State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
Legislation

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91_HB3321

 
                                               LRB9109465JSpc

 1        AN   ACT   to  create  the  Health  Care  Provider  Joint
 2    Negotiation Act.

 3        Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
 4    represented in the General Assembly:

 5        Section  1.  Short  title.  This  Act may be cited as the
 6    Health Care Provider Joint Negotiation Act.

 7        Section 5.  General Definitions. The following words  and
 8    phrases, when used in this Act, shall have the meanings given
 9    to  them in this Section unless the context clearly indicates
10    otherwise:
11        "Attorney General" means  the  Attorney  General  of  the
12    State of Illinois.
13        "Covered lives" means the total number of individuals who
14    are  entitled to benefits under a health care insurance plan,
15    including, but not limited  to,  beneficiaries,  subscribers,
16    and members of the plan.
17        "Department" means the Department of Insurance.
18        "Health  care  insurer"  means  an insurance company or a
19    health service corporation authorized in this State to  issue
20    policies   or   subscriber  contracts,  which  reimburse  for
21    expenses of health care services.  For purposes of this  Act,
22    a third party administrator shall be considered a health care
23    insurer  when  interacting  with  health  care  providers and
24    enrollees on behalf of a health care insurer.
25        "Health care  insurer  affiliate"  means  a  health  care
26    insurer  that is affiliated with another entity by either the
27    insurer or entity having a 5% or greater, direct or indirect,
28    ownership or investment interest in the other through equity,
29    debt, or other means.
30        "Health care  provider"  means  any  physician,  hospital
31    facility,  or  other  person  that  is  licensed or otherwise
 
                            -2-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1    authorized to furnish health care services and also  includes
 2    any other entity that arranges for the delivery or furnishing
 3    of health care service.
 4        "Health  care  services"  means  health  care services or
 5    products rendered or sold by a provider within the  scope  of
 6    the  provider's  license  or  legal  authorization.  The term
 7    includes, but is not limited to, hospital, medical, surgical,
 8    dental, vision, and pharmaceutical services or products.
 9        "Health  maintenance  organization"   (HMO)   means   any
10    organization  formed  under the laws of this or another state
11    to provide or arrange for one or more health care plans under
12    a system which causes any part of the  risk  of  health  care
13    deliver to be borne by the organization or its providers.
14        "Joint  negotiation" means negotiation with a health care
15    insurer by 2 or more independent health care providers acting
16    together as part of a formal entity or group or otherwise.
17        "Joint negotiation representative" means  a  third  party
18    who  is  authorized  by  a  group  of independent health care
19    providers to negotiate on their behalf  with  health  benefit
20    plans over contractual terms and conditions affecting them.
21        "Point-of-service  product"  (POS) means a group contract
22    that includes both in-plan covered services  and  out-of-plan
23    covered  services as well as a POS contract in which the risk
24    for   out-of-plan   covered   services   is   borne   through
25    reinsurance.
26        "Preferred  provider  organization"  (PPO)  includes  any
27    health care  insurer  product,  other  than  an  HMO  or  POS
28    product,  that provides financial incentives for enrollees to
29    use health care providers in a  designated  provider  network
30    for covered services.
31        "Provider  contract"  means an agreement between a health
32    care provider and a health care insurer that sets  forth  the
33    terms  and  conditions under which the provider is to deliver
34    health care services to enrollees of the  insurer.  The  term
 
                            -3-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1    does  not  include employment contracts between a health care
 2    insurer and a health care professional.
 3        "Provider network" means a group of health care providers
 4    who have provider contracts with a health care insurer.
 5        "Self-funded health  benefit  plan"  means  a  plan  that
 6    provides  for  the assumption of the cost of or spreading the
 7    risk of loss resulting from health care services  of  covered
 8    lives  by  an employer, union, or other sponsor substantially
 9    out of the current revenues, assets, or any  other  funds  of
10    the sponsor.
11        "Third  party  administrator"  means  any  person  who on
12    behalf of a plan sponsor  or  insurer  receives  or  collects
13    charges,  contributions,  or  premiums  for,  or  adjusts  or
14    settles  claims on residents of this State in connection with
15    any type of life  or  accident  or  health  benefit  provided
16    through or as an alternative to insurance within the scope of
17    Class  1(a),  1(b),  or  2(a)  of  Section  4 of the Illinois
18    Insurance Code, other than any of the following:
19             (1)  a   corporation,   association,    trust,    or
20        partnership  which  is administering a plan (i) on behalf
21        of the employees of the corporation, association,  trust,
22        or  partnership  or (ii) for the employees of one or more
23        subsidiaries or  affiliated  corporations  or  affiliated
24        associations, trusts, or partnerships;
25             (2)  a union administering a plan for its members;
26             (3)  a plan sponsor administering its own plan;
27             (4)  an  insurer  to  the extent regulated under the
28        Illinois Insurance Code;
29             (5)  a  producer  licensed  in  this   State   whose
30        insurance  activities  are  limited  to  the scope of the
31        license;
32             (6)  a trust and its trustees and  employees  acting
33        pursuant to its trust agreement established in conformity
34        with 29 U.S.C. 186;
 
                            -4-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1             (7)  a  person  who adjusts or settles claims in the
 2        normal course of the person's practice or  employment  as
 3        an    attorney-at-law,   and   who   does   not   collect
 4        contributions or premiums  in  connection  with  life  or
 5        accident or health coverage;
 6             (8)  a  person  who  administers  only  self-insured
 7        workers'    compensation   plans   or   single   employer
 8        self-insured life or accident or health benefit plans;
 9             (9)  a credit card issuing company that advances for
10        and collects premiums or charges  from  its  credit  card
11        holders  who  have  authorized  the  collection,  if  the
12        company does not adjust or settle claims;
13             (10)  a  creditor  on  behalf  of  its  debtors with
14        respect to insurance covering a debt between the creditor
15        and its debtors.

16        Section 10.  Legislative intent.
17        The  General  Assembly  hereby  finds  and  declares   as
18    follows:
19        Active,  robust, and fully competitive markets for health
20    care services provide the best opportunity for  residents  of
21    this State to receive high-quality health care services at an
22    appropriate cost.
23        A  substantial  amount  of  health  care services in this
24    State is purchased for the benefit of patients by health care
25    insurers engaged in the provision of  health  care  financing
26    services  or  is  otherwise delivered subject to the terms of
27    agreements between health care insurers and providers of  the
28    services.
29        Health  care  insurers  are  able  to control the flow of
30    patients  to  providers  of  health  care  services   through
31    compelling  financial  incentives for patients in their plans
32    to utilize only the  services  of  providers  with  whom  the
33    insurers have contracted.
 
                            -5-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1        Health   care  insurers  also  control  the  health  care
 2    services rendered  to  patients  through  utilization  review
 3    programs and other managed care tools and associated coverage
 4    and payment policies.
 5        The  power  of  health  care  insurers in markets of this
 6    State for health care services has  become  great  enough  to
 7    create a competitive imbalance, reduce levels of competition,
 8    and threaten the availability of high-quality, cost-effective
 9    health care.
10        In  many  areas  of this State, the health care financing
11    market is dominated by a few health care insurers, with  some
12    insurers controlling over 50% of the market.
13        Health  care insurers often are able to virtually dictate
14    the  terms  of  the  provider  contracts  that   they   offer
15    physicians and other health care providers and commonly offer
16    provider contracts on a take-it-of-leave-it basis.
17        The  power of health care insurers to unilaterally impose
18    provider contract terms jeopardizes the ability of physicians
19    and other health  care  providers  to  deliver  the  superior
20    quality  health  care  services  that have been traditionally
21    available in this State.
22        Physicians and other health care providers  do  not  have
23    sufficient  market  power  to reject unfair provider contract
24    terms  that  impede  their  ability  to   deliver   medically
25    appropriate care without undue delay or hassle.
26        Inequitable  reimbursement and other unfair payment terms
27    adversely affect quality patient care and access by  reducing
28    the  resources  that  health  care  providers  can  devote to
29    patient care and decreasing the time that physicians are able
30    to spend with their patients.
31        Inequitable reimbursement and other unfair payment  terms
32    also  endanger  the  health  care  infrastructure and medical
33    advancement by diverting capital needed for  reinvestment  in
34    the  health  care delivery system, curtailing the purchase of
 
                            -6-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1    state-of-the-art technology, the pursuit of medical research,
 2    and the expansion of medical services, all to  the  detriment
 3    of the residents of this State.
 4        The  inevitable collateral reduction and migration of the
 5    health care work force also will have  negative  consequences
 6    for this State's economy.
 7        Empowering  independent  health care providers to jointly
 8    negotiate with health care insurers as provided in  this  Act
 9    will   help  restore  the  competitive  balance  and  improve
10    competition in the markets for health care services  in  this
11    State,  thereby providing benefits for consumers, health care
12    providers, and less dominant health care insurers.
13        Allowing independent health  care  providers  to  jointly
14    negotiate  with  health  care insurers through a common joint
15    negotiation representative will improve  the  efficiency  and
16    effectiveness  of  communications  between  the  parties  and
17    result  in  provider contracts that better reflect the mutual
18    areas of agreement.
19        This Act is  necessary  and  proper  and  constitutes  an
20    appropriate  exercise  of  the  authority  of  this  State to
21    regulate the business of insurance and the delivery of health
22    care services.
23        The pro-competitive  and  other  benefits  of  the  joint
24    negotiations  and  related  joint activity authorized by this
25    Act including, but not limited to, restoring the  competitive
26    balance  in  the  market for health care services, protecting
27    access to quality patient care,  promoting  the  health  care
28    infrastructure   and   medical   advancement,  and  improving
29    communications outweigh any anti-competitive effects.
30        It is the intention of the General Assembly to  authorize
31    independent  health  care providers to jointly negotiate with
32    health care insurers and to qualify those joint  negotiations
33    and  related  joint activities for the State-action exemption
34    to the federal antitrust laws through the  articulated  State
 
                            -7-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1    policy and active supervision provided in this Act.

 2        Section   15.  Negotiations   regarding  non-fee  related
 3    terms.  Independent  health  care   providers   may   jointly
 4    negotiate  with  a  health care insurer and engage in related
 5    joint activity, as provided in Sections 30 and 35,  regarding
 6    non-fee-related   matters   which  can  affect  patient  care
 7    including, but not limited to, any of the following:
 8             (1)  The definition of medical necessity  and  other
 9        conditions of coverage.
10             (2)  Utilization review criteria and procedures.
11             (3)  Clinical practice guidelines.
12             (4)  Preventive  care  and  other medical management
13        policies.
14             (5)  Patient  referral  standards   and   procedures
15        including,  but  not  limited  to,  those  applicable  to
16        out-of-network referrals.
17             (6)  Drug  formularies  and standards and procedures
18        for prescribing off-formulary drugs.
19             (7)  Quality assurance programs.
20             (8)  Respective health care provider and health care
21        insurer liability for the treatment or lack of  treatment
22        of plan enrollees.
23             (9)  The  methods  and timing of payments including,
24        but not limited  to,  interest  and  penalties  for  late
25        payments.
26             (10)  Other administrative procedures including, but
27        not limited to, enrollee eligibility verification systems
28        and claim documentation requirements.
29             (11)  Credentialing standards and procedures for the
30        selection,  retention,  and  termination of participating
31        health care providers.
32             (12)  Mechanisms for resolving disputes between  the
33        health  care insurer and health care providers including,
 
                            -8-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1        but not limited to, the appeals process  for  utilization
 2        review and credentialing determination.
 3             (13)  The    health    insurance   plans   sold   or
 4        administered by the insurer  in  which  the  health  care
 5        providers are required to participate.

 6        Section  20.  Negotiation  regarding fees and fee-related
 7    terms. When a health  care  insurer  has  substantial  market
 8    power  over  independent health care providers, the providers
 9    may jointly negotiate with the health care insurer and engage
10    in related joint activity, as provided in Sections 30 and  35
11    regarding  fees  and  fee-related  matters including, but not
12    limited to, any of the following:
13             (1)  The amount of payment or  the  methodology  for
14        determining the payment for a health care service.
15             (2)  The  conversion  factor  for  a  resource-based
16        relative value scale or similar reimbursement methodology
17        for health care services.
18             (3)  The  amount  of  any discount on the price of a
19        health care service.
20             (4)  The procedure code or other description of  the
21        health care service or services covered by a payment.
22             (5)  The  amount of a bonus related to the provision
23        of health care services or a withhold  from  the  payment
24        due for a health care service.
25             (6)  The  amount  of  any  other  component  of  the
26        reimbursement methodology for a health care service.

27        Section 25.  Substantial market power.
28        (a)  Standard.   A  health  care  insurer has substantial
29    market power over health care providers when:
30             (1)  the insurer's market share in the comprehensive
31        health care financing market or  a  relevant  segment  of
32        that  market,  alone  or  in  combination with the market
 
                            -9-                LRB9109465JSpc
 1        shares of affiliates, exceeds either 15% of  the  covered
 2        lives  in  the  geographic  service area of the providers
 3        seeking to jointly negotiate or 25,000 covered lives; or
 4             (2)  the Attorney General determines that the market
 5        power  of  the  insurer  in  the  relevant  product   and
 6        geographic  markets  for  the  services  of the providers
 7        seeking to jointly negotiate  significantly  exceeds  the
 8        countervailing  market  power  of  the  providers  acting
 9        individually.
10        (b)  Comprehensive  health  care  financing  market.  The
11    comprehensive health care financing market  includes  all  of
12    the following:
13             (1)  All  health care insurer products which provide
14        comprehensive coverage,  alone  or  in  combination  with
15        other products sold together as a package, including, but
16        not  limited to, indemnity, HMO, PPO and POS products and
17        packages.
18             (2)  Self-funded health benefit plans which  provide
19        comprehensive coverage.
20        (c)  Relevant  market segments.  Relevant market segments
21    in the comprehensive health care  financing  market  includes
22    all of the following:
23             (1)  Health  care  insurer  products and self-funded
24        health benefit plans.
25             (2)  Within  the   health   care   insurer   product
26        category, private health insurance, PPO, and POS.
27             (3)  Within  the  private health insurance category,
28        indemnity, HMO, PPO, and POS products.
29             (4)  Such other segments  as  the  Attorney  General
30        determines  are  appropriate  for purposes of determining
31        whether a health  care  insurer  has  substantial  market
32        power.
33        (d)  Annual calculation by Department of Insurance.
34             (1)  By  March 31 of each year, the Department shall
 
                            -10-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1        calculate the number of covered lives of each health care
 2        insurer and its affiliates in  the  comprehensive  health
 3        care financing market and in each relevant market segment
 4        for  each  county of the State. The Department shall make
 5        these calculations by averaging quarterly data  from  the
 6        preceding  year  unless  it  has  been determined that it
 7        would  be  more  appropriate  to  use  other   data   and
 8        information. The Department may recalculate covered lives
 9        determinations   earlier   than   the   required   annual
10        recalculation when the Department deems it appropriate.
11             (2)  When  calculating  the market power of a health
12        care  insurer  or  affiliate   that   has   third   party
13        administration  products, the covered lives of the health
14        care insurers and self-funded health  benefit  plans  for
15        whom  the  insurer  or  affiliate provides administrative
16        services shall be treated as the  covered  lives  of  the
17        insurer or affiliate.
18             (3)  The  Department's  covered  lives  calculations
19        shall  be  used  for  purposes  of determining the market
20        power of health care insurers in the comprehensive health
21        care financing market from the date of the  determination
22        until   the   next  annual  determination  or  until  the
23        Department recalculates the determination,  whichever  is
24        earlier.
25             (4)  In  cases  in  which  the  relevant  geographic
26        market    is    multiple   counties,   the   Department's
27        calculations for those counties shall be aggregated  when
28        counting  the  covered  lives  of the health care insurer
29        whose market power is being evaluated.
30             (5)  The Department shall  collect  and  investigate
31        information  necessary  to calculate the covered lives of
32        health care insurers and their affiliates.

33        Section  30.  Conduct  of  negotiations.  The   following
 
                            -11-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1    requirements shall apply to the exercise of joint negotiation
 2    rights and related activity under this Act:
 3             (1)  Health  care providers shall select the members
 4        of their joint negotiation group by mutual agreement.
 5             (2)  Health care providers shall designate  a  joint
 6        negotiation  representative  as the sole party authorized
 7        to negotiate with the health care insurer  on  behalf  of
 8        the health care providers as a group.
 9             (3)  Health care providers may communicate with each
10        other  and  their  joint  negotiation representative with
11        respect to the matters to be negotiated with  the  health
12        care insurer.
13             (4)  Health care providers may agree upon a proposal
14        to be presented by their joint negotiation representative
15        to the health care insurer.
16             (5)  Health  care providers may agree to be bound by
17        the  terms  and  conditions  negotiated  by  their  joint
18        negotiation representative.
19             (6)  The health care  providers'  joint  negotiation
20        representative may provide the health care providers with
21        the  results of negotiations with the health care insurer
22        and an evaluation of any offer made by  the  health  care
23        insurer.
24             (7)  The  health  care  providers' joint negotiation
25        representative may reject a contract proposal by a health
26        care insurer on behalf of the health  care  providers  as
27        long   as  the  health  care  providers  remain  free  to
28        individually contract with the health care insurer.
29             (8)  The health care  providers'  joint  negotiation
30        representative  shall advise the health care providers of
31        the provisions of this Act and shall  inform  the  health
32        care  providers of the potential for legal action against
33        health care providers who violate the  Federal  antitrust
34        laws.
 
                            -12-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1             (9)  Health  care  providers  may  not negotiate the
 2        inclusion or alteration of terms and  conditions  to  the
 3        extent the terms or conditions are required or prohibited
 4        by   government   regulation.  This  item  shall  not  be
 5        construed to limit the right of health care providers  to
 6        jointly   petition   government   for  a  change  in  the
 7        regulation.

 8        Section 35.  Attorney General oversight.
 9        (a)  Petition for approval of joint negotiations.  Before
10    engaging in any joint negotiation with a health care insurer,
11    health care providers shall  obtain  the  Attorney  General's
12    approval  to  proceed  with  the  negotiations.  The petition
13    seeking approval shall include all of the following:
14             (1)  The name and business  address  of  the  health
15        care providers' joint negotiation representative.
16             (2)  The  names and business addresses of the health
17        care providers petitioning to jointly negotiate.
18             (3)  The name and business  address  of  the  health
19        care  insurer  or  insurers  with  which  the petitioning
20        providers seek to jointly negotiate.
21             (4)  The proposed subject matter of the negotiations
22        or discussions with the health care insurer or insurers.
23             (5)  The proportionate relationship  of  the  health
24        care  providers  to  the  total population of health care
25        providers in the relevant geographic service area of  the
26        providers by providers by provider type and specialty.
27             (6)  In  the  case of a petition seeking approval of
28        joint  negotiations  regarding  one  or   more   fee   or
29        fee-related  terms,  a  statement  of the reasons why the
30        health care insurer has substantial market power over the
31        health care providers. The attorney  general  shall  make
32        the  determination of what constitutes substantial market
33        power.
 
                            -13-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1             (7)  A statement of the  pro-competitive  and  other
 2        benefits of the proposed negotiations.
 3             (8)  The  health  care  provider's joint negotiation
 4        representative's plan  of  operation  and  procedures  to
 5        ensure compliance with this Act.
 6             (9)  Any other data, information, and documents that
 7        the  petitioners  desire  to  submit  in support of their
 8        petition.
 9        (b)  Petition  for  approval  of  modification  of  joint
10    negotiations.  The health care providers shall  supplement  a
11    petition  under  subsection (a) or (b) of this Section as new
12    information becomes available that indicates that the subject
13    matter of the proposed  negotiations  with  the  health  care
14    insurer  has  or  will  materially change and must obtain the
15    Attorney General's approval of material changes. The petition
16    seeking approval shall include all of the following:
17             (1)  The Attorney General's file reference  for  the
18        original petition for approval of joint negotiations.
19             (2)  The proposed new subject matter.
20             (3)  The  information  required by items (6) and (7)
21        of subsection  (a)  with  respect  to  the  proposed  new
22        subject matter.
23             (4)  Any other data, information, and documents that
24        the  health care providers or health care insurer desires
25        to submit in support of their petition.
26        (c)  Petition for approval of  provider  contract  terms.
27    No provider contract terms negotiated under this Act shall be
28    effective  until  the  terms  are  approved  by  the Attorney
29    General. The  petition  seeking  approval  shall  be  jointly
30    submitted  by  the  health care providers and the health care
31    insurer who are parties to the contract. The  petition  shall
32    include all of the following:
33             (1)  The  Attorney  General's file reference for the
34        original petition for approval of joint negotiations.
 
                            -14-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1             (2)  The negotiated provider contract terms.
 2             (3)  A statement of the  pro-competitive  and  other
 3        benefits of the negotiated provider contract terms.
 4             (4)  Any other data, information, and documents that
 5        the  health care providers or health care insurer desires
 6        to submit in support of their petition.
 7        (d)  Resumption  of  negotiations.   Joint   negotiations
 8    approved  under  this  Act may continue until the health care
 9    insurer notifies the joint negotiation representative for the
10    health care providers that it declines  to  negotiate  or  is
11    terminating negotiations. If the health care insurer notifies
12    the   joint   negotiation   representative  for  health  care
13    providers that it desires to resume  negotiations  within  60
14    days after the end of negotiations, the health care providers
15    may   renew  the  previously  approved  negotiations  without
16    obtaining  a  separate  approval  of  the  renewal  from  the
17    Attorney General.

18        Section 40.  Attorney General determinations.
19        (a)  Time period for review. The Attorney  General  shall
20    either  approve  or  disapprove  a  petition under Section 35
21    within 30 days after the filing. If disapproved, the Attorney
22    General  shall  furnish  a   written   explanation   of   any
23    deficiencies  along  with  a  statement  of specific remedial
24    measures as to how the deficiencies may be corrected.
25        (b)  Standards for reviewing petitions.
26             (1)  The Attorney General shall approve  a  petition
27        under subsections (a) and (b) of Section 30 if:
28                  (A)  the  pro-competitive and other benefits of
29             the joint negotiations outweigh any anti-competitive
30             effects; and
31                  (B)  in the case of a petition seeking approval
32             to jointly negotiate one or more fee or  fee-related
33             terms,  the  health  care  insurer  has  substantial
 
                            -15-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1             market power over the health care providers.
 2             (2)  The  Attorney  General shall approve a petition
 3        under subsection (c) of Section 35 if:
 4                  (A)  the pro-competitive and other benefits  of
 5             the  contract  terms  outweigh  any anti-competitive
 6             effects; and
 7                  (B)  the contract  terms  are  consistent  with
 8             other applicable laws and regulations.
 9             (3)  The pro-competitive and other benefits of joint
10        negotiations  or  negotiated  provider contract terms may
11        include, but shall not be limited to:
12                  (A)  restoration of the competitive balance  in
13             the market for health care services;
14                  (B)  protections  for access to quality patient
15             care;
16                  (C)  promotion    of    the     health     care
17             infrastructure and medical advancement; and
18                  (D)  improved   communications  between  health
19             care providers and health care insurers.
20             (4)  When weighing the anti-competitive  effects  of
21        provider   contract   terms,  the  Attorney  General  may
22        consider whether the terms:
23                  (A)  provide for excessive payments; or
24                  (B)  contribute to the escalation of  the  cost
25             of providing health care services.
26        (c) Supplemental information. For the purpose of enabling
27    the  Attorney General to make the findings and determinations
28    required by this Section, the Attorney  General  may  require
29    the  submission of such supplemental information as he or she
30    may deem necessary or proper to reach a determination.

31        Section 45.  Notice and comment.
32        (a)  Notice to health insurer. In the case of a  petition
33    under  subsection  (a)  or  (b)  of  Section 35, the Attorney
 
                            -16-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1    General shall notify the health insurer of the  petition  and
 2    provide  the  insurer  with the opportunity to submit written
 3    comments within a specified time frame that does  not  extend
 4    beyond  the date on which the Attorney General is required to
 5    act on the petition.
 6        (b)  Public notice not required.
 7             (1)  Except  as  provided  in  subsection  (a),  the
 8        Attorney General shall not be required to provide  public
 9        notice of a petition under subsection (a), (b), or (c) of
10        Section  35, to hold a public hearing on the petition, or
11        to otherwise accept public comment on the petition.
12             (2)  The  Attorney  General  may,  at  his  or   her
13        discretion,  publish notice of a petition for approval of
14        provider contract terms  in  the  Illinois  Register  and
15        receive  written comment from interested persons, so long
16        as the opportunity for public comment  does  not  prevent
17        the  Attorney  General from acting on the petition within
18        the time period set forth in this Act.

19        Section 50.  Disapproval; Attorney General proceedings.
20        (a)  Request  for  hearing.  Within  30  days  after  the
21    mailing of a  notice  of  disapproval  of  a  petition  under
22    Section 35, the petitioners may make a written application to
23    the Attorney General for a hearing.
24        (b)  Hearing  to  be  conducted. Upon receipt of a timely
25    written application for a hearing, the Attorney General shall
26    schedule and conduct a hearing as provided for in Article  10
27    of  the  Illinois  Administrative  Procedure Act. The hearing
28    shall be held within 30 days after the date  the  application
29    for   hearing   is  filed  unless  the  petitioner  seeks  an
30    extension.
31        (c)  Mandamus action. If the Attorney  General  does  not
32    issue  a  written approval or disapproval of a petition under
33    Section 35 within the required time period,  the  parties  to
 
                            -17-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1    the  petition  shall  have  the right to petition the circuit
 2    court for a mandamus order requiring the Attorney General  to
 3    approve or disapprove the petition.
 4        (d)  Parties   to  proceedings.  The  sole  parties  with
 5    respect to  any  petition  under  Section  35  shall  be  the
 6    petitioners  and  the  Attorney  General. Notwithstanding any
 7    otherwise applicable provision of Article 10 of the  Illinois
 8    Administrative  Procedure Act, the Attorney General shall not
 9    be required to treat any other person as a party and no other
10    person shall be entitled to  appeal  the  Attorney  General's
11    determination.

12        Section 55.  Confidentiality and disclosure.
13        (a)  General  rule. All information, documents and copies
14    thereof obtained by or disclosed to the Attorney  General  or
15    any  other  person in a petition under Section 35 or pursuant
16    to a request for supplemental  information  under  subsection
17    (c)  of  Section  40  shall  be given confidential treatment,
18    shall not be subject to subpoena and shall not be made public
19    or otherwise disclosed by the Attorney General or  any  other
20    person without the written consent of the petitioners to whom
21    the  information  pertains,  except as provided in subsection
22    (b).
23        (b)  Exceptions.
24             (1)  In the case of a petition under subsection  (a)
25        or  (b)  of Section 35, the Attorney General may disclose
26        the information required  to  be  submitted  pursuant  to
27        items (1) through (4) of subsection (a) of Section 35 and
28        items (1) and (2) of subsection (b) of Section 35.
29             (2)  The  Attorney  General  may  disclose  provider
30        contracts  negotiated  under  this  Act provided that the
31        Attorney  General  removes  or  redacts  those   provider
32        contract  provisions that contain payment rates and fees.
33        The Attorney General may disclose payment rates and  fees
 
                            -18-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1        to  the Department of Insurance, the insurance department
 2        of another state, and a law enforcement official of  this
 3        State,  any  other  state,  or  an  agency of the Federal
 4        Government, so long as the agency or office receiving the
 5        information agrees in writing to hold it confidential and
 6        in a manner consistent with this Act.

 7        Section  60.  Good  faith  negotiations.  A  health  care
 8    insurer shall  negotiate  in  good  faith  with  health  care
 9    providers regarding the terms of provider contracts.

10        Section  65.  Construction. Nothing contained in this Act
11    shall be construed to:
12             (1)  prohibit or restrict activities by health  care
13        providers  that  is sanctioned under the Federal or State
14        laws;
15             (2)  prohibit or require governmental approval of or
16        otherwise restrict activity by health care providers that
17        is not prohibited under the Federal antitrust laws;
18             (3)  require approval of provider contracts terms to
19        the  extent  that  the  terms  are  exempt   from   State
20        regulation; or
21             (4)  expand   a  health  care  provider's  scope  of
22        practice or to require a health care insurer to  contract
23        with any type or specialty of health care providers.

24        Section  70.  Exclusions.  Nothing  contained in this Act
25    shall authorize  joint  negotiations  regarding  health  care
26    services   covered  under  any  of  the  following  insurance
27    policies or coverage programs:
28             (1)  Workers' compensation.
29             (2)  Medical payment coverage issued as  part  of  a
30        motor vehicle insurance policy.
31             (3)  Medicare supplemental.
 
                            -19-               LRB9109465JSpc
 1             (4)  Civilian  Health  and  Medial  Program  of  the
 2        Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS).
 3             (5)  Accidental death or dismemberment.
 4             (6)  Specified disease.
 5             (7)  Long-term care insurance.
 6             (8)  Disability insurance.
 7             (9)  Credit insurance.
 8             (10)  Wages  or  payments  in  lieu  of  wages for a
 9        period during which  an  employee  is  absent  from  work
10        because of sickness or injury.

11        Section  75.  Rules.  The Attorney General and Department
12    of Insurance may promulgate  such  rules  as  are  reasonably
13    necessary to implement the purposes of this Act.

14        Section   99.  Effective  date.  This  Act  takes  effect
15    January 1, 2001.

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