2001 House Bill 5103

Introduced in the House

Sept. 26, 2001

Introduced by Rep. Patricia Birkholz (R-88)

To establish in law that "health profession specialty field license" means an authorization to use a title issued to a licensee who has met qualifications established by a board for registration in a health profession specialty field, replacing the current term "health profession specialty field certification".

Referred to the Committee on Health Policy

April 24, 2002

Substitute offered

To replace the previous version of the bill with one which limits its application to the dental field.

The substitute passed by voice vote

May 1, 2002

Passed in the House 105 to 0 (details)

To establish in law that "health profession specialty field license" means an authorization to use a title issued to a licensee who has met qualifications established by a board for registration in a health profession specialty field, replacing "health profession specialty field certification," which is the current term.

Received in the Senate

May 1, 2002

June 5, 2002

Substitute offered

To replace the previous version of the bill with one which uses the bill as a legislative "vehicle" for a “Michigan Medicaid Quality Assurance Assessment” (MMQAA) program. The program would impose a new bed tax or fee on hospitals. The money generated would allow the state to collect an even greater amount of federal Medicaid revenue, much of which would go to the hospitals, resulting in a net gain. The substitute was amended to give hospitals that have graduate medical education programs a little more of the money, and others a little less.

The substitute passed by voice vote

Passed in the Senate 25 to 12 (details)

To establish in law that "health profession specialty field license" means an authorization to use a title issued to a licensee who has met qualifications established by a board for registration in a health profession specialty field, replacing "health profession specialty field certification," which is the current term. The bill was amended to make it a legislative "vehicle" for a new “Michigan Medicaid Quality Assurance Assessment” (MMQAA) program for hospitals. The program would impose a new bed tax or fee on hospitals. The money generated would allow the state to collect a greater amount of federal Medicaid matching fund revenue, much of which would go to the hospitals, resulting in a net gain.

Received in the House

June 5, 2002

June 18, 2002

Amendment offered by Rep. Keith Stallworth (D-12)

To prohibit the use of the proposed fee for purposes other than those specified. The amendment would potentially prohibit hospitals from passing the fee on to patients.

The amendment passed by voice vote

Amendment offered by Rep. Sandy Caul (R-99)

To distribute the increased federal money generated by the new fee proportionally to all hospitals, and not give more to hospitals with graduate medical education programs.

The amendment failed 28 to 72 (details)

Amendment offered by Rep. Mickey Mortimer (R-65)

To revise the new hospital assessments so as to maximize the amount of federal Medicaid dollars to be generated under the program, and return assessments not eligible for federal matching funds to the hospitals.

The amendment passed by voice vote

Passed in the House 84 to 18 (details)

Received in the Senate

June 18, 2002

To establish in law that "health profession specialty field license" means an authorization to use a title issued to a licensee who has met qualifications established by a board for registration in a health profession specialty field, replacing "health profession specialty field certification," which is the current term. The bill was amended to make it a legislative "vehicle" for a new “Michigan Medicaid Quality Assurance Assessment” (MMQAA) program for hospitals. The program would impose a new bed tax or fee on hospitals. The money generated would allow the state to collect a greater amount of federal Medicaid matching fund revenue, much of which would go to the hospitals, resulting in a net gain.

June 19, 2002

Passed in the Senate 27 to 9 (details)

Received in the House

June 19, 2002

Aug. 13, 2002

Referred to the Committee on Health Policy