A bill introduced to the Jacksonville City Council last week could increase the number of city employees getting health care from UF Health.
In the bargain, it could improve the Northeast Florida safety-net hospital’s paying customer mix.
Ordinance 2017-20 would authorize the city’s employee services department to offer the option to workers and retirees to enroll in the UF Health plan starting on March 31.
The contract would be administered by a third party, “Integra Administrative Services,” via a no-bid contract.
The bill summary refers to this deal as a “network option under the City’s self-insurance plan that consists primarily of UF Health providers.”
For UF Health, a rollout of a program like this could be a game changer.
The city spends $88 million on health claims a year, with only $6 million going to UF Health.
People in both the mayor’s office and on the council have expressed a sincere desire to get more of a paying customer mix at the city’s safety net hospital.
Jacksonville, unlike other Florida cities of its size, lacks an indigent care tax; this surfeit makes UF Health funding especially vulnerable to flux in state and federal funding.
Estimates from the employee services division are that 500 to 600 of the city’s staff and retirees will choose this option, which would move them away from Florida Blue.
The plan is said to be revenue neutral for the city, yet allows a meaningful cushion for funding formulas that may be shaky from Washington or Tallahassee in the coming years.