A00336 Summary:

BILL NOA00336A
 
SAME ASSAME AS S01157-A
 
SPONSORGottfried
 
COSPNSRCahill, Colton, Magnarelli, Galef, Paulin, Schimel, Lifton, Cusick, O'Donnell, Jaffee, Perry, Russell, Markey, Bronson, Rosenthal, Lavine, Thiele, Benedetto, Titone, Peoples-Stokes, Gunther, Weprin, Abinanti, Englebright, Robinson, Skoufis, Otis, Aubry, Wright, Stirpe, Crespo, Steck, Hunter, Zebrowski
 
MLTSPNSRAbbate, Arroyo, Braunstein, Brennan, Buchwald, Cook, Cymbrowitz, Dinowitz, Fahy, Glick, Hikind, Hooper, Lentol, Lopez, Lupardo, Lupinacci, Magee, Malliotakis, McDonald, McDonough, Montesano, Moya, Ortiz, Pretlow, Ra, Raia, Richardson, Sepulveda, Weinstein
 
Add Art 49 Title III SS4920 - 4929, Pub Health L
 
Enacts provisions relating to collective negotiations by health care providers with certain health care plans in certain counties; applies to health benefit plans that provide benefits for medical or surgical expenses incurred as a result of a health condition, accident or sickness, including an individual, group, blanket or franchise insurance policy or insurance agreement offered by certain enumerated entities.
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A00336 Actions:

BILL NOA00336A
 
01/07/2015referred to health
03/24/2015reported referred to ways and means
06/11/2015amend and recommit to ways and means
06/11/2015print number 336a
01/06/2016referred to health
01/21/2016reported referred to ways and means
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A00336 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A336A
 
SPONSOR: Gottfried (MS)
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the public health law, in relation to requirements for collective negotiations by health care providers with certain health benefit plans   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: This bill is designed to restore fairness in the contracting process between physicians and large managed care plans by allowing doctors to join together to negotiate contract provisions. This legislation would not authorize strikes of health bene- fit plans by physicians.   SUMMARY OF SPECIFIC PROVISIONS: Section 1 is a statement of legisla- tive intent that states that the legislature finds it appropriate and necessary to authorize collective negotiations on patient care issues and on fee-related and other issues where it determines that health plans have an undue advantage negotiating the terms of contracts with health care providers. The legislative intent clarifies that the act is not intended to apply or affect collective bargaining relationships involving health care providers who are employees of health care provid- ers or rights relating to collective bargaining arising under applicable federal/state collective bargaining statutes. Section 2 cites the bill as the Health Care Consumer and Provider Protection Act Section 3 amends article 49 to the public health law by adding a new title III titled Collective Negotiations by Health Care Providers with Health Care Plans This legislation adds a new Article 49-A to the public health law to authorize collective bargaining for independent contractor health care providers including physicians or an entity that employs or utilizes health care providers to provide health care services. This bill would create a system under which the state would closely monitor those nego- tiations, and any negotiations involving fee-related matters would only be permitted when an individual managed care plan controls a substantial share of the managed care market. The Commissioner of Health would be authorized to approve the health care providers' representative request to negotiate based upon the benefits to be achieved for providers and consumers of health services, and is required to review any offer submitted to the health care providers' representative prior to sharing with affected health care providers. The legislation would also create a mechanism for resolving disputes when there is an impasse or when the health plan refuses to negotiate. The bill would also direct the Commis- sioner of Health to approve any final agreement as well as monitor the implemented agreements to ensure continued compliance with the law. Importantly, this legislation would not authorize strikes or concerted action by physicians in response to negotiations with health care plans.   JUSTIFICATION: Currently, federal antitrust laws prohibit individual physicians from collectively negotiating any provisions of contracts they sign with managed care entities. This bill would allow physicians in New York State to conduct some collective negotiations by creating a system under which the state would closely monitor those negotiations, facilitate resolution of negotiation impasses, and actively monitor implementation of agreements. Negotiations involving fee-related matters would be prohibited unless an individual managed care plan controls a substantial share of the managed care market. Giving physicians greater ability to advocate for patients in contract negotiations is critical since large health maintenance organizations control huge shares of the health insurance market, both in New York and across the country. In the last few years we have seen the mergers of United Healthcare and Oxford, MVP and Preferred Care, and Wellpoint with Wellchoice (Empire). As of March 2008, almost 75% of the enrollees in managed care plans in New York State were enrolled in just five health plans (GHI/HIP, United/Oxford/Amerchoice, Excellus, Empire and MVP/Preferred Care). We have also seen an emerging trend of long-time not-for-profit health insurance companies such as Empire and HIP seeking to convert to for-profit status. Due to the current imbalance of negotiating power in favor of the managed care plans, physicians and other health care providers are offered take-it-or-leave-it contracts by health plans that significantly hamper their ability to provide quality patient care. These contracts permit burdensome processes and unjustifiably long wait times for obtaining pre-authorization to provide needed patient care; impose limi- tations on whom a physician may refer a patient for necessary care; permit demands for refunds of payments long after the time that such payments were originally made; permit health plans to make major changes to key elements of a contract without physician consent; and cede to physicians the legal consequences for patients harmed by health plan utilization review decisions. This bill, by allowing independent contractor physicians to conduct some collective negotiations while being closely monitored by the state, would give physicians greater ability to advocate for patients in contract negotiations. This bill would create a system under which the state would closely monitor those negotiations, and any negotiations involving fee-related matters would only be permitted when an individual managed care plan controls a substantial share of the managed care market. This legislation would not authorize strikes or boycotts of health benefit plans by physicians   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2000: A.9484-A (Canastrari) - A Referred to Health/Senate Finance 2001-2002: A.5466 (Canastrari) - Reported to Third Reading Calendar 2003-2004: A.1317-A (Canastrari) - Reported to Ways & Means 2005-2006: A.6458 (Canastrari) - Reported to Ways & Means 2007-2008: A.2177 (Canastrari)- Reported to Ways & Means 2009-2010: 4301-B (Canastrari) - Reported to Ways and Means 2011-2012: 2474-B (Canastrari) - Reported to Ways and Means 2013-2014: 5692 - Reported to Ways and Means   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None to the State. The bill would provide the legal basis for an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill.   EFFECTIVE DATE: 120 days after it shall have become a law, provided that the department of health may promulgate and establish any regu- lations pursuant hereto prior to the effective date.
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A00336 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         336--A
 
                               2015-2016 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                       (Prefiled)
 
                                     January 7, 2015
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A. GOTTFRIED, CAHILL, COLTON, MAGNARELLI, GALEF,
          PAULIN, SCHIMEL, LIFTON, CUSICK, O'DONNELL,  JAFFEE,  PERRY,  RUSSELL,
          MARKEY,   BRONSON,   ROSENTHAL,  LAVINE,  THIELE,  BENEDETTO,  TITONE,
          PEOPLES-STOKES,  GUNTHER,  WEPRIN,  ABINANTI,  ENGLEBRIGHT,   ROBERTS,
          BROOK-KRASNY, ROBINSON, SKOUFIS, OTIS, AUBRY, WRIGHT, STIRPE, BORELLI,
          CRESPO, STECK, CLARK -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. ABBATE, ARROYO,
          BRAUNSTEIN,  BRENNAN,  BUCHWALD,  COOK,  CYMBROWITZ,  DINOWITZ,  FAHY,
          GLICK, HIKIND,  HOOPER,  LENTOL,  LOPEZ,  LUPARDO,  LUPINACCI,  MAGEE,
          MALLIOTAKIS, McDONALD, MONTESANO, MOYA, ORTIZ, PRETLOW, RAIA, SEPULVE-
          DA,  WEINSTEIN -- read once and referred to the Committee on Health --
          reported and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means --  committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to said committee
 
        AN  ACT  to amend the public health law, in relation to requirements for
          collective negotiations by health care providers with  certain  health
          benefit plans
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Statement of legislative intent. The legislature finds that
     2  collective negotiation by competing health care providers for the  terms
     3  and  conditions  of contracts with health plans can result in beneficial
     4  results  for  health  care  consumers.  The  legislature  further  finds
     5  instances  where  health plans dominate the market to such a degree that
     6  fair and adequate negotiations between health  care  providers  and  the
     7  plans are adversely affected, so that it is necessary and appropriate to
     8  provide  for  a  system  of  collective  action on behalf of health care
     9  providers. Consequently, the legislature finds it appropriate and neces-
    10  sary to displace competition with  regulation  of  health  plan-provider
    11  agreements and authorize collective negotiations on the terms and condi-
    12  tions  of  the  relationship  between  health care plans and health care
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD02700-04-5

        A. 336--A                           2
 
     1  providers so the imbalances between the two will not result  in  adverse
     2  conditions  of  health  care.  This  act  is not intended to apply to or
     3  affect in any respect collective bargaining  relationships  which  arise
     4  under applicable federal or state collective bargaining statutes.
     5    §  2.  This  act  shall  be known and may be cited as the "health care
     6  consumer and provider protection act".
     7    § 3. Article 49 of the public health law is amended by  adding  a  new
     8  title III to read as follows:
     9                                  TITLE III
    10                   COLLECTIVE NEGOTIATIONS BY HEALTH CARE
    11                      PROVIDERS WITH HEALTH CARE PLANS
    12  Section 4920. Definitions.
    13          4921. Non-fee related collective negotiation authorized.
    14          4922. Fee related collective negotiation.
    15          4923. Collective negotiation requirements.
    16          4924. Requirements for health care providers' representative.
    17          4925. Certain collective action prohibited.
    18          4926. Fees.
    19          4927. Monitoring of agreements.
    20          4928. Confidentiality.
    21          4929. Severability and construction.
    22    § 4920. Definitions. For purposes of this title:
    23    1.  "Health  care  plan"  means  an  entity  (other than a health care
    24  provider) that approves, provides, arranges for, or pays for health care
    25  services, including but not limited to:
    26    (a) a health maintenance organization  licensed  pursuant  to  article
    27  forty-three  of  the  insurance  law  or  certified  pursuant to article
    28  forty-four of this chapter;
    29    (b) any other organization certified pursuant to article forty-four of
    30  this chapter; or
    31    (c) an insurer or corporation subject to the insurance law.
    32    2. "Person" means an  individual,  association,  corporation,  or  any
    33  other legal entity.
    34    3.  "Health care providers' representative" means a third party who is
    35  authorized by health care providers to negotiate on  their  behalf  with
    36  health  care plans over contractual terms and conditions affecting those
    37  health care providers.
    38    4. "Strike" means a work stoppage in part or in whole, direct or indi-
    39  rect, by a health care provider or health care providers to gain compli-
    40  ance with demands made on a health care plan.
    41    5. "Substantial market share in a business line" exists  if  a  health
    42  care  plan's  market share of a business line within the geographic area
    43  for which a negotiation has been approved by the commissioner, alone  or
    44  in  combination with the market shares of affiliates, exceeds either ten
    45  percent of the total number of covered lives in that  service  area  for
    46  such business line or twenty-five thousand lives, or if the commissioner
    47  determines  the  market  share  of the insurer in the relevant insurance
    48  product and geographic markets for the services of the providers seeking
    49  to  collectively  negotiate  significantly  exceeds  the  countervailing
    50  market share of the providers acting individually.
    51    6.  "Health  care provider" means a person who is licensed, certified,
    52  registered or authorized pursuant to title eight of  the  education  law
    53  and  who practices that profession as a health care provider as an inde-
    54  pendent contractor and/or who is  an  owner,  officer,  shareholder,  or
    55  proprietor  of  a  health  care  provider,  or an entity that employs or
    56  utilizes health care providers to provide health care services,  includ-

        A. 336--A                           3
 
     1  ing but not limited to a hospital licensed under article twenty-eight of
     2  this  chapter  or an accountable care organization under article twenty-
     3  nine-E of this chapter.  A health care provider under title eight of the
     4  education  law  who  practices  as an employee of a health care provider
     5  shall not be deemed a health care provider for purposes of this title.
     6    § 4921. Non-fee related collective negotiation authorized.  1.  Health
     7  care providers practicing within the geographic area for which a negoti-
     8  ation has been approved by the commissioner may meet and communicate for
     9  the  purpose  of collectively negotiating the following terms and condi-
    10  tions of provider contracts with the health care plan:
    11    (a) the details of the utilization review plan as defined pursuant  to
    12  subdivision  ten  of  section  forty-nine  hundred  of  this article and
    13  subsection (j) of section four thousand nine hundred  of  the  insurance
    14  law;
    15    (b)  coverage  provisions;  health  care  benefits;  benefit maximums,
    16  including benefit limitations; and exclusions of coverage;
    17    (c) the definition of medical necessity;
    18    (d) the clinical practice guidelines used to  make  medical  necessity
    19  and utilization review determinations;
    20    (e) preventive care and other medical management practices;
    21    (f)  drug  formularies  and  standards  and procedures for prescribing
    22  off-formulary drugs;
    23    (g) respective physician liability for the treatment or lack of treat-
    24  ment of covered persons;
    25    (h) the details of health care plan risk  transfer  arrangements  with
    26  providers;
    27    (i)  plan  administrative  procedures, including methods and timing of
    28  health care provider payment for services;
    29    (j) procedures to be utilized to resolve disputes between  the  health
    30  care plan and health care providers;
    31    (k)  patient  referral procedures including, but not limited to, those
    32  applicable to out-of-network referrals;
    33    (l) the formulation and application of health care provider reimburse-
    34  ment procedures;
    35    (m) quality assurance programs;
    36    (n)  the  process  for  rendering  utilization  review  determinations
    37  including:  establishment  of a process for rendering utilization review
    38  determinations which shall, at a minimum, include: written procedures to
    39  assure that utilization reviews and determinations are conducted  within
    40  the  timeframes  established  in  this  article; procedures to notify an
    41  enrollee, an  enrollee's  designee  and/or  an  enrollee's  health  care
    42  provider of adverse determinations; and procedures for appeal of adverse
    43  determinations,  including  the  establishment  of  an expedited appeals
    44  process for denials of continued inpatient care or where there is  immi-
    45  nent or serious threat to the health of the enrollee; and
    46    (o)  health  care  provider selection and termination criteria used by
    47  the health care plan.
    48    2. Nothing in this section shall be construed to allow or authorize an
    49  alteration of the terms of the internal and external  review  procedures
    50  set forth in law.
    51    3.  Nothing  in this section shall be construed to allow a strike of a
    52  health care plan by health care providers  or  plans  as  otherwise  set
    53  forth in the laws of this state.
    54    4.  Nothing  in  this section shall be construed to allow or authorize
    55  terms or conditions which would impede the ability of a health care plan

        A. 336--A                           4
 
     1  to obtain or retain accreditation by the national committee for  quality
     2  assurance or a similar body.
     3    § 4922. Fee related collective negotiation. 1. If the health care plan
     4  has  substantial  market share in a business line in any geographic area
     5  for which a negotiation has been approved by  the  commissioner,  health
     6  care  providers  practicing within that geographic area may collectively
     7  negotiate the following terms and conditions relating to  that  business
     8  line with the health care plan:
     9    (a)  the fees assessed by the health care plan for services, including
    10  fees established through the application of reimbursement procedures;
    11    (b) the  conversion  factors  used  by  the  health  care  plan  in  a
    12  resource-based  relative  value scale reimbursement methodology or other
    13  similar methodology; provided the same are not otherwise established  by
    14  state or federal law or regulation;
    15    (c)  the amount of any discount granted by the health care plan on the
    16  fee of health care services to be rendered by health care providers;
    17    (d) the dollar amount  of  capitation  or  fixed  payment  for  health
    18  services  rendered  by  health care providers to health care plan enrol-
    19  lees;
    20    (e) the procedure code or other description of a health  care  service
    21  covered  by  a  payment  and  the  appropriate grouping of the procedure
    22  codes; or
    23    (f) the amount of any other component of the reimbursement methodology
    24  for a health care service.
    25    2. Nothing herein shall be deemed to affect or limit the  right  of  a
    26  health  care  provider or group of health care providers to collectively
    27  petition a government entity for a change in a law, rule, or regulation.
    28    § 4923. Collective negotiation requirements. 1. Collective negotiation
    29  rights granted by this title must conform to the following requirements:
    30    (a) health care providers  may  communicate  with  other  health  care
    31  providers  regarding  the contractual terms and conditions to be negoti-
    32  ated with a health care plan;
    33    (b) health care providers may communicate with health care  providers'
    34  representatives;
    35    (c)  a health care providers' representative is the only party author-
    36  ized to negotiate with health care plans on behalf of  the  health  care
    37  providers as a group;
    38    (d)  a  health  care provider can be bound by the terms and conditions
    39  negotiated by the health care providers' representatives; and
    40    (e) in communicating or negotiating with the  health  care  providers'
    41  representative, a health care plan is entitled to contract with or offer
    42  different  contract  terms and conditions to individual competing health
    43  care providers.
    44    2. A health care providers' representative may not represent more than
    45  thirty percent of the market of health care providers or of a particular
    46  health care provider type or specialty practicing in the geographic area
    47  for which a negotiation has been approved by  the  commissioner  if  the
    48  health  care  plan covers less than five percent of the actual number of
    49  covered lives of the health care plan in the area, as determined by  the
    50  department.
    51    3.  Nothing  in this section shall be construed to prohibit collective
    52  action on the part of any health care provider who  is  a  member  of  a
    53  collective  bargaining  unit  recognized  pursuant to the national labor
    54  relations act.
    55    § 4924. Requirements for health  care  providers'  representative.  1.
    56  Before  engaging  in  collective negotiations with a health care plan on

        A. 336--A                           5
 
     1  behalf of health care providers, a health care providers' representative
     2  shall file with the  commissioner,  in  the  manner  prescribed  by  the
     3  commissioner,  information identifying the representative, the represen-
     4  tative's  plan  of  operation,  and  the  representative's procedures to
     5  ensure compliance with this title.
     6    2. Before engaging in the collective  negotiations,  the  health  care
     7  providers'  representative shall also submit to the commissioner for the
     8  commissioner's approval a report identifying the proposed subject matter
     9  of the negotiations or discussions with the health  care  plan  and  the
    10  efficiencies  or  benefits  expected  to be achieved through the negoti-
    11  ations for both the providers and  consumers  of  health  services.  The
    12  commissioner  shall  not  approve  the  report  if  the commissioner, in
    13  consultation with the superintendent of  financial  services  determines
    14  that  the proposed negotiations would exceed the authority granted under
    15  this title.
    16    3. The representative shall supplement the information in  the  report
    17  on  a  regular basis or as new information becomes available, indicating
    18  that the subject matter of the negotiations with the  health  care  plan
    19  has  changed  or  will change. In no event shall the report be less than
    20  every thirty days.
    21    4. With the advice of the superintendent of financial services and the
    22  attorney general, the  commissioner  shall  approve  or  disapprove  the
    23  report  not  later  than  the  twentieth day after the date on which the
    24  report is filed. If disapproved, the commissioner shall furnish a  writ-
    25  ten  explanation of any deficiencies, along with a statement of specific
    26  proposals for remedial measures to cure the deficiencies. If the commis-
    27  sioner does not so act within the  twenty  days,  the  report  shall  be
    28  deemed approved.
    29    5.  A person who acts as a health care providers' representative with-
    30  out the approval of the commissioner under this section shall be  deemed
    31  to be acting outside the authority granted under this title.
    32    6.  Before  reporting  the  results of negotiations with a health care
    33  plan or providing to the affected health care providers an evaluation of
    34  any offer made by a health care plan, the health care providers'  repre-
    35  sentative shall furnish for approval by the commissioner, before dissem-
    36  ination to the health care providers, a copy of all communications to be
    37  made  to the health care providers related to negotiations, discussions,
    38  and offers made by the health care plan.
    39    7. A health care providers' representative   shall report the  end  of
    40  negotiations to the commissioner not later than the fourteenth day after
    41  the date of a health care plan decision declining negotiation, canceling
    42  negotiations,  or  failing  to respond to a request for negotiation.  In
    43  such instances, a health  care  providers'  representative  may  request
    44  intervention  from  the  commissioner to require the health care plan to
    45  participate in the negotiation pursuant to  subdivision  eight  of  this
    46  section.
    47    8. (a) In the event the commissioner determines that an impasse exists
    48  in  the  negotiations,  or  in  the event a health care plan declines to
    49  negotiate, cancels negotiations or fails to respond  to  a  request  for
    50  negotiation, the commissioner shall render assistance as follows:
    51    (1)  to  assist  the  parties  to effect a voluntary resolution of the
    52  negotiations, the commissioner shall appoint a mediator from a  list  of
    53  qualified  persons  maintained  by  the commissioner. If the mediator is
    54  successful in resolving the impasse, then  the  health  care  providers'
    55  representative shall proceed as set forth in this article;

        A. 336--A                           6
 
     1    (2)  if  an  impasse continues, the commissioner shall appoint a fact-
     2  finding board of not more than three members from a  list  of  qualified
     3  persons  maintained  by the commissioner, which fact-finding board shall
     4  have, in addition to the powers delegated to it by the board, the  power
     5  to make recommendations for the resolution of the dispute;
     6    (b) The fact-finding board, acting by a majority of its members, shall
     7  transmit  its findings of fact and recommendations for resolution of the
     8  dispute to the commissioner, and may thereafter assist  the  parties  to
     9  effect  a  voluntary  resolution  of the dispute. The fact-finding board
    10  shall also share its findings  of  fact  and  recommendations  with  the
    11  health care providers' representative and the health care plan. If with-
    12  in  twenty  days after the submission of the findings of fact and recom-
    13  mendations, the impasse continues, the commissioner shall order a resol-
    14  ution  to  the  negotiations  based  upon  the  findings  of  fact   and
    15  recommendations submitted by the fact-finding board.
    16    9.  Any  proposed agreement between health care providers and a health
    17  care plan negotiated pursuant to this title shall be  submitted  to  the
    18  commissioner  for  final  approval.  The  commissioner  shall approve or
    19  disapprove the agreement within sixty days of such submission.
    20    10. The commissioner may collect information  from  other  persons  to
    21  assist  in  evaluating  the  impact  of  the proposed arrangement on the
    22  health care marketplace. The commissioner shall collect information from
    23  health plan companies and health care providers operating  in  the  same
    24  geographic area.
    25    §  4925.  Certain  collective  action prohibited. 1. This title is not
    26  intended to authorize competing health care providers to act in  concert
    27  in  response  to a report issued by the health care providers' represen-
    28  tative related to the representative's discussions or negotiations  with
    29  health care plans.
    30    2. No health care providers' representative shall negotiate any agree-
    31  ment  that  excludes,  limits  the participation or reimbursement of, or
    32  otherwise limits the scope of services to be provided by any health care
    33  provider or group of health care providers with respect to the  perform-
    34  ance  of  services  that  are within the health care provider's scope of
    35  practice, license, registration, or certificate.
    36    § 4926. Fees. Each person who acts as the representative or  negotiat-
    37  ing parties under this title shall pay to the department a fee to act as
    38  a  representative.  The commissioner, by rule, shall set fees in amounts
    39  deemed reasonable and necessary to  cover  the  costs  incurred  by  the
    40  department  in  administering  this  title. Any fee collected under this
    41  section shall be deposited in the state treasury to the  credit  of  the
    42  general fund/state operations - 003 for the New York state department of
    43  health fund.
    44    §  4927.  Monitoring  of  agreements.  The commissioner shall actively
    45  monitor agreements approved under this title to ensure that  the  agree-
    46  ment  remains  in  compliance  with  the  conditions  of  approval. Upon
    47  request, a health care plan or health care provider shall provide infor-
    48  mation regarding compliance. The commissioner  may  revoke  an  approval
    49  upon  a finding that the agreement is not in substantial compliance with
    50  the terms of the application or the conditions of approval.
    51    § 4928. Confidentiality. All reports and other information required to
    52  be reported to the department of law under this title including informa-
    53  tion obtained by the commissioner pursuant to subdivision ten of section
    54  forty-nine hundred twenty-four of this title shall  not  be  subject  to
    55  disclosure under article six of the public officers law or article thir-
    56  ty-one of the civil practice law and rules.

        A. 336--A                           7
 
     1    §  4929.  Severability  and construction. The provisions of this title
     2  shall be severable, and if any court of competent jurisdiction  declares
     3  any  phrase,  clause, sentence or provision of this title to be invalid,
     4  or its applicability to any government, agency, person  or  circumstance
     5  is declared invalid, the remainder of this title and its relevant appli-
     6  cability  shall  not  be affected. The provisions of this title shall be
     7  liberally construed to give effect to the purposes thereof.
     8    § 4. This act shall take effect on the one hundred twentieth day after
     9  it shall have become a law; provided that the commissioner of health  is
    10  authorized  to promulgate any and all rules and regulations and take any
    11  other measures necessary to implement this act on its effective date  on
    12  or before such date.
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