Relates to the age requirement for voting in a primary election
Sets a $25/hour minimum wage for home care and related providers, with annual inflation increases and requires state rates to fully cover the wage costs.
Sets a $25/hour minimum wage for home care and related providers, with annual inflation increases and requires state rates to fully cover the wage costs.
Status & Timeline
- Introduced in the Massachusetts Senate (filed 1/16/2025; presented by Sen. Robyn K. Kennedy).
- Referred to relevant committees (record shows referral to Health Care Financing). A public hearing was scheduled for 07/01/2025.
- If enacted, the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) must complete the required rulemaking and file for emergency adoption of the amended regulations within 180 days after the Act’s passage.
Purpose
- To establish an enhanced, guaranteed minimum wage for employees who provide home care and certain social service program services paid by the Commonwealth, and to require state reimbursement rates to fully cover the cost of that wage.
Key Provisions
1. New statutory wage floor for covered workers
- Requires that the minimum wage paid to employees of home care agencies providing homemaker and personal care/homemaker services be no less than $25.00 per hour in the first “rate year.”
- Requires the same $25.00 floor for employees of social service program providers that receive state payments under Chapter 118E, §13C.
Annual inflation adjustment
Rate-setting and reimbursement
Affected Parties
- Directly affected: home care agency employees (homemakers, personal care providers) and employees of social service program providers paid through the referenced state payment systems.
- Indirectly affected: home care and social service providers (who will receive adjusted state reimbursement rates), MassHealth/state budgets (increased reimbursement obligations), and program participants (potentially affected by service availability/contracting).
- Likely impacts: upward pressure on state expenditures for contracted care, higher wages and potentially improved retention among care workers, and possible effects on provider finances and capacity pending full rate adjustments.
Implementation Notes & Potential Fiscal Impact
- The bill mandates that payment rates be adjusted to cover the wage increase; therefore, implementing it likely increases state spending for programs financed under Chapter 19A and Chapter 118E unless offset by other changes.
- Exact fiscal impact would depend on the number of covered workers, current wages, and timing of rate-year adjustments; the bill does not specify the funding source for increased payments beyond requiring rate adjustments.
- The emergency regulation requirement (within 180 days of enactment) is intended to accelerate implementation once the law is passed.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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