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Bill

SB 83

Prisons and reformatories; modifying elements of exemption to certain account. Effective date.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Todd Gollihare and 1 co-sponsor

Extends and empowers the Primary Care Payment Reform Task Force to gather data, analyze primary care spending, set an investment target, and guide payment reforms across Medicaid,

Becomes law without Governor's signature 05/14/2025
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Bill Summary · SB 83

SB 83 — "Extend Primary Care Task Force" (NC) — Summary

Status: Passed 1st Reading (Introduced Jan 17, 2025)
Primary subject areas: Health services, data & records systems, insurance, reports, task forces

Main purpose

SB 83 extends and clarifies the North Carolina Primary Care Payment Reform Task Force (the “Task Force”), housed administratively in the NC Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Division of Health Benefits. The bill expands the Task Force’s authority to collect and safeguard payer/provider data, refines its duties, and updates reporting and sunset timelines so the group can develop a primary-care investment target and related implementation options for Medicaid, the State Health Plan, and commercial insurers.

Key provisions

  • Re-establishes/extends the Task Force within DHHS (Division of Health Benefits) and specifies duties, including:
    • Establishing a working definition of “primary care” applicable across NC Medicaid, State Health Plan, and commercial insurance.
    • Conducting actuarial analysis of current primary care spending (Medicaid and commercial market, including Medicare Advantage).
    • Assessing the adequacy of North Carolina’s primary care delivery system and its effects on clinician supply.
    • Studying other states’ approaches (e.g., minimum primary care spend policies).
    • Identifying data collection and measurement systems to inform a primary care investment target and methods to measure progress.
  • Data collection and compliance:
    • Authorizes Task Force requests for data and requires entities to comply within 30 days.
    • Directs DHHS and the Task Force to develop and implement a detailed data security and safeguarding plan (authentication, privacy compliance, audits, breach procedures, retention/disposition, encryption, staff training).
    • Specifies that Task Force data (wherever housed) is not a public record under Chapter 132 (i.e., not subject to public records disclosure).
  • Reporting and timeline:
    • Requires reports to the Joint Legislative Oversight Committees on Health & Human Services and on Medicaid — due April 1, 2024 and April 1, 2026 — with concrete, actionable recommendations.
    • Extends the Task Force’s expiration to December 31, 2026 (retroactive effective date to July 1, 2023).

Who is affected

  • State agencies: DHHS (Division of Health Benefits), Medicaid, State Health Plan.
  • Payers and plans: commercial insurers and Medicare Advantage plans (data requests).
  • Providers: primary care practices, health systems, and clinics (data, potential payment reforms).
  • Legislators and policy makers will receive analytic products to guide potential statutory or budget actions.
  • Entities submitting data will be subject to the Task Force’s data requests and to the security/privacy requirements specified.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Policy: The Task Force’s actuarial work and investment target could drive changes in primary care spending and payment models across Medicaid, the State Health Plan, and commercial markets.
  • Operational/fiscal: DHHS and the Task Force will need resources to implement the data-security plan, manage large data sets, and produce technical reports; payers/providers must respond to 30‑day data requests.
  • Privacy & transparency: The bill mandates robust safeguards and explicitly excludes collected data from public-records disclosure; HIPAA and other privacy laws remain relevant constraints.
  • Timeline: The law is retroactive to July 1, 2023 and requires near-term deliverables (April 2024 and April 2026 reports), with the Task Force active through Dec 31, 2026.

If you want, I can extract the bill's full operative text and produce a compliance checklist for agencies and providers responding to Task Force data requests.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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