SENIOR CARE RESPITE FUNDS:  ESCHEAT                                                         S.B. 642:

                                                                                               COMMITTEE SUMMARY

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Senate Bill 642 (as introduced 10-23-13)

Sponsor:  Senator Goeff Hansen

Committee:  Insurance

 

Date Completed:  11-5-13

 

CONTENT

 

The bill would amend the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act to require the State Treasurer to transfer to the Senior Care Respite Fund certain funds that escheat to the State from uncashed benefit checks written by a nonprofit mutual disability insurer.

 

The Act governs procedures by which abandoned property escheats to the State. Generally, the Treasurer must transfer escheated funds into the General Fund.  

 

The Act includes an exception that requires the Treasurer to transfer to the Senior Respite Care Fund funds that escheat to the State under Section 403a of the Nonprofit Health Care Corporation Reform Act.  (Under that section, any check or other written instrument for benefits that a nonprofit health care corporation, i.e., Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, pays to a subscriber or provider that is not cashed within the mandated period under the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act escheats to the State.  Generally, a check is presumed abandoned, and its funds escheat, three years after it was payable.) 

 

The bill would require the Treasurer also to transfer to the Senior Respite Care Fund funds that escheat to the State under Section 5805 of the Insurance Code.  (That section requires that benefits paid by a nonprofit mutual disability insurer that has merged with a nonprofit health care corporation to an insured or provider via check or other written instrument that is not cashed within the mandated period under the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act escheat to the State.) 

 

(Money in the Senior Care Respite Fund, established in the Older Michiganians Act, is annually distributed to Area Agencies on Aging.  Area Agencies on Aging are nonprofit agencies that assist the elderly in various ways, including providing access services, assisting in future planning, advocacy, and developing and implementing a system of home and community-based care.  There are currently 16 Area Agencies on Aging in Michigan.)

 

MCL 567.244                                                             Legislative Analyst:  Glenn Steffens

 

FISCAL IMPACT

 

The bill would maintain the current revenue source for the Senior Care Respite Fund.  It would require the deposit of escheated payments from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan under both its current structure and the revised structure, which will take effect January 1, 2014, pursuant to Public Acts 4 and 5 of 2013.  The budget for the Department of


Community Health includes $1.8 million in FY 2013-14 appropriated from the Senior Care Respite Fund for senior respite care.

 

                                                                                    Fiscal Analyst:  Steve Angelotti

                                                                                                          Elizabeth Pratt

 

This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.