Concerning procedures related to the provision of health-care services to inmates, and, in connection therewith, prohibiting certain copayments and fees.
Current law requires the department of corrections (department) to assess a copayment for inmate-initiated visits to providers of medical, dental, mental health, and optometric care services. Current law permits a waiver or reduction of the copayment under a range of circumstances. The department's current administrative regulations assess fees when an inmate fails to attend or refuses a scheduled health-care appointment. The bill eliminates the copayment and prohibits the department from assessing a fee when an inmate fails to attend or refuses a health-care appointment until July 1, 2028 . The bill requires the department to report during its 2026 "SMART Act" hearing on the number of times an inmate failed to attend a scheduled health-care appointment or requested an appointment when the request was not relevant to an actual medical condition. The bill reduces appropriations to the department by a net of $165,682, which includes an increase of $157,179 appropriated from the general fund and a decrease of $322,861 from cash funds.
(Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.)