Judges: WINSTON BRYANT, Attorney General
Filed Date: 5/16/1996
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Mr. Tim Leathers Chairman Arkansas State and Public School Employees Insurance Board 401 DFA Building Post Office Box 3278 Little Rock, Arkansas 72203
Dear Mr. Leathers:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on the following three questions of interest to the Arkansas State and Public School Employees Insurance Board (the "Board") relating to Act 1206 of 1995 (the "Act"):
1. Is the Board required by the inclusion of the word "any" in the language of Ark. Code Ann. §
21-5-405 (b)(2)(A)(I) to offer every health maintenance organization that offers a point of service option, when the requirement to do so would conflict with other duties of the Board and would contradict other mandates of the enacting legislation?2. [D]oes the provision in §
21-5-405 (b)(2)(A)(ii) that the Board offer "The health benefit plan offered by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences-sponsored managed care program" prohibit the Board from establishing reasonable standards of operation of the UAMS program and selecting among the multiple benefit options offered by UAMS?3. Does Ark. Code Ann. §
21-5-401 et seq., in conjunction with Act 782 of 1995, empower the Board to take the actions necessary to fund the health insurance plan for public school employees on a self-insured basis?
With respect to your first question, your request states:
The Board is aware of Arkansas Attorney General's Opinion No.
95-126 , dated June 27, 1995, which expresses the opinion that the word "any" requires the Board to offer "each and every HMO that meets the requirement of the statute and wishes to participate." However, as the Board has assumed its overall duties under the Act, the Board has become aware of numerous and significant conflicts between the interpretation of the word "any" to mean "every" and other provisions of the Act. In short, the Board finds that the legislative directives spelled out for it in the Act seem largely unachievable if it cannot promulgate reasonable standards for all interested HMO bidders.
Your request goes on to state that Act 1206, codified at A.C.A. §§
Your request also quotes from A.C.A. §
You state that, in the event this office opines that the Board may do so, the Board will establish "minimum operational and performance standards consistent with the dictates of [Act 1206] in the RFP specifications" and that "each and every HMO/POS meeting those RFP standards would be automatically authorized to provide health coverage to State and Public School Employees." Request at 2.
Your request also states that, if the Act requires the Board to offer each HMO/POS that wishes to participate, "certain other powers, duties and objectives mandated by the Act can fall completely out of the control of the Board, and therefore be unenforceable." Request at 2. While your request does not specify the additional powers, duties, and objectives to which your refer, it does give four examples of how the Board's inability to promulgate and enforce standards for HMO/POSs "could be used to escape accountability to the Board that is otherwise mandated by the Act. . . ." Request at 3. The examples illustrate problems of adverse selection, use of misleading marketing materials, refusal to provide data, and geographically selective service. You state that an HMO/POS's refusal to provide data to the Board would circumvent A.C.A. §
Although this is a difficult issue that ultimately may require judicial determination, it is my opinion that the Board must offer each and every HMO/POS that wishes to participate. It is my view that no objective or mandate of the Act would be so frustrated by the inclusion of all HMO/POSs that A.C.A. §
I accept your assertion that the inclusion of all HMO/POSs will make it more difficult to achieve certain of the general objectives of the Act. In my opinion, however, none of them will be frustrated to a degree that would permit the Board to disregard the language of A.C.A. §
In addition, even if provisions of the Act are in irreconcilable conflict, and one or more must be deemed to be repealed by implication by other provisions, it appears that the specific requirement to include all HMO/POSs might well be held to repeal the generally-stated objectives of the Act. In the interpretation of statutes, specific provisions control and take precedence over general ones, whether or not the provisions are part of the same enactment. Valley Nat'l Bank of Arizona v. Stroud,
As you point out, the Board is authorized by statute to "[u]ndertake studies and take any appropriate action which it determines will promote the financial soundness and overall well-being of the state employee and public school personnel health insurance programs." In my view, however, this provision must be interpreted only those actions that are both deemed appropriate and not contrary to the Act. The promulgation of rules that would prevent the offering of all HMO/POSs that wish to participate would, in my opinion, be contrary to the specific mandate of A.C.A. §
It seems entirely reasonable that the Board should be empowered to impose standards upon participants, but it is well-established that "[t]he wisdom, advisability, expediency, propriety, and necessity of particular legislation are matters solely for consideration of the legislative department and are not for judicial determination." Hill v. Bank ofNortheast Arkansas,
With respect to your second question, it is my opinion, for reasons similar to those stated above and in Op. Att'y Gen.
The Act clearly envisions a single UAMS "health benefit plan." Your request indicates that UAMS offers "multiple benefit options." Without further information, I cannot determine the legislative intent underlying A.C.A. §
With respect to your third question, it is my opinion that Act 782 of 1995 is of no legal effect. It should be noted that the only substantive provision of Act 782, approved by the Governor on March 24, 1995, was an amendment to A.C.A. § 6-17-1108 (Repl. 1993). Act 1206, approved by the Governor on April 11, 1995, expressly repealed A.C.A. § 6-17-1108. Act 1206, § 9. In addition to Act 1206's express repeal of A.C.A. § 6-17-1108, the Arkansas Code Revision Commission has determined that the amendment of A.C.A. § 6-17-1108 by Act 782 was superseded by Act 1206 pursuant to A.C.A. §
In my opinion, however, it is likely that Act 1206 likely would be held to empower the Board to fund a health insurance plan for public school employees on a self-insured basis. The Board is authorized and directed to "[p]romote increased access to various plan options and health care models" including "[a]ny . . . [health care] plans deemed suitable by the board." A.C.A. §
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General J. Madison Barker.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:JMB/cyh