WV Legislature may be called for PEIA special session in July
While
At the finance board's regular meeting Thursday, Chairman
"I know currently … we are working providing data to the governor," Householder said. "There's been no decision on what to do, just providing data, having roundtable discussions. That's all we're doing right now."
Householder said Morrisey tentatively intends to call a special session for PEIA in mid July.
Beginning in July, PEIA premiums are increasing by 14% for state employees and by 16% for local government employees. Out-of-pocket and copay costs will also go up. The agency will also raise premiums by 12% for retirees.
PEIA leaders have said that the rising cost of health care — particularly inflation on prescription GLP-1 drugs that treat obesity and diabetes — are a major driver of the rate increases.
Union leaders and state employees have repeatedly called on the Legislature to come up with a solution to PEIA's rising costs, but the issue largely went unaddressed during the 2025 regular session.
Morrisey said in April that he plans to call a special session for PEIA, but he has not said how exactly the issue of increasing costs will be addressed..
"That was kicked down the road for many, many years," the governor said in April. "I don't intend to kick it down the road. We have to bring everyone together, all the stakeholders: listen, learn and then you'll be seeing some activity."
In a news release Thursday, leadership from the
"Pay-Cut Patrick failed to take action to stabilize PEIA premiums," Democratic Party Chair
In an email Thursday, Morrisey spokesman
Galang did not respond to an email asking to clarify when, publicly, the July timeframe had been set by Morrisey and no such references to it have been made clear in previous PEIA meetings or announcements prior to Thursday.
A spokeswoman for the
"The employees can't be the ones providing all of this," Lee said of the cost increases. "We have to have the Legislature. There has to be not only the Legislature but also the providers. That's why I continue to ask that we all go back to the table and that we come up with a plan that people can agree on."
Lee, who has repeatedly criticized state leaders for failing to act on the recommendations of a task force called by former Gov.
"[It] never even got on a committee agenda," he said of the recommendations. "That's just disingenuous."
Ask The Medicare Specialist
Cloverleaf Analytics Selected by Pearl Holding Group to Transform Disparate Operational Data into Real-Time Strategic Intelligence
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News