Washington Code 48.62.121 – General operating regulations — Employee remuneration — Governing control — School districts — Use of insurance producers and surplus line brokers — Health care services — Trusts
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(1) No employee or official of a local government entity or the board of pilotage commissioners may directly or indirectly receive anything of value for services rendered in connection with the operation and management of a self-insurance program other than the salary and benefits provided by his or her employer or the reimbursement of expenses reasonably incurred in furtherance of the operation or management of the program. No employee or official of a local government entity or the board of pilotage commissioners may accept or solicit anything of value for personal benefit or for the benefit of others under circumstances in which it can be reasonably inferred that the employee’s or official’s independence of judgment is impaired with respect to the management and operation of the program.
Terms Used In Washington Code 48.62.121
- Statute: A law passed by a legislature.
- Trustee: A person or institution holding and administering property in trust.
(2)(a) No local government entity may participate in a joint self-insurance program in which local government entities do not retain complete governing control. This prohibition does not apply to:
(i) Local government contribution to a self-insured employee health and welfare benefits plan otherwise authorized and governed by state statute;
(ii) Local government participation in a multistate joint program where control is shared with local government entities from other states;
(iii) Local government contribution to a self-insured employee health and welfare benefit trust in which the local government shares governing control with their employees; or
(iv) Local government participation in a joint self-insurance program with the board of pilotage commissioners, as authorized in RCW 48.62.037.
(b) If a local government self-insured health and welfare benefit program, established by the local government as a trust, shares governing control of the trust with its employees:
(i) The local government must maintain at least a fifty percent voting control of the trust;
(ii) No more than one voting, nonemployee, union representative selected by employees may serve as a trustee; and
(iii) The trust agreement must contain provisions for resolution of any deadlock in the administration of the trust.
(3) Moneys made available and moneys expended by school districts and educational service districts for self-insurance under this chapter are subject to such rules of the superintendent of public instruction as the superintendent may adopt governing budgeting and accounting. However, the superintendent shall ensure that the rules are consistent with those adopted by the state risk manager for the management and operation of self-insurance programs.
(4) RCW 48.30.140, 48.30.150, 48.30.155, and 48.30.157 apply to the use of insurance producers and surplus line brokers by local government self-insurance programs.
(5) Every individual and joint local government self-insured health and welfare benefits program that provides comprehensive coverage for health care services shall include mandated benefits that the state health care authority is required to provide under RCW 41.05.170 and 41.05.180. The state risk manager may adopt rules identifying the mandated benefits.
(6) An employee health and welfare benefit program established as a trust shall contain a provision that trust funds be expended only for purposes of the trust consistent with statutes and rules governing the local government or governments creating the trust.
NOTES:
Effective date—2009 c 162: See note following RCW 48.03.020.
Severability—Effective date—2008 c 217: See notes following RCW 48.03.020.
Review of health care trusts—1993 c 458: “If chapter 492, Laws of 1993 is enacted into law, the provisions of chapter 48.62 RCW shall be reviewed to evaluate the extent to which health care trusts provide benefits to certain individuals in the state; and to review the federal laws that may constrain the organization or operation of these joint employee-employer entities. The health services commission shall make appropriate recommendations to the governor and the legislature as to how these trusts can be brought under the provisions of chapter 492, Laws of 1993.” [ 1993 c 458 § 3.]