WeVote

Bill

Bill

S 5145

Relates to certain authorizations for fiscal intermediaries

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Joe Addabbo and 8 co-sponsors

Establishes or tightens authorizations for fiscal intermediaries in health programs, impacting oversight, eligibility, and reporting for providers, beneficiaries, and agencies.

REFERRED TO HEALTH
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · S 5145

Summary: Bill S 5145 — Relates to certain authorizations for fiscal intermediaries

Overview
- Bill Number: S 5145
- Title: Relates to certain authorizations for fiscal intermediaries
- Status: REFERRED TO HEALTH
- Introduced: February 19, 2025
- Classification: bill

Key Legislative Details
- Primary sponsor: Leroy Comrie
- Additional sponsors (cosponsors):
- Luis R. Sepúlveda
- Nathalia Fernandez
- Zellnor Myrie
- Monica Martinez
- Julia Salazar
- Cordell Cleare
- James Sanders Jr.
- Joseph P. Addabbo Jr.
- Related bills:
- S 5020 (prior-session)
- A 5703 (companion)
- Legislative actions to date:
- 2025-02-19: REFERRED TO HEALTH (listed twice)

What the bill is about (as indicated by the title)
- The bill relates to “certain authorizations for fiscal intermediaries.” The available information does not include the bill text or a detailed description of the authorizations, so the precise scope, standards, and mechanisms are not specified here.

What is known about the bill’s purpose and potential impact
- Purpose (inferred from title):
- To establish, modify, or clarify authorization processes or credentials for fiscal intermediaries involved in health-related programs.
- Could address the role, oversight, or scope of services provided by fiscal intermediaries within health programs.
- Potential impacts (topic area-based, not text-specific):
- Affects entities functioning as fiscal intermediaries, such as oversight requirements, eligibility criteria, reporting obligations, or authorization procedures.
- Possible implications for providers, beneficiaries, and state or program administrators who interact with fiscal intermediaries.
- May impact program administration, compliance costs, and timeliness of service delivery if authorizations change.

Who would be affected
- Fiscal intermediaries operating under health-related programs.
- Healthcare providers and organizations contracting with or relying on fiscal intermediaries.
- Beneficiaries or consumers who receive services or supports delivered through fiscal intermediary arrangements.
- State or program agencies responsible for authorizations, oversight, and compliance.

Procedural and timeline aspects
- Status indicates the bill has been referred to the Senate Health Committee, suggesting it will undergo committee review, potential hearings, and amendments before any floor consideration.
- Introduced and referred on February 19, 2025; no further timeline details are provided in the available information.

Next steps for tracking
- Obtain the bill text and committee memo for precise provisions, definitions, deadlines, funding implications, and enforcement mechanisms.
- Monitor Health Committee hearings, amendments, and votes.
- Check for companion Assembly bill A 5703 and any related S 5020 updates or actions from prior sessions.

Notes
- The summary above is based on the bill’s title and the provided metadata. The exact provisions, definitions, and fiscal or regulatory specifics require the official bill text and committee materials.

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

Sign in to ask a question.