HF4634

Behavioral health fund payments for uncollectible withdrawal management debt provided, span of eligibility for behavioral health fund services extended, pilot program established, and other behavioral health provisions modified.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: SF4710

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • To change how the Behavioral Health Fund pays for withdrawal management debt that cannot be collected, extend eligibility for behavioral health fund services, test a pilot program for additional licensing inspections of substance use disorder treatment programs, and adjust related administrative and funding provisions.

Main provisions

  • Behavioral Health Fund payment for uncollectible withdrawal management debt (new Subdivision 2a to 254B.03)

    • The commissioner must create rules to identify uncollectible withdrawal management debt.
    • Criteria for uncollectible debt include:
    • The services were provided by an eligible vendor under an existing agreement.
    • The client was not eligible for behavioral health fund payment at the time of services.
    • The provider billed a third-party payer, the claim was denied, and the remaining balance is the client’s responsibility.
    • The provider billed the client for the remaining balance (including copays, coinsurance, and deductibles) and made reasonable efforts to collect.
    • The remaining balance is at least 90 days past due.
    • The criteria cannot require the program to enroll the client in a payment plan or to refer the debt to collections.
    • Beginning with services provided on or after July 1, 2027, the commissioner may pay withdrawal management programs from the Behavioral Health Fund for uncollectible debt, up to the rate determined for those services.
    • The payment is subject to the established rate and program rules; it does not override other program obligations (e.g., existing duties under section 62J.808).
  • Other bill provisions (highlights)

    • Extend the span of eligibility for behavioral health fund services (longer access to fund services).
    • Pilot program to permit additional alternative licensing inspections for substance use disorder treatment programs (testing new inspection approaches).
    • Authorize counties to temporarily retain administrative functions related to the behavioral health fund (local administration flexibility).
    • Modify adolescent substance use disorder treatment rate (adjusts how adolescent SUD services are funded).
    • Modify funding for withdrawal management startup and capacity-building grants (changes to grant funding levels or eligibility).
    • Require reports (implies new reporting requirements related to fund use, expenditures, or program outcomes).
    • Amend Minnesota Statutes 2024 sections (254B.03 with new subdivision 2a, 254B.04 subdivision changes, and 254B.06 subdivisions) and reference Laws 2025 First Special Session Chapter 9 (article 4 sections 21–30).
    • Overall, the bill introduces additional funding and administrative tools related to behavioral health and withdrawal management services.

Significant changes to existing law

  • Creates a new authority and process for paying uncollectible withdrawal management debt from the Behavioral Health Fund (new Subd. 2a in 254B.03), with criteria to determine when debt is uncollectible and when the fund may pay it (starting July 1, 2027).
  • Establishes policy changes that expand fund eligibility, enhance oversight and licensing options, and adjust funding structures for related withdrawal management and adolescent SUD services.
  • Allows counties limited temporary control over BH Fund administrative functions, which may alter day-to-day fund management at the local level.
  • Introduces pilot testing for alternative licensing inspections, which could influence how SUD treatment programs are reviewed and licensed.

Potential implications

  • Providers of withdrawal management services may have a clearer path to recoup losses on debts that are truly uncollectible, reducing financial risk.
  • Providers must meet specific criteria to qualify debts for fund payment, encouraging careful documentation of eligibility and collections efforts.
  • Extension of fund eligibility and new licensing inspection pilots could change how services are funded and overseen, potentially affecting access and quality of care.
  • Administrative changes at the county level may shift how funds are managed locally.

Relevant Terms - Behavioral Health Fund - withdrawal management - uncollectible debt - eligible vendor - third-party payment source - copayments - coinsurance - deductibles - 90 days past due - 62J.808 - licensing inspections - substance use disorder treatment programs - adolescent substance use disorder treatment rate - withdrawal management startup grants - capacity-building grants - Minnesota Statutes 254B.03, 254B.04, 254B.06 - Laws 2025 First Special Session chapter 9 - commissioner (of Human Services)

Bill text versions

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Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 25, 2026HouseActionIntroduction and first reading, referred toHuman Services Finance and Policy
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Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee

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