deny coverage or steer individuals toward lower cost, and sometimes less effective, treatments and medications, strategies sometimes referred to as “utilization management.”

The package also includes measures giving the Illinois Department of Insurance authority to approve or deny premium rate changes in large-group health insurance plans while banning the sale of short-term, limited duration individual health plans, which are sometimes derisively referred to as “junk insurance.”

Go read the rest. You can read all of Hancock’s stories here.

* Meanwhile, WAND TV reporter Mike Miletich has been killing it lately. Dude is churning out multiple informative stories a day. One from yesterday

State representatives passed a plan Saturday that could drastically improve maternal healthcare for Black women in Illinois.

The legislation requires private insurance companies to cover maternal services provided by midwives, doulas and lactation consultants. Private insurance companies would be required to cover home births, home visits and support during labor, abortion or miscarriage as well.

The proposal was a top priority for Gov. JB Pritzker and Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton.

“This bill empowers Illinois women to make holistic choices for their birth experience, which is especially important for Black mothers who face unacceptably high rates of complications and mortality,” Stratton said.

Click here to read what he’s been writing.

* Blog favorite Tina Sfondeles is back in Springfield to cover the rest of the session. Excerpt from her latest

Meanwhile, Senate changes to an approved House measure that would reform the embattled Illinois Prisoner Review Board ruffled some feathers in the governor’s office.

The initial plan — in response to the killing of 11-year-old Jayden Perkins — would require board members to complete an annual training program about domestic violence and for board members to notify any registered victims of a crime when the offender of such crime is being released from state custody, among other reforms.

It would also require the board to indicate whether any reports included prior convictions of a domestic violence offense within the last five years — and would set up a task force to make recommendations to the General Assembly.

Senate changes included making all hearings available to the public for live broadcast on the board’s website and available to watch for a minimum of 18 months.

The governor’s office does not support that aspect, arguing it would require new technology and additional staffing. The office is instead pushing for the issue to be delayed and taken up by the newly set up task force. They are also concerned about the bill’s reliance on information from a Law Enforcement Agencies Data System, or LEADS report, which may not be up-to-date and may not include the information they’re seeking. Pritzker’s office has also argued that some of the sought reforms are already “standard practice.”

“The PRB is committed to increasing transparency. Hearings are currently open and records of the hearings are available via FOIA,” governor’s office spokeswoman Jordan Abudayyeh said in a statement. “It is an immense challenge to do nearly 5,000 parole revocation hearings a year and we would prefer to be a part of the conversation on how best to increase transparency instead of having requirements the board will not be able to fulfill foisted upon them.”

The governor’s office on Saturday stated that it is working on an executive order that would mirror the changes enacted in the House measure.

* I met Tribune reporter Olivia Olander for the first time yesterday. Her informative story on the governor’s health insurance reform package today is definitely worth a read. Excerpt

One of the key provisions in the legislation passed by lawmakers would put prohibitions on what is known as step therapy, in which insurers require patients to try a different, often cheaper, alternative before treatment recommended by doctors. The practice has been decried by doctors and patients who say it can delay necessary care, allowing patients’ condition to worsen; the insurance industry has framed it as a cost-saving measure.

In the version that passed in both chambers, the step therapy provisions for prescription drugs apply to medications already covered within insurance plans, Laura Minzer, president of the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Council, said Saturday.

For example, if a doctor wanted a patient to try Ozempic, it could be immediately prescribed if it was already on the list of medications covered by the patient’s insurance.

If Ozempic wasn’t on that list, there would still be an additional process to try to get an exemption, such as for cases where the patient had been on a particular medication successfully for a long time. That process keeps costs down, Minzer said.

The step therapy provision, along with many of the others in the bill, goes into effect in 2026.

* Another blog favorite, Capitol News Illinois reporter Hannah Meisel, is also a must-follow on Twitter…


Hannah then linked to this helpful story

The minimum tax rate as part of HB 4951 is 20%, an increase from the current 15% rate at all levels of operator adjusted gross revenue. The threshold increases to 25% at $30 million in adjusted gross revenue; 30% over $50 million; 35% over $100 million; and 40% over $200 million.

Of the eight mobile sports betting operators currently in Illinois, only FanDuel ($429.3 million) and DraftKings ($350 million) would reach that maximum 40% threshold based on their last 12 months of winnings.

BetRivers ($81.1 million) and Fanatics Sportsbook ($51.7 million) are the only other operators that would cross into the 30% threshold, but ESPN BET likely would reach that benchmark as well in a full 12-month span.

…Adding… Update…

* I’m sure I’ve missed some solid stuff in this post. For instance, Jerry Nowicki of Capitol News Illinois has been tweeting out lots of Statehouse info.

Make sure to click here and follow the whole show with our live session coverage.

  4 Comments      


Session updates (Updated x3)

Sunday, May 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Jerry Nowicki‘s recap of the Senate Appropriations hearing this morning


* Sen. Sims said there will likely be a third amendment to the budget introduced on the floor. The budget’s bill number is SB251….

Sen. Elgie Sims: Based on technical changes that have been identified we can expect another amendment [to the budget]. Again, I expect that amendment to be technical in nature. But I would expect a minimum of three.

Sen. Rose: So it should be called to the floor directly?

Sims: Correct.

* The BIMP will be moved to HB4959, SA2, though language has not yet been introduced as I write this.

…Adding… Subscribers were told more about yesterday’s House member deficit early today…


What Harmon said yesterday in response to my question before the House adjourned

Reporter: The House is down like 10 people. I guess [their attendance is] going back up tomorrow. Do you see any need to run the bonding authority bill in the Senate before it goes to the House?

Harmon: We’re going to coordinate with the House, we’ll make sure that both chambers are in full agreement on which Bill starts where. We’ve worked very well in collaboration with the House through this whole process. We’re going to continue that to the bitter end.

…Adding… Al Llorens, president of the Illinois Education Association…

“At a time when Illinois is experiencing a statewide teacher shortage, it is incomprehensible that funding for vital educator support programs are absent from the current budget proposal. Sadly, two such programs — the teacher pipeline program Educators Rising and the Illinois Virtual Instructional Coach and Mentoring Program — have been left out of this version of the budget.

Educators Rising focuses on introducing high school students to the education profession and builds the mindset and skills essential for aspiring educators to enter a quality educator preparation program. The Virtual Instructional Coach and Building Mentor Program is an essential wraparound professional support for clinicians and teachers in the first three years of their careers wherein new educators are paired with a trained virtual coach to receive support and feedback. It also provides high quality professional development and allows new teachers to access a vast content and resource library. This ensures a higher rate of educator retention among early career educators for our state. In fact, more than 90 percent of educators in the program have been retained because of the critical support the program provides.

A budget that does not include funding for Educators Rising and the Virtual Instructional Coach and Building Mentor Program is detrimental to public education, to our students, and to the future of the state of Illinois.”

…Adding… Click here to follow developments as they happen…

  3 Comments      


*** 2024 end of session cheat sheet ***

Sunday, May 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Waiting on House concurrence

* FY25 Approp bill - SB251, SA3

* BIMP - HB4959 SA2

* Revenue omnibus - HB4951, SA2, SA3, SA4, SA5

* Use Tax Act Omnibus (Eliminates grocery tax) - HB3144, SA2, SA3

* Bonding Authority - HB4582, SA1

* Tax incentives, credits - HB5005

* Procurement omnibus - HB5511

* Medical Debt Relief Act - HB5290

* Cannabis omnibus - HB2911 (Senate floor amendments filed)

* Hemp Consumer Products Act - HB4293

* Prisoner Review Board reform - HB681 SFA5

In second chamber

* Repeals sub-minimum wage for persons with disabilities - HB793 (Senate First Reading)

* Prevents hospital patient abuse - HB587 (Senate First Reading)

* Family Amusement Wagering Prohibition Act - SB327, House Amendment 1

Passed both chambers

* Healthcare Protection Act - HB5395

* Short Term Insurance Ban - HB2499

* Birth equity - HB5142

* Election omnibus - HB4488

* Worker Freedom of Speech Act - SB3649

* Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) - SB1289

* Medicaid Omnibus - SB3268, HFA2

Passage vote failed

  6 Comments      


*** LIVE session coverage ***

Sunday, May 26, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for our end of session cheat sheet…

  Comment      


Live coverage

Sunday, May 26, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comment      


Harmon: I’m hoping the Senate will be able to wrap up its business tomorrow (Updated)

Saturday, May 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Senate President Don Harmon did an impromptu gaggle with reporters tonight on his way to a caucus meeting…

Reporter: Will there be any votes on budget bills tonight?

President Harmon: I doubt that but we’re going to caucus right now to discuss the schedule for today and tomorrow.

Reporter: So you will be here tomorrow, in session?

Harmon: We’re planning to be here tomorrow in session.

Reporter: Any plan beyond that? Sunday, Monday, Tuesday?

Harmon: I’m hoping the Senate will be able to wrap up its business tomorrow.

Reporter: What are the sticking points right now?

Harmon: Time.

Reporter: An amendment hasn’t dropped yet, what is the..?

Harmon: We agreed from the start that the House and the Senate would agree to every word and every number in the budget before filing. We are very close to that with the next amendment. We’re talking to both of our caucuses and we’ll move forward after that.

Reporter: What is the situation with the transit money coming out of the Road Fund? Local 150 is opposed to this, they seem to believe that they have been able to stall the budget over this. Do you think that can be overcome?

Harmon: I do. I do. I think it’s important to remember that a significant chunk of the Road Fund is dedicated to mass transit. We’d like to emphasize that the money going to the RTA for mass transit is coming from the portion of the Road Fund that supports mass transit, and not taking money away from the roads.

Reporter: The House is down like 10 people. I guess they’re going back up tomorrow. Do you see any need to run the bonding authority bill in the Senate before it goes to the House?

Harmon: We’re going to coordinate with the House, we’ll make sure that both chambers are in full agreement on which Bill starts where. We’ve worked very well in collaboration with the House through this whole process. We’re going to continue that to the bitter end.

Reporter: Will the Senate take up that prisoner review board measure?

Harmon: I expect so but I haven’t talked to the caucus.

Reporter: What about the Chicago School Board bill? There’s been some pushback.

Harmon: I need to talk to the caucus about that as well. Let me get the caucus since we’re late already. Thank you all appreciate it.

*** Adding ***




* The paper release…

House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch released the following statement Saturday:

“The House and Senate are very close to an agreement on a final budget. Procedurally, the earliest an agreement could pass both chamber is next week. To let members and staff rest and spend time with family, we are adjourning for the holiday weekend and will return to complete this work.”

  4 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Session stuff (Updated x2)

Saturday, May 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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*** Live session coverage ***

Saturday, May 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From Rich: Click here for our end of session cheat sheet. This live coverage software is not automated like the old one was, and today is Isabel’s first time handling these duties. She’s good at everything she does, but help her out in comments, please. Thanks…

  Comments Off      


*** 2024 end of session cheat sheet ***

Saturday, May 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Budget-related

* FY25 Approp bill - SB251, SA1

* Bonding Authority - SB 3422, HA2 (House Third Reading)

* BIMP - SB2665, HFA2

* Revenue omnibus - HB4951, SA2 (Senate Third Reading)

Cleared first committee

* Hemp Consumer Products Act - HB4293

* Cannabis omnibus - HB2911 (Senate floor amendments filed)

* Medical Debt Relief Act - HB5290 (Senate Third Reading)

Waiting on House concurrence

* Procurement omnibus - HB5511

Waiting on Senate concurrence

* Worker Freedom of Speech Act - SB3649

* Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) - SB1289

In second chamber

* Medicaid Omnibus - SB3268, HFA2

* Tax incentives, credits - HB817 (Senate First Reading)

* Repeals sub-minimum wage for persons with disabilities - HB793

* Prisoner Review Board reform - HB681 (Senate amendments filed)

* Prevents hospital patient abuse - HB587 (Senate First Reading)

* Family Amusement Wagering Prohibition Act - SB327, House Amendment 1

Passed both chambers

* Healthcare Protection Act - HB5395

* Short Term Insurance Ban - HB2499

* Birth equity - HB5142

* Election omnibus - HB4488

Passage vote failed

  7 Comments      


Live coverage

Saturday, May 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Today's quotable
* The Internet is forever, Rodney
* Edgar Fellows Class of 2024 unveiled
* Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation
* Governor Pritzker endorses Kamala Harris for president (Updated)
* Mayor Johnson's actual state ask is $5.5 billion, and Pritzker turns thumbs down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Pritzker, Durbin, Duckworth so far keeping powder dry on endorsing VP Harris (Updated x7)
* Biden announces withdrawal from reelection (Updated x3)
* Yesterday's stories

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