Katherine Wallat, Legal Director at CCLP, provided testimony against House Bill 26-1327, which aimed to address the problem of large corporations relying on the state to provide health insurance by paying their workers low enough wages to enroll in Medicaid. CCLP agrees corporations should pay their fair share, but ultimately opposed the bill because of the harm it could cause workers perceived to use Medicaid due to their age, disability, or income level.
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CCLP testifies in support of continuity health care coverage

On Thursday, February 15, 2024, Bethany Pray, CCLP’s Deputy Director, provided testimony to the Senate Health & Human Services Committee for Senate Bill 24-093, Continuity of Health-Care Coverage Change. CCLP is in support for SB24-093.
Members of the Senate Health & Human Services Committee,
I’m Bethany Pray, Deputy Director at the Colorado Center on Law and Policy, a statewide anti-poverty advocacy organization. Our vision is a Colorado where all people have what they need to succeed – and one essential piece is consistent access to health care. I’m asking for your support today on Senate Bill 24-093, which allows patients with serious conditions who are mid-treatment to temporarily continue seeing their provider, even if they’ve had a change in coverage.
The American health coverage system is extraordinarily fragmented. State-regulated plans, Medicaid, Medicare, employer plans – it’s a patchwork at best. Commercial plans provide a year of coverage, after which someone may re-enroll, or may need to change plans. Medicaid enrollees can lose coverage at any time, often necessitating a shift to commercial coverage. And this year in particular, with the end of the COVID Public Health Emergency continuous coverage requirements, tens of thousands of Medicaid enrollees are having to move to commercial plans.
Most of us have probably experienced that disruption – resulting in your having to change a primary care provider or specialist, though you had trust in that relationship, or having a break in a medication because you need to get prior authorization again. But you can imagine how much more dire the situation is when patients have a serious condition, are inpatient at a facility, pregnant, or terminally ill. Identifying a new provider and getting into care can take weeks, and disruptions in cancer care, for example, have been found to result in result in disease progression. People with complex pregnancies similarly cannot afford to have any break between providers. And a patient who can’t live with a break in treatment may instead have to stick with their provider despite their now being out of network – and face unmanageable costs.
Colorado already has protections if a provider leaves a plan’s network mid-year, and with this legislation, Colorado would join states like Montana, Arizona, and Iowa, that protect enrollees when they change plans altogether by allowing them to continue for up to 90 days with their provider. This bill makes that extension more meaningful because it allows this group – people with serious and complex conditions – to have existing prior authorizations honored.
In conclusion – this bill takes an important step reducing the gaps in care that accompany a change in coverage and I ask the committee for a “yes” vote today.
Sincerely,
Bethany Pray
Deputy Director
Colorado Center on Law and Policy
Update 4/4/2024: SB24-093 was signed into law by the Governor on April 4, 2024.
