by Devon Green, VP of Government Relations, VAHHS
Although no one has gaveled out, this will be my last column of the session… for now. The health care bills are done, but if this session has made one thing clear, it’s that health care permeates Vermont’s economy, government, and communities. There is much work to be done in the off-session to make care more affordable while maintaining access to essential services.
Below are the happenings from last week, as well as a summary of the health care bills that passed out of the legislature.
340B Protection/Prescription Drug Cap: In a 20-10 vote, the Senate approved of a floor amendment to change the start date in H.266 from July 1, 2025 to January 1, 2026. This will give hospitals time to implement the 120% price cap on prescription drugs administered in a hospital outpatient setting while ensuring premium savings for the Vermonters during the calendar year. The bill also maintains 340B protections for hospitals, FQHCs, and retail pharmacies along with 340B reporting requirements for hospitals.
Health Care Reform: The Conference Committee met on S.126 and came to agreement that included requiring global hospital budgets for at least one non-critical access hospital in 2028 and all hospitals in 2030. The legislature passed out the bill and it is on its way to the governor. Below is a summary:
- AHS must make recommendations on reducing hospital spend by 2.5% ($100M) statewide over the course of FY 2026, with first report by July 1, 2025
- Green Mountain Care Board to implement reference-based pricing for hospitals by 2027 with hospital input
- If it has the resources, the Green Mountain Care Board will implement global hospital budgets to at least one non-CAH hospital in 2028 and all hospitals by 2030
- Hospitals must report the number of administrative versus direct-care employees to the Green Mountain Care Board
- Hospitals must report variable compensation to the Green Mountain Care Board
- Hospitals must notify the Green Mountain Care Board, the Agency of Human Services, the Health Care Advocate, and their legislative delegation about the reduction or elimination of hospital services in order to comply with a budget 45 days prior to implementation
- Actions recommended by Act 167 are exempt
- Green Mountain Care Board oversees hospital networks and makes recommendations
- Requires AHS to develop a statewide health care plan overseen by a health care delivery advisory committee, including hospital representation
- Establishes a Vermont Steering Committee for Comprehensive Primary Health Care to create a plan every three years, starting with December 1, 2030
- AHS shall work with the HIE steering committee to create a “Unified Health Data Space” and examine whether to integrate clinical and claims data—report due on January 15, 2026
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I welcome all ideas and discussion at [email protected].
