July 18, 2025

As we discussed during our Thursday morning meeting (yesterday) and according to the New York State (NYS) Comptroller’s June monthly cash report, the State collected $33.2 billion during the first quarter of State Fiscal Year 2025-26 in tax receipts – $580.5 million above the Division of the Budget’s projections and $3.3 billion more than the same period in 2024. NYS Comptroller DiNapoli attributed the higher receipts primarily to strong personal income tax collections on 2024 income. While All Funds spending through June increased 10.8% compared to last year overall spending remained $1.7 billion below projections. The State ended the quarter with a $4.98 billion operating surplus, $927 million higher than anticipated.

The state’s General Fund closed June 30 with a $53.6 billion balance.

The Comptroller’s press release is available here:  https://www.osc.ny.gov/press/releases/2025/07/dinapoli-state-tax-receipts-higher-projections-first-quarter.  

The June 2025 cash report is here:  https://www.osc.ny.gov/files/reports/finance/cash-basis/pdf/cash-basis-june-2025.pdf

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(Marshall and Sterling, 7.18.25)

On July 4, 2025, President Trump signed a major tax and spending bill, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB), into law. The lengthy legislation includes major changes for employee benefit plans that may complicate existing benefit strategies.
Join Dannielle Mattes, Esq., Marshall+Sterling’s in-house Health Care Reform attorney, for a complimentary webinar, as she provides a breakdown of the key OBBB provisions impacting employer-sponsored health plans. 
Thursday, July 31st at 10AM EST
Register Here
Some of the topics this webinar will cover are: Expanded HSA eligibilityDependent Care FSA updates Changes to Medicaid + ACA subsidies Additional employee benefit items 
 

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Reminder:  According to the NYCON and their insurance division, Council Services Plus, after July 31, 2025, NY employers no longer need to provide COVID-19 sick leave and can do away with any applicable policies.

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(Fierce Healthcare, 7/18)

A new lawsuit brought by 20 Democratic attorneys general says a recent final rule by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will make it unfairly difficult to obtain health insurance through the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

The lawsuit mirrors a challenge by three cities and liberal advocacy groups earlier this month. Plaintiffs in both cases say the regulation will cause up to 1.8 million people to lose coverage, starting in 2026. Many more will see premiums increase and out-of-pocket costs soar.

Thursday’s suit also takes issue with a provision in the rule, finalized in June, barring federal funds toward gender-affirming care services as an essential health benefit under the ACA.

The states hope to delay the rule from taking effect in August.

“These sweeping changes would impose onerous verification requirements, junk health insurance premiums for some consumers, shorten enrollment periods in federal and state healthcare exchanges like Covered California, deprive up to 1.8 million Americans of health insurance, drive up out-of-pocket healthcare costs and so much more,” said California Attorney General Rob Bonta in a statement.

Only two states have more ACA enrollees than California, a news release said. Two million people accessing healthcare coverage in this avenue will face higher costs and new barriers to care. The attorneys general of New Jersey and Massachusetts are co-leading the suit with Bonta, according to statements.

Also Thursday, the CMS released new figures supporting the administration’s stance there have been a surge of improper enrollments draining federal health programs. Conservative think tank Paragon Health Institute has previously estimated 5 million people enrolled improperly in ACA plans in 2024.

Software engineers working with the CMS, analyzing 2024 enrollment data, found 1.2 million people enrolled in Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) in multiple states, and 1.6 million enrolled in one of those programs and an ACA exchange plan.

“The Biden Administration struggled to ensure that individuals were only enrolled in the single Medicaid or Exchange plan for which they were eligible, that ends today,” said CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz., M.D., in a separate news release. “CMS is restarting these important checks to follow federal law.”

Both Oz and Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in statements said this task will be easier due to the passage of Trump’s reconciliation bill. Broadly speaking, the bill makes it more difficult for individuals to enroll, and stay enrolled, in coverage.

The CMS said ACA exchanges are required to scrutinize data for dual enrollments through Medicaid Periodic Data Matching twice a year, but this standard was paused during the COVID-19 public health emergency. The agency warned states earlier today that Medicaid waivers applications with generous continuous eligibility provisions would not be accepted going forward.

The CMS laid out three ways it will work with states to minimize duplicate enrollment.

First, the CMS will give states a list of people enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP in at least two states and tell them to recheck eligibility.

They also informed individuals enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP and a federal exchange plan, instructing them to disenroll from Medicaid or CHIP, end their exchange subsidy or clarify and verify their correct status. Otherwise, the subsidy will expire in 30 days.

Lastly, CMS will notify states of people in a Medicaid or CHIP plan and a state-based exchange plan. States then must then start a process to recheck eligibility.

States are expected to receive more guidance by August.———————————
CMS is taking a new approach to waivers in the Medicaid program. The agency told states Thursday that it will not extend or grant waivers that provide continuous eligibility in Medicaid or CHIP.  New York is one of a handful of states with a waiver that allows it to extend continuous Medicaid coverage in this manner.
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Trump admin ends 988’s LGBTQ+ line

As of today, there are no more specialized suicide prevention services for LGBTQ+ youth on the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. Three years after the shortened dial number was launched, the Trump administration has cut these services “to focus on serving all help seekers,” according to a press release. A recent First Opinion essay called the end of this service “a crushing moment” and “a public health failure.” 

It’s been repeatedly established by research that queer youth have higher risk of suicide than their straight peers. A nationally-representative poll of more than 2,000 respondents, completed this summer by the National Alliance on Mental Illness, found that 60% have at least some support for funding LGBTQ+ specialized services for 988, and 79% felt that young people need more mental health resources dedicated to their specific needs. 

The removal of the specialized line is the latest in a barrage of moves by the Trump administration targeting LGBTQ people. And while most of the policies focus on young people, funding proposals continue to be made that could affect adult access to care as well. Another survey, published yesterday in JAMA Network Open, found that out of almost 500 respondents, every single person believed their access to gender-affirming care would be restricted in the next four years.

News & Information for NYS Council Members, 7/18/25