Sec. 107b.
(1) No later than October 1, 2018, the department must apply for or apply to amend a waiver under section 1115 of the social security act, 42 USC 1315, and submit subsequent waivers to prohibit and prevent a lapse in the workforce engagement requirements as a condition of receiving medical assistance under section 105d. The waiver must be a request to allow for all of the following:
(a) A requirement of 80 hours average per month of qualifying activities or a combination of any qualifying activities, to count toward the workforce engagement requirement under this section.
(b) A requirement that an able-bodied recipient verifies that he or she is meeting the workforce engagement requirements by the last day of each month for the previous month’s qualifying activities through MiBridges or any other subsequent system. If a recipient does not verify that he or she is meeting the workforce engagement requirements by the last day of the month for the previous month, he or she may verify compliance with the workforce engagement requirements up to 60 days after the missed date for reporting. If the recipient verifies compliance within this time period, the month is not a noncompliance month. A recipient is allowed 3 months of noncompliance within a 12-month period. The recipient may use a noncompliance month either by self-reporting that he or she is not in compliance that month or by the default method of not reporting compliance for that month. The department shall notify the recipient after each time a noncompliance month is used. After a recipient uses 3 noncompliance months in a 12-month period, the recipient loses coverage for at least 1 month until he or she becomes compliant under this section.
(c) Allow substance use disorder treatment that is court-ordered, prescribed by a licensed medical professional, or is a Medicaid-funded substance use disorder treatment, to count toward the workforce engagement requirements if the treatment impedes the ability to meet the workforce engagement requirements.
(d) A requirement that community service must be completed with a nonprofit organization that is exempt from taxation under section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(4) of the internal revenue code of 1986, 26 USC 501. Community service can only be used as a qualifying activity for up to 3 months in a 12-month period.
(e) A requirement that a recipient who is also a recipient of the supplemental nutrition assistance program or the temporary assistance for needy families program who is in compliance with or exempt from the work requirements of the supplemental nutrition assistance program or the temporary assistance for needy families program is considered to be in compliance with or exempt from the workforce engagement requirements in this section.
(f) An exemption from the reporting requirement if the department is able to verify the recipient’s compliance through other data available to the department.
(g) An exemption for a recipient who meets 1 or more of the following conditions:
(i) A recipient who is the caretaker of a family member who is under the age of 6 years. This exemption allows only 1 parent at a time to be a caretaker, no matter how many children are being cared for.
(ii) A recipient who is currently receiving temporary or permanent long-term disability benefits from a private insurer or from the government.
(iii) A recipient who is a full-time student who is not a dependent of a parent or guardian or whose parent or guardian qualifies for Medicaid. This subparagraph includes a student in a postsecondary institution or certificate program.
(iv) A recipient who is pregnant.
(v) A recipient who is the caretaker of a dependent with a disability which dependent needs full-time care based on a licensed medical professional’s order. This exemption is allowed 1 time per household.
(vi) A recipient who is the caretaker of an incapacitated individual even if the incapacitated individual is not a dependent of the caretaker.
(vii) A recipient who has proven that he or she has met the good cause temporary exemption.
(viii) A recipient who has been designated as medically frail.
(ix) A recipient who has a medical condition that results in a work limitation according to a licensed medical professional’s order.
(x) A recipient who has been incarcerated within the last 6 months.
(xi) A recipient who is receiving unemployment benefits from this state. This exemption applies during the period the recipient received unemployment benefits and ends when the recipient is no longer receiving unemployment benefits.
(xii) A recipient who is under 21 years of age who had previously been in a foster care placement in this state.
(2) After the waiver requested under this section is approved, the department must include, but is not limited to, all of the following, as approved in the waiver, in its implementation of the workforce engagement requirements under this section:
(a) A requirement of 80 hours average per month of qualifying activities or a combination of any qualifying activities counts toward the workforce engagement requirement under this section.
(b) A requirement that an able-bodied recipient verifies that he or she is meeting the workforce engagement requirements by the last day of each month for the previous month’s qualifying activities through MiBridges or any other subsequent system. If a recipient does not verify that he or she is meeting the workforce engagement requirements by the last day of the month for the previous month, he or she may verify compliance with the workforce engagement requirements up to 60 days after the missed date for reporting. If the recipient verifies compliance within this time period, the month is not a noncompliance month. A recipient is allowed 3 months of noncompliance within a 12-month period. The recipient may use a noncompliance month either by self-reporting that he or she is not in compliance that month or by the default method of not reporting compliance for that month. The department shall notify the recipient after each time a noncompliance month is used. After a recipient uses 3 noncompliance months in a 12-month period, the recipient loses coverage for at least 1 month until he or she becomes compliant under this section.
(c) Allowing substance use disorder treatment that is court-ordered, is prescribed by a licensed medical professional, or is a Medicaid-funded substance use disorder treatment, to count toward the workforce engagement requirements if the treatment impedes the ability to meet the workforce engagement requirements.
(d) A requirement that community service must be completed with a nonprofit organization that is exempt from taxation under section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(4) of the internal revenue code of 1986, 26 USC 501. Community service can only be used as a qualifying activity for up to 3 months in a 12-month period.
(e) A requirement that a recipient who is also a recipient of the supplemental nutrition assistance program or the temporary assistance for needy families program who is in compliance with or exempt from the work requirements of the supplemental nutrition assistance program or the temporary assistance for needy families program is considered to be in compliance with or exempt from the workforce engagement requirements in this section.
(f) An exemption from the reporting requirement if the department is able to verify the recipient’s compliance through other data available to the department.
(g) An exemption for a recipient who meets 1 or more of the following conditions:
(i) A recipient who is the caretaker of a family member who is under the age of 6 years. This exemption allows only 1 parent at a time to be a caretaker, no matter how many children are being cared for.
(ii) A recipient who is currently receiving temporary or permanent long-term disability benefits from a private insurer or from the government.
(iii) A recipient who is a full-time student who is not a dependent of a parent or guardian or whose parent or guardian qualifies for Medicaid. This subparagraph includes a student in a postsecondary institution or a certificate program.
(iv) A recipient who is pregnant.
(v) A recipient who is the caretaker of a dependent with a disability which dependent needs full-time care based on a licensed medical professional’s order. This exemption is allowed 1 time per household.
(vi) A recipient who is the caretaker of an incapacitated individual even if the incapacitated individual is not a dependent of the caretaker.
(vii) A recipient who has proven that he or she has met the good cause temporary exemption.
(viii) A recipient who has been designated as medically frail.
(ix) A recipient who has a medical condition that results in a work limitation according to a licensed medical professional’s order.
(x) A recipient who has been incarcerated within the last 6 months.
(xi) A recipient who is receiving unemployment benefits from this state. This exemption applies during the period the recipient received unemployment benefits and ends when the recipient is no longer receiving unemployment benefits.
(xii) A recipient who is under 21 years of age who had previously been in a foster care placement in this state.
(3) The department may first direct recipients to existing resources for job training or other employment services, child care assistance, transportation, or other supports. The department may develop strategies for assisting recipients to meet workforce engagement requirements under this section.
(4) By October 1 of each year the department submits a waiver to prohibit and prevent a lapse in the workforce engagement requirements, the Medicaid director must submit to the governor, the senate majority leader, and the speaker of the house of representatives a letter confirming the submission of the waiver request required under subsection (1).
(5) Beginning January 1, 2020, the department must execute a survey to obtain the information needed to complete an evaluation of the medical assistance program under section 105d to determine how many recipients have left the Healthy Michigan program as a result of obtaining employment and medical benefits.
(6) The department must execute a survey to obtain the information needed to submit a report to the legislature beginning January 1, 2021, and every January 1 after that, that shows, for medical assistance under section 105d known as Healthy Michigan, the number of exemptions from workforce engagement requirements granted to individuals in that year and the reason the exemptions were granted.
(7) The department shall enforce the provisions of this section by conducting the compliance review process on medical assistance recipients under section 105d who are required to meet the workforce engagement requirements of this section. If a recipient is found, through the compliance review process, to have misrepresented his or her compliance with the workforce engagement requirements in this section, he or she shall not be allowed to participate in the Healthy Michigan program under section 105d for a 1-year period.
(8) The department shall implement the requirements of this section no later than January 1, 2020, and shall notify recipients to whom the workforce engagement requirements described in this section are likely to apply of the workforce engagement requirements 90 days in advance.
(9) The cost of initial implementation of the workforce engagement requirements required under this section shall not be considered when determining the cost-benefit analysis required under section 105d(28)(b). The cost of initial implementation does not include the cost of ongoing administration of the workforce engagement requirements. The ongoing costs of administering the workforce engagement requirements required under this section may have up to a $5,000,000.00 general fund/general purpose revenue limit that shall not be counted when determining the cost-benefit analysis required under section 105d(28)(b). Any ongoing costs above $5,000,000.00 of general fund/general purpose revenue to administer the workforce engagement requirements under this section shall be considered in the cost-benefit analysis required under section 105d(28)(b).
(10) Beginning January 1, 2020, medical assistance recipients who are not exempt from the workforce engagement requirements under this section must be in compliance with this section. Beginning January 1, 2020, a medical assistance applicant who is not exempt from the work engagement requirements under this section must be in compliance with this section not more than 30 days after an eligibility determination is made.
(11) The department shall not withdraw, terminate, or amend any waiver submitted under this section without the express approval of the legislature in the form of a bill enacted by law.
History: Add. 2018, Act 208, Eff. Sept. 20, 2018 ;-- Am. 2019, Act 50, Imd. Eff. Sept. 23, 3019 Popular Name: Act 280
Structure Michigan Compiled Laws
Act 280 of 1939 - The Social Welfare Act (400.1 - 400.122)
Section 400.48 - Organization of Counties Into Single Administrative Unit; Appointment of Director.
Section 400.50 - County Employee; Unauthorized Transfer of Public Relief Recipient, Misdemeanor.
Section 400.53 - County Board; Cooperation With State Department.
Section 400.55 - Administration of Public Welfare Program by County Department.
Section 400.55b - Repealed. 1983, Act 213, Imd. Eff. Nov. 11, 1983.
Section 400.55c - Repealed. 1995, Act 223, Eff. Mar. 28, 1996.
Section 400.56 - Repealed. 1995, Act 223, Eff. Mar. 28, 1996.
Section 400.56a, 400.56b - Repealed. 1964, Act 3, Imd. Eff. Mar. 13, 1964.
Section 400.56c-400.56g - Repealed. 1995, Act 223, Eff. Mar. 28, 1996.
Section 400.57c - Application for Assistance by Minor Parent; Duties of Department.
Section 400.57h - Repealed. 2011, Act 131, Eff. Oct. 1, 2011.
Section 400.57k - Repealed. 2011, Act 131, Eff. Oct. 1, 2011.
Section 400.57l - Feasibility of Substance Abuse Testing Program; Report.
Section 400.57o - Repealed. 2011, Act 131, Eff. Oct. 1, 2011.
Section 400.57p - Counting Certain Months Toward Cumulative Total of 48 Months; Exclusion.
Section 400.57q - Earned Income Disregard.
Section 400.57r - Family Independence Program Assistance; Limitation.
Section 400.57s - Repealed. 2015, Act 58, Eff. Oct. 1, 2015.
Section 400.57t - Repealed. 2011, Act 131, Eff. Oct. 1, 2011.
Section 400.58a - County Medical Care Facility; Admittance.
Section 400.58c - County Medical Care Facility; Patients With Contagious Disease, Isolation.
Section 400.59b - Notification of County of Residence; Denial of Settlement, Notice.
Section 400.59c - Domicile and Legal Settlement Cases; Appeal, Determination by State Department.
Section 400.59d - Domicile and Legal Settlement Cases; Appeal; Insufficient Evidence.
Section 400.60a - Program of Computer Data Matching; Development and Implementation; Report.
Section 400.61 - Violations; Penalties; Cessation of Payments During Imprisonment.
Section 400.62 - Relief or Assistance; Effect of Amendment or Repeal; No Claim for Compensation.
Section 400.63a - Contract Awards to Specific Organizations.
Section 400.65 - Hearings Within County Department; Rules for Procedure; Review by Board.
Section 400.66 - Finality of Decision as to Relief or Medical Care; Investigation by Department.
Section 400.66c - Hospitalization; Reimbursement of County Expense.
Section 400.66d - Finality of Determination of Ineligibility for Hospitalization.
Section 400.66f - Repealed. 1971, Act 146, Imd. Eff. Nov. 12, 1971.
Section 400.66h - Hospitalization; Consent to Surgical Operation, Medical Treatment; First Aid.
Section 400.66k - Office; Creation; Purpose; Duties; Powers; Appeals Procedure.
Section 400.66m - Invoices for Reimbursement.
Section 400.66n - Appropriations.
Section 400.68 - Application by County Board for State and Federal Moneys.
Section 400.70 - Appropriation for Expenses by County Board of Supervisors.
Section 400.71 - Distinction Between Township, City, and County Poor; Abolition.
Section 400.72 - Repealed. 1968, Act 117, Imd. Eff. June 11, 1968.
Section 400.73 - Repealed. 1975, Act 237, Eff. Jan. 1, 1976.
Section 400.74 - Child Care and Social Welfare Funds; Disbursement; Bond; Purchases Made Locally.
Section 400.75 - County Board of Auditors; Authority.
Section 400.77b - Repealed. 1973, Act 189, Imd. Eff. Jan. 8, 1974.
Section 400.79 - Prosecuting Attorney; Duty to Give Counsel to Board or Director.
Section 400.80 - County Social Welfare Board; Reports to State Department.
Section 400.86 - County Departments; Powers and Duties Transferred.
Section 400.87 - Veterans' Relief Act Not Repealed.
Section 400.88 - Repealed. 1957, Act 95, Eff. July 1, 1957.
Section 400.90 - Political Activity or Use of Position by Officers and Employes Prohibited; Penalty.
Section 400.103 - Agreements as to Eligibility for Supplementary Benefits and Medical Assistance.
Section 400.105e - Appropriations.
Section 400.105f - Michigan Health Care Cost and Quality Advisory Committee.
Section 400.105g - Remote Patient Monitoring Services; Definition.
Section 400.105h - Telemedicine; Eligibility; Definitions.
Section 400.107 - Medically Indigent; Financial Eligibility; Income.
Section 400.107a - Workforce Engagement Requirements; Definitions.
Section 400.109b - Modification of Formula for Indigent Care Volume Price Adjustor.
Section 400.109d - Services Relating to Performing Abortions; Prohibitions.
Section 400.109i - Locally or Regionally Based Single Point of Entry Agencies for Long-Term Care.
Section 400.109j - Designation of Single Point of Entry Agencies; Limitation.
Section 400.110 - Medical Services for Residents Absent From State.
Section 400.110a - Funding; Rural Hospital Access Pool; Limitations; Definitions.
Section 400.111b - Requirements as Condition of Participation by Provider.
Section 400.111c - Duties of Director in Carrying Out Authority Conferred by MCL 400.111a(7)(d).
Section 400.111e - Grounds for Action by Director.
Section 400.111h - Applicability of MCL 400.111a to 400.111g.
Section 400.111k - Lead Screening on Children Enrolled in Medicaid.
Section 400.111l - Children Participants in Wic Program; Lead Testing Required.
Section 400.111n - Effective Date of Policy Changes Affecting Medicaid Cost Reports.
Section 400.112 - Medical Services; Contract With Private Agencies as Fiscal Agents.
Section 400.112b - Definitions.
Section 400.112d - Repealed. 2006, Act 674, Imd. Eff. Jan. 10, 2007.
Section 400.112e[1] - Payments Not Required; Amounts Constituting Payment in Full.
Section 400.112h - "Estate" and "Property" Defined.
Section 400.112j - Rules; Report.
Section 400.112k - Applicability of Program to Certain Medical Assistance Recipients.
Section 400.113 - “Executive Director” and “Office” Defined.
Section 400.115 - Services to Children and Youth.
Section 400.115a - Office of Children and Youth Services; Duties Generally.
Section 400.115f - Definitions.
Section 400.115k - Appeal of Determination; Notice of Rights of Appeal.
Section 400.115n - Escape of Juvenile From Facility or Residence; Notification; Definitions.
Section 400.115s - Interstate Compacts; Authorization; Force and Effect; Contents.
Section 400.117 - Repealed. 1972, Act 301, Eff. Jan. 1, 1973.
Section 400.117b - Office of Children and Youth Services; Powers Generally.
Section 400.117d - Repealed. 2018, Act 21, Eff. May 15, 2018.
Section 400.117f - Joint Program for Providing Juvenile Justice Services.
Section 400.117g - County Block Grant; Calculation; Adjustment; Deduction.
Section 400.119 - Youth Advisory Commission; Duties.
Section 400.119a - Departments and Agencies of Executive Branch of Government; Duties.
Section 400.120, 400.121 - Repealed. 1988, Act 75, Eff. June 1, 1991.
Section 400.122 - Repealed. 1978, Act 87, Eff. Apr. 1, 1978.