H 3921 Session 112 (1997-1998)
H 3921 General Bill, By J.G. Felder and Fleming
Similar(S 643)
A BILL TO AMEND SECTION 43-7-460, AS AMENDED, CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
1976, RELATING TO RECOVERY FROM ESTATES OF CERTAIN INDIVIDUALS FOR MEDICAL
ASSISTANCE, SO AS TO ESTABLISH CONDITIONS FOR UNDUE HARDSHIP UNDER WHICH SUCH
RECOVERY MUST BE WAIVED UNTIL THE SECRETARY OF THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES ESTABLISHES CRITERIA.
04/10/97 House Introduced and read first time HJ-72
04/10/97 House Referred to Committee on Ways and Means HJ-72
A BILL
TO AMEND SECTION 43-7-460, AS AMENDED, CODE OF
LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, RELATING TO
RECOVERY FROM ESTATES OF CERTAIN INDIVIDUALS FOR
MEDICAL ASSISTANCE, SO AS TO ESTABLISH CONDITIONS
FOR UNDUE HARDSHIP UNDER WHICH SUCH RECOVERY
MUST BE WAIVED UNTIL THE SECRETARY OF THE UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
ESTABLISHES CRITERIA.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South
Carolina:
SECTION 1. Section 43-7-460 of the 1976 Code, as last amended
by Act 71 of 1995, is further amended to read:
"Section 43-7-460. (A) The State Department of Health
and Human Services Finance Commission shall seek recovery
of medical assistance paid under the Title XIX State Plan for Medical
Assistance from the estate of an individual who:
(1) at the time of death was an inpatient in a nursing facility,
intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded, or other medical
institution if the individual is required, as a condition of receiving
services in the facility under the state plan, to spend for costs of
medical care all but a minimal amount of the person's income
required for personal needs; or
(2) was fifty-five years of age or older when the individual
received medical assistance, but only for medical assistance
consisting of nursing facility services, home and community-based
services, and hospital and prescription drug services provided to
individuals in nursing facilities or receiving home and
community-based services.
(B) Recovery under this section may be made only after the death
of the decedent's surviving spouse, if any, and only at a time when
the decedent has no surviving child under age twenty-one or no child
who is blind or permanently and totally disabled as defined in Title
XVI of the Social Security Act.
(C) Recovery under this section may
must be waived by the commission
department upon proof of undue hardship, asserted by
an heir or devisee of the property claimed as established by
the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human
Services pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1396p(b)(3). Until
conflicting hardship standards and criteria are issued by the Secretary
of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, the
following are considered instances of undue hardship in which
recovery must be waived:
(1) with respect to the decedent's home property, if the decedent
could have transferred the home property on or after the date of his
or her Medicaid application without incurring a penalty under 42
U.S.C. Section 139p(c), if the property could have been transferred
without penalty to a:
(a) spouse who has survived the decedent;
(b) surviving child of the decedent who was under age
twenty-one or blind or totally disabled;
(c) surviving sibling of the decedent who possessed an
equity interest in the property and who lived in the home for a period
of at least one year immediately prior to the date the decedent was
institionalized; or
(d) surviving child of the deceased who lived in the home
for a period of at least two years immediately before the decedent
became institutionalized and who provided care which allowed the
decedent to delay institutionalization.
However, hardship under this item only applies if the individual to
whom the property could have been transferred without penalty is
actually residing in the home at the time the hardship is claimed and
this hardship status only protects up to one hundred thousand dollars
of appraised value of the home property and to the extent the
appraised value of the home property exceeds one hundred thousand
dollars, that portion of the value that exceeds one hundred thousand
dollars, is subject to recovery by the department as otherwise
authorized under this section.
(2) With respect to the decedent's home and one acre of land
surrounding the house, if an immediate family member:
(a) has resided in the home for at least two years immediately
prior to the recipient's death;
(b) is actually residing in the home at the time the hardship
is claimed;
(c) owns no other real property or agrees to sell all other
interest in real property and give the proceeds to the department; and
(d) has annual gross family income that does not exceed one
hundred eighty-five percent of the federal poverty guidelines.
(3) With respect to an income producing asset:
(a) the spouse's or immediate family member's annual
gross family income would fall below the federal poverty guidelines
without the income produced by the asset; and
(b) at the time of death, the asset is not producing annual
income in excess of one hundred eighty-five percent of the federal
poverty guidelines or the spouse or immediate family member agrees
to pay all income in excess of one hundred eighty-five percent of the
federal poverty guidelines to the department until the department
recovers all medical assistance due under this section.
(D) Recovery of medical assistance payments under this section
applies to medical assistance paid after June 30, 1994.
(E) Claims against an estate under this section have priority as
established in Section 62-3-805(a)(2)(ii).
(F) For purposes of this section:
(1) 'estate' means all real and personal property and other assets
included within the individual's estate as defined in Section
62-1-201(11);
(2) the 'state plan' means Title XIX State Plan for Medical
Assistance in effect at the decedent's death.;
(3) 'immediate family member' means a child,
parent, brother, or sister of the deceased.
(G) Notwithstanding subsection (A)(2) upon the enactment of any
amendments to federal law which grant states the option to exempt
home and community-based services or other noninstitutional
Medicaid services from the estate recovery provisions mandated by
Section 13612 of the federal Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1993, the State Health and Human Services Finance Commission
shall seek recovery of medical assistance paid under the Title XIX
State Plan for Medical Assistance from the estate of an individual
who:
(1) at the time of death was an inpatient in a nursing facility,
intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded, or other medical
institution if the individual is required, as a condition of receiving
services in the facility under the state plan, to spend for costs of
medical care all but a minimal amount of the person's income
required for personal needs; or
(2) was fifty-five years of age or older when the individual
received medical assistance but only for medical assistance consisting
of nursing facility services."
SECTION 2. This act takes effect upon approval by the Governor.
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