Public Comments for 02/06/2026 Appropriations - Health and Human Resources Subcommittee
HB267 - Workers with disabilities; earned income disregard, cost-of-living adjustment.
These should be basic right standards. These cause less trauma, less injuries, deaths, and for a better society
HB335 - Independent Pharmacy Access and Resilience Pilot Program; established, report, sunset.
HB470 - Medicaid waivers; consumer-directed services, employer of record.
HB483 - Prescription Drug Affordability Board; established, drug cost affordability review, report.
The Partnership to Improve Patient Care (PIPC) is writing to share the concerns of patients and people with disabilities related to efforts in Virginia to establish a Prescription Drug Affordability Board (PDAB). We oppose HB 483 and SB 271 which would allow for reference to value assessments of new health innovations using quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and similar measures. Over 100 organizations representing patients and people with disabilities agree. Our comments are attached as a file.
Dear Honorable Delegate: Please Oppose HB 483, Drug Affordability Board; established, drug cost affordability review, report. (Delaney) PDABs have a poor record of performance! Just look at the other states that have these boards and the cost of the prescription drugs they claim to regulate. The best way to lower drug prices is to increase supply; we support Virginia’s plan to bolster the pharmaceutical industry here; and we, the Building Trades, are ready to go to work. Please OPPOSE HB 483; thank you! Respectfully Submitted, Lou Spencer Virginia Commonwealth Director Pharmaceutical Industry Labor Management Association (PILMA) A partnership between the Building Trades and the Pharmaceutical Companies
The Patient Inclusion Council (PIC) submits this comment to oppose/amend HB 483 and urges delaying PDAB authority to set upper payment limits (UPLs) until patient access, cost, and equity impacts are studied, as evidence shows UPLs risk patient harm without lowering out-of-pocket costs.
The Patient Inclusion Council (PIC) and Ensuring Access through Collaborative Health (EACH) respectfully submit this written comment to oppose or amend HB 483. I am a Virginia resident and patient living with chronic health conditions, and our coalition represents patients and caregivers across a broad range of chronic and serious diseases statewide. The attached Virginia PDAB Policy Research One-Pager summarizes evidence that Prescription Drug Affordability Boards and upper payment limits (UPLs) do not reduce patient out-of-pocket costs and create risks to access, equity, and state healthcare spending. Granting PDAB UPL authority without first conducting a patient-focused study risks harming the very Virginians this policy is intended to help.
The Patient Inclusion Council (PIC) respectfully submits this written comment to oppose/amend HB 483, which would create a Prescription Drug Affordability Board (PDAB) with authority to set upper payment limits (UPLs). I am a Virginia resident and a patient living with chronic health conditions, and our coalition represents patients and caregivers across a wide range of chronic and serious diseases statewide. While we support efforts to improve affordability, granting UPL authority without first studying patient access, costs, and equity risks harms patients without evidence of savings. This comment summarizes our concerns about patient harm and the need for a study before proceeding.
Dear Chair Willett and Members of the House Appropriations Health and Human Resources Subcommitee, On behalf of the Association of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), I am sharing a letter outlining concerns that upper payment limits set by HB 483 would jeopardize access to necessary care for Virginia patients with cancer. Please don't hesitate to reach out if you have any questions about cancer care; we're happy to be a resource. Best, Sarah Lanford Associate Director of State Advocacy Association for Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
CANN respectfully opposes HB483. While good-intentioned, the bill does not address affordability concerns for patients and could adversely affect patient access. Upper payment limits are not affordability solutions; they are *insurance* payment caps that do not directly benefit patients. They ultimately would only benefit Pharmacy Benefit Managers and their associated insurance companies at the expense of patients, independent pharmacists, and the state. Data already shows that Upper Payment Limits would result in increased cost-sharing and administrative burdens for patients, increased insurance premiums, and harmful impacts to pharmacy reimbursement, which would make it less likely pharmacies would continue to stock drugs with a UPL. The language in the bill that attempts to address this is not sufficient. The bill also uses Medicare Maximum Fair Price as the surrogate Upper Payment Limit to be used for drugs on the Medicare Drug Negotiation List that are deemed to be affordability challenges. The MFP is based on federal data, not Virginia. Using the MFP ignores any analysis of the specific needs of Virginia patients, the state budget, and entities such as community health centers. Additionally, conducting an affordability analysis of drugs on the Medicare Drug Negotiation List is a waste of time and financial resources since it also disregards a thorough analysis of which drugs are specifically financially burdensome to patients and the state. To date, no active Prescription Drug Advisory Board has generated any savings for patients or their states in spite of millions of dollars being spent on their activities. Notably, the New Hampshire PDAB was repealed and dissolved because its efforts proved to be unproductive and failed to offer any meaningful benefits to stakeholders. Vermont's Green Mountain Care Board also recently released an analysis reporting that PDABs and UPLs are not effective endeavors for their state. Patient cost is directly a factor of insurance design. Therefore, pursuing solutions such as various aspects of PBM reform and consideration of copay cap legislation are evidence-based solutions that would help patients in a more timely manner with less potential for harm. Prescription Drug Advisory Boards with their associated UPLs are expensive experiments with too much potential for harm.
As President of the Coastal Virginia Medical Society, I respectfully oppose passage of the Prescription Drug Affordability Board legislation (HB483) today as it is being heard in the House Labor and Commerce Subcommittee #1. While it sounds good on the surface, using the word "Affordability" in the title, PDAPs have never saved any money, but rather end up costing hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. Patient costs will increase by over 30%. The "fixes"of this bill over last year's bill are minimal window dressing and will not result in any improvement. The fundamental problem is that the bill is structured incorrectly. The consequences will be decreased supply of life saving drugs and increased cost to the recipient. Please refer this bill to the Joint Commission on Health Care to study it more carefully and fix it so that it does what it is actually intended to do. Thank you.
I'm Greg Josephs and I'm in Ashburn. I want to thank Delegate Delaney for including an exemption for rare disease medications in this bill. Advocates like her and Senator Deeds hear our concerns and address them in this bill. After fighting and managing this disease (Myasthenia Gravis) for 23 years, this exemption is vital to ensuring patients like me have access to the lifesaving meds and therapies we need. Godspeed! Go
The Value of Care Coalition, a network of patient, provider and caregiver organizations, urges opposition to HB 483, primarily for two reasons: First, it's unlikely that savings, if any exist, will reach patients in a meaningful way. Insurers have indicated that if UPLs are implemented, patient costs will rise – not decrease – and that any savings to payers would likely be consumed by new compliance and administrative burdens. Second, substantial evidence suggests that access could be diminished. Surveys of pharmacists, doctors and health plans all point to this likely, and concerning, outcome. The bill relies heavily on Medicare’s maximum fair price, but studies have shown that drugs subjected to the MFP have seen patient out of pocket costs rise by 32% on average last year, with health plans increasing deductibles and shifting drugs to higher cost-sharing tiers. Finally, Virginia voters are hesitant about PDABs and upper payment limits as well. A recent survey by the Coalition shows support dropping dramatically when informed about concerns from important entities in the health care delivery system that directly shape the patient experience, like pharmacists, doctors and health plans. A full comment is attached. We kindly ask that you consider these concerns, and oppose HB 483. Thank you - Derek Flowers, Value of Care Coalition
The Diabetes Patient Advocacy Coalition (DPAC) appreciates the opportunity to express its concerns regarding HB 483. DPAC is an alliance of people with diabetes, caregivers, patient advocates, health professionals, and others working together to support public policy initiatives to improve the lives of Americans living with and at risk for diabetes and its complications. As an organization run by and for people with diabetes, DPAC seeks to ensure quality of and access to care, medications and devices for our community. We appreciate the Committee’s interest in addressing the prescription drug affordability crisis for Virginians; however, we believe that creating a Prescription Drug Affordability Board (PDAB) in the state is not the most direct way to address patient cost concerns. Even years after implementation, states that have established PDABs have not produced direct cost relief for patients, and their primary cost-control mechanism, Upper Payment Limits (UPLs), is misguided. UPLs or similar affordability actions will likely disrupt the rebate contracts between manufacturers and the PBMs who control plan formularies. PBMs have a well-established practice of preferring higher priced drugs that come with a higher rebate for preferential formulary placement. A UPL that results in lowering the rebate received by the PBM may result in that drug being excluded from the formulary or being placed on a higher copayment tier to dissuade the patient from using that medication. Either of those easily anticipated moves by the PBM will restrict patient access and raise patient cost despite the opposite intention. Another common PBM practice is to place restrictive prior authorization requirements on drugs that they want to steer patients away from, which they likely would do in reaction to UPLs. Prior authorizations are proven delay tactics and are detrimental to the management of chronic diseases like diabetes. This is especially frustrating to patients who have been taking the medication for many months or even years and now must get re-approved to continue their successful therapy. As an organization dedicated to protecting patient access and affordability, we respectfully urge the Committee to take steps that would immediately lower patients’ out-of-pocket costs by passing PBM reform measures. There is strong evidence supporting rebate pass-through policies that require insurers and PBMs to pass negotiated savings directly to patients at the point-of-sale. West Virginia, Indiana, and Arkansas passed such legislation in 2021, 2023 and 2024, respectively. Following implementation, rate filings for plans in Indiana and Arkansas saw no increase in premiums attributable to these policy reforms. In addition, delinking PBM compensation from drug list prices will limit future increases in list price, as it will remove incentives to inflate list prices and provide higher rebates to PBMs. It will ensure that patients benefit from the lowered list prices. A recent analysis on drug costs showed that delinking compensation from the list price of a drug could lower overall drug spending by about 15%. These approaches offer evidence-based pathways to improve affordability while minimizing the risk of unintended access disruptions that may be caused by setting up a UPL through a PDAB. Advancing these strategies should be central to the state’s efforts to protect patient access and affordability. Thank you for your commitment to Virginia patients.
I am here to speak on behalf of the PDAB. I am a physician Assistant who became a full time care giver of two aging parents and son whom I adopted with cerebral palsy. With one in four Virginians having to make the decision on whether or not to take their medications as prescribed due to the cost of medications and trying to pay for rent and everyday life needs. The choice of taking the medications needed to live and paying for shelter and food shouldn't be a constant choice Virginians should have to make to survival. Especially when we can have drug companies charge more reasonable rates for the medications that Virginian need.
The Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO) respectfully opposes SB271/HB483, which would create a Prescription Drug Affordability Board tasked with reviewing prescription drug costs and setting upper payment limits for specified prescription drugs. Government price controls like those proposed by this bill are an especially drastic action with unpredictable consequences. While the intent of this bill is to lower drug prices, we fear SB271/HB483 will fail to bring down costs for consumers or institutions and instead disincentivize development of new therapeutic breakthroughs. This bill will not lower prescription drug costs for patients because it does not address outof-pocket costs. Patients pay a given price when they visit a pharmacy based on what their health insurer determines—it is for this reason why two patients will pay a different price for the same drug. Out-of-pocket costs have been rising for patients as a result of decisions made by health insurers. SB271/HB483 does not address the price patients pay out-ofpocket and will therefore not directly impact patient affordability for prescription medications. This bill also provides no clear path for lowering prescription drug costs for public or private payers or the healthcare system overall. The price control scheme in HB 1724 is designed around the premise that prescription drug costs have ballooned out of control or are increasing at an unsustainable rate. Yet according to the latest OECD Data for 2023, pharmaceutical spending in the U.S. accounted for 12.4% of national health expendituresless than Canada (14.9%), Japan (17.6%), Germany (13.7%), France (12.9%), and over a dozen other OECD nations.1 And net prices for branded medicines continue to grow slower than inflation; in 2024, net price growth was 0.1% while the annual average CPI growth was 2.9%.2 Unfortunately, artificial price controls only serve to disincentivize biopharmaceutical companies from developing new, more effective therapies. Economists have estimated that government price controls can have a significant, damaging effect on the development pipeline. For example, one study found that an artificial 50% decrease in prices could reduce the number of drugs in the development pipeline by as much as 24%,3 while another study found investment in new Phase I research would fall by nearly 60%,4 decreasing the hopes of patients who are seeking new cures and treatments. Price controls will dampen investment and would not allow companies to adequately establish prices that will provide a return on investment. The average biopharmaceutical costs $2.6 billion to bring from research and development to market.5 They sacrifice millions of dollars, often for decades before ever turning a profit, if at all. In fact, 92% of publicly traded therapeutic biotechnology companies, and 97% of private firms, operate with no profit.6 Out of thousands of compounds only one will receive approval. For drugs that are advanced to phase I clinical trial, there is a 90% failure rate.7
As President of the Virginia Association of Hematologists and Oncologists (VAHO), I am writing to respectfully oppose SB271 and HB483, legislation that would create a Prescription Drug Affordability Board in Virginia. Since our founding in 1990, VAHO has represented Virginia’s largest community of oncologists and multidisciplinary cancer care providers, all dedicated to improving patient outcomes across the Commonwealth. We share your goal of making prescription medications more affordable. However, we have significant concerns that establishing a Prescription Drug Affordability Board, and authorizing the use of Upper Payment Limits, could unintentionally restrict access to critical cancer treatments for Virginia patients. Many oncology drugs are high-cost, highly specialized therapies with limited, if any, generic or therapeutic alternatives. When reimbursement is capped below the real-world cost of acquisition and delivery, providers may be unable to obtain or sustainably offer these therapies, and patients can face delays, disruptions in care, or loss of access to the most appropriate treatment. Cancer is not a condition where patients can wait while supply chains and coverage decisions adjust. Treatment delays can have real consequences, and even short interruptions can undermine outcomes. Measures that function as price controls risk shifting the burden of affordability onto patients and the physicians and clinics caring for them, particularly in community oncology settings where most Virginians receive treatment. To provide additional context, we would welcome the opportunity to share VAHO’s position statement on Prescription Drug Affordability Boards (https://drive.google.com/file/d/1utZjFR53XEgCZNLPytMshKCr8QXVCYff/view) and to discuss our concerns in more detail. We are also eager to work with you on practical approaches that improve affordability without jeopardizing timely access to medically necessary, life-saving cancer therapies. Thank you for your consideration, and for your continued work on behalf of Virginia patients and families.
The EACH/PIC Coalition urges subcommittee members to oppose H.B. 483 legislation to create a Prescription Drug Affordability Board or delay the upper payment limit authority until adverse impacts on patients have been studied and considered by the Assembly.
Submission Summary – Opposition to HB483 (Prescription Drug Affordability Board) Patients Rising respectfully submits this comment in opposition to House Bill 483, which would establish a Prescription Drug Affordability Board (PDAB) in Virginia. While HB483 is framed as an affordability measure, its structure does not guarantee lower out-of-pocket costs for patients and creates meaningful risks to access—particularly for working Virginians and those who rely on community pharmacies. At its core, HB483 relies on Upper Payment Limits (UPLs) that cap reimbursement, not manufacturer pricing. Pharmacies purchase medications from wholesalers up front and are reimbursed after the fact by health plans, PBMs, or government payers. Because manufacturers are not compelled to accept UPLs, the financial pressure created by this policy falls on pharmacies and, ultimately, patients. Pharmacies may be reimbursed below acquisition cost plus dispensing fees, which can lead to reduced participation, limited inventory, or non-medical switching. Patients may face narrower access without any guaranteed reduction in copays, coinsurance, or deductibles. HB483 also fails to reach most working Virginians. The bill explicitly recognizes that self-funded employer plans governed by ERISA are outside state authority and may comply only if they voluntarily opt in. Because a majority of Virginians receive coverage through these plans, PDAB decisions would apply to only a limited segment of the market, undermining claims that the bill will broadly reduce prescription drug costs. While HB483 includes reporting requirements regarding how savings are used, it does not mandate that savings be passed directly to patients at the pharmacy counter. The bill does not require reductions in cost sharing and does not address rebate-driven pricing practices or PBM spread pricing—key drivers of what patients actually pay. The bill also permits tying reimbursement to Medicare’s Inflation Reduction Act Maximum Fair Price. However, the real-world access impacts of IRA-negotiated drugs are still emerging. Early indications suggest that plans may shift formulary placement toward non-IRA drugs with more favorable reimbursement structures rather than improve patient affordability. Even with IRA in place, access disruptions, formulary instability, and non-medical switching remain real concerns. Experience in other states reinforces these concerns. PDABs have not demonstrated patient savings. Maryland’s PDAB has not lowered the cost of a single drug after more than five years. New Hampshire has shut its PDAB down, Ohio’s remains dormant, and Colorado’s first UPL is currently mired in litigation. Affordability policy should be judged by a simple standard: does it reliably lower what patients pay without compromising access to care? HB483 fails that test. It shifts financial risk onto pharmacies and patients, excludes a large share of working Virginians due to ERISA preemption, and lacks enforceable protections to ensure real patient savings. For these reasons, Patients Rising urges the House Labor & Commerce Subcommittee to reject HB483 and pursue patient-centered reforms that deliver real, immediate, and guaranteed affordability while preserving access to needed medications.
I am the executive director of the Rare Access Action Project, and we submitted complete comments over the weekend in opposition to the bill. Let’s be clear, a UPL has been found unworkable in other states. Why? Because the Upper Payment Limit in this bill only sets a limit on what plans can pay for a therapy. It does not set the acquisition cost of the medicine which can be higher than a UPL. Plans have already said in study after study that they will limit use. Pharmacists won’t be able to stock it. And PBMs will switch from it. Again, this data has been shared in our RAAP paper that has been submitted to the committee. And patients are already seeing in CO non-therapeutic restrictions and access challenges with the first UPL product, which by the way, also used MFP to set the UPL. Further, use of MFP, which is designed for Medicare, much like the best price for Medicaid, or FSS, or 340(b) pricing, is intended for those programs only. For a PDAB, those numbers are merely a surrogate plug in for a UPL, and all the problems associated with a UPL tag along for the ride. While we thank the patrons for seeking protections for rare patients, please remember only 5 percent of rare diseases and conditions have an FDA approved therapy. This means that a vast majority of rare patients rely on medicines and therapies that can and will be subject to review by a PDAB. So, a rare disease exemption exempts rare disease prescription drugs but not rare disease patients. Before requiring patients to navigate a new bureaucracy, we ask that the bill be referred to a study committee where that committee can examine the issues, can explore the potential for access disruption, and can shed light on impact for all patients in the Commonwealth. Thank you.
To the Chair and members of the Committee, SAARA of Virginia is in full support of HB483 and SB 271. Prescriptions can’t be effective if they can’t be afforded. Our organization is in support of efforts that intentionally create oversight through the creation Prescription Drug Affordability Board to aid in lowering cost of prescriptions. Respectfully submitted by Anika Richburg, Executive Director, SAARA of Virginia
While HDA understands the goals of this legislation, we would like to respectfully raise for your awareness the concern that applying a state-level price ceiling does not adequately account for how prescription drugs are bought and paid for in the U.S. Rather, placing a cap on in-state purchases but not out- of-state purchases would ultimately limit the ability of pharmacies, clinics or other points of care to recoup costs for administering or dispensing these products, which could result in sites of care in Virginia being unable to stock these medications. For example, while Maximum Fair Price represents the most that Medicare will pay for a drug, it does not change the national “list price” of drugs sold in the U.S. Rather, Medicare reductions in price is a federal effort that will involve several complex steps that can not be replicated at the state level. The attached letter outlines in more detail the destabilizing impact that HB 483 could have on the pharmaceutical supply chain and patient access to critical medications in Virginia. Thank you.
The Coalition of State Rheumatology Organizations (CSRO) would like to express concerns regarding HB 483, which would create a Prescription Drug Affordability Board that is empowered to apply the Medicare maximum fair price to physician reimbursements for provider administered medications. CSRO serves the practicing rheumatologist and is comprised of over 40 state and regional professional rheumatology societies nationwide whose mission is to advocate for excellence in the field of rheumatology, ensuring access to the highest quality of care for the management of rheumatologic and musculoskeletal disease. This legislation would establish a Prescription Drug Affordability Board that would have the ability to not only review the cost of prescription drugs, but establish upper payment limits. This legislation would set the upper payment limit for selected drugs at the Medicare maximum fair price for medications administered to patients throughout Virginia. This would in turn cap physician reimbursement for selected provider administered medications. We fear this proposal may actually limit patient access and drive up the cost of physician administered medications instead of making them more affordable for patients, while simultaneously causing significant financial strain on physician practices throughout Virginia. Please see comments attached.
Attached please find a letter of opposition to HB483 from the HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute.
People living with rare diseases face extremely limited treatment options, as only 5% of rare conditions have an FDA-approved therapy. By excluding any "drug or biologic that is designated for a rare disease or condition,” you will ensure access to medication for patients living with a rare disease, who have no treatment alternatives. We appreciate the consideration of the unique circumstances of rare disease patients and therapies in this legislation. We urge the Committee to maintain the following section in the legislation: The Board shall not be required to identify every prescription drug product that meets the criteria of this subsection. The Board shall not include in such list of identified prescription drug products (i) any brand-name prescription drug or biologic that is designated for a rare disease or condition under 21 U.S.C. § 360bb and for which the only approved indication is for one or more rare diseases or conditions or (ii) any biological product that is derived from human blood or plasma. The Board shall determine whether to conduct an affordability review for each identified prescription drug product pursuant to the provisions of subsections C, D, and E”
(See attached letter)
Dear Chair Maldonado and Members of the House Labor and Commerce Subcommittee #1, On behalf of the Association for Clinical Oncology, I'm sharing a letter outlining concerns with the upper payment limit language in HB 483, which could jeopardize access to necessary care for Virginians with cancer. Please don't hesitate to reach out if you have questions with cancer care; we're happy to be a resource. Best, Sarah Lanford Associate Director of State Advocacy Association for Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
HB794 - Opioid overdose and opioid overdose deaths; Department of Health to reduce rates, report.
America has been dealing the worst opioid epidemic ever since former President Biden and Democrats allowed drugs, cartels, criminals, and traffickers into America. Now taxpayers have to pay for the Left’s failures and selfishness.
HB823 - Community Living and Family and Individual Supports Waiver; program rule amendments.
Please Vote YES on HB823. If a Medicaid Recipient has to be hospitalized, their attendant does not get paid while the individual is in the hospital. This bill will provide for an option to have a paid caregiver assist a Medicaid Waiver Recipient in the hospital with necessary supports, including communication, behavior support and intense care needs. Attendants who are home care providers are paid minimal amounts and must find another job. When the hospitalized individual comes home, they no longer have the attendant care they need at home. Please VOTE YES on HB823.
HB1245 - Virginia Health Care Fund; additional funding and uses.
I am in full support of HB 1245 - a bill that ensures healthcare access for marginalized and Queer communities in Virginia stay protected. It should be goal of all governments to protect their people, and this bill diverts funding to do just that. Denying this bill is saying that the health of Virginians is not a priority for the House or GA as a whole. Especially with attacks and cuts at the federal level, state-level support and funding is needed now more than ever. I would not be alive today if community-based resources did not offer me the counseling and care I needed in high school! 1,000s of Virginians will die if their essential healthcare is cut by federal attacks while Virginia does nothing.
Virginia Student Power Network strongly supports HB1245. Urgent action is needed to stabilize existing providers, keeping clinics open and preventing patients from losing care mid-treatment. Virginia’s care networks dismantled by federal pressure must be rebuilt. Grants would expand access by supporting new clinics (brick-and-mortar, mobile, or innovative models), training and credentialing new clinicians, and supporting culturally competent, evidence-based care statewide. Virginia's youth, particularly gender expansive youth, must have pathways to care. This bill is a common sense measure to fill the gap left by the removal of federal funding for these critical services.
I don't have much faith in electoral politics, and I've never submitted a written comment before, but here goes. I've lived in Virginia all my life and I don't intend for that to change. However, as a trans woman, my survival is dependent on having access to gender affirming care. In 2020, After 25 years of suicidal ideation and severe depression, it became clear to me (and the mental health professionals in my life) that either I accept myself as the one thing I was always taught was the worst thing you could be, transgender, and pursue gender affirming care, or I wouldn't make it to my next birthday. When I say that gender affirming care saved my life, it's not hyperbole. Weeks before I started HRT I found myself in the middle of the road in front of my house, looking at an oncoming tractor trailer, thinking "what if I just didn't move?" If my dog hadn't started barking from my yard and snapped me out of it, I don't know if I'd be writing this today. I'm not going to throw numbers at you from studies you'll likely never read, because I'm sure you've heard them all by now. What I will leave you with is a phrase that has become very common within trans circles in the face of legislative and medical discrimination: "death before detransition." For so many of us, its not even a choice anymore. By allocating money for medical care for populations protected by the Virginia Human Rights Act, HB1245 will save lives. There's no question about that. If you think the lives of Virginians "protected" under the VHRA are worth saving, I urge you to support this bill. If not, I guess that's between you and God.
Please, protect health care for the most vulnerable. Let's lead here. -Rev. Sara Dorrien-Christians
Greetings, My name is Chlo'e Edwards, and I am the Policy Director at New Virginia Majority. We support HB 1245, which establishes a Virginia Health Care Stabilization and Expansion Fund to protect access to care for some of the Commonwealth’s most vulnerable residents. Virginia is facing an urgent health care crisis driven by federal actions that threaten to strip care from transgender people, immigrants, people with disabilities, veterans, and other communities already facing systemic barriers. Recent federal efforts have sought to cut off funding to providers delivering lifesaving, evidence-based care, forcing clinics and hospitals to choose between abandoning patients or risking the loss of critical federal dollars. These actions destabilize community health providers and put Virginians at risk of losing care mid-treatment. HB 1245 offers a timely and responsible solution. By appropriating $4.5 million to the Virginia Health Care Fund and leveraging public-private partnerships, this bill ensures that nonprofit and community-based providers serving populations protected under the Virginia Human Rights Act can remain open, rebuild care networks dismantled by federal pressure, and responsibly expand access statewide. The flexible grant structure recognizes the realities of both low-overhead community clinics and larger providers, ensuring resources reach patients efficiently and equitably. At New Virginia Majority, we believe health care is a cornerstone of a thriving democracy and a just economy. HB 1245 affirms Virginia’s commitment to protecting human dignity, safeguarding public health, and ensuring that no community is left behind due to political attacks beyond our control. We respectfully urge the committee to support HB 1245.
As the Federal government has cut off funding to critical medical services in Virginia, we've struggled to find providers delivering health care. Simply the threat of Federal intervention has closed clinics and led hospital to stop providing certain kinds of care. The few remaining providers struggle to deliver the services and medical care me and my neighbors need. Medical care decisions must be made between doctors and patients. The Federal government selectively canceling funding (and thus care) based on political ideology is harmful and wrong. These cuts are causing daily harm to Virginians and we must act to restore this critical, lifesaving care. Further, cutting regular care simply forces patients into more expensive emergency care, driving costs up for all Virginians, regardless of their medical care needs. I plead with you to deliver solutions to keep essential medical care in our communities. Please support HB1245 to provide a vital backfill to decreased Federal funding and allow smaller community-based providers deliver the care that larger institutions, for whatever reason, will not or cannot. Virginians are counting on you to bolster local services that deliver essential care to local communities every day.
HB1284 - State plan for med. assistance; patient-initiated consultation, provider-to-provider consultation.
HB1357 - Nursing facilities; comprehensive study of quality of care, etc., and operational practices.
I write in strong support of HB 1357, which directs the Virginia Department for Aging and Rehabilitative Services to conduct a comprehensive study of nursing facilities across the Commonwealth. This legislation is both timely and necessary to ensure that our seniors and individuals with disabilities receive care that is safe, dignified, and centered on their well-being. Nursing facilities serve some of Virginia’s most vulnerable residents. Families entrust these institutions with the care of their loved ones, often during the most fragile stages of life. HB 1357 acknowledges this responsibility by calling for a thorough review of quality of care, resident safety, staffing, and operational practices. A comprehensive study paired with the formation of a knowledgeable work group -creates an opportunity to identify gaps, highlight best practices, and recommend meaningful improvements grounded in real data and lived experiences. This legislation also reflects a commitment to accountability and transparency. By requiring a formal report, HB 1357 ensures that findings are shared with policymakers, advocates, and the public, fostering informed decision-making and long-term systemic improvements. It moves the Commonwealth beyond reactive responses toward proactive oversight and continuous quality improvement. Importantly, HB 1357 brings multiple stakeholders to the table, recognizing that improving nursing facility care requires collaboration among providers, regulators, advocates, residents, and families. This inclusive approach strengthens trust and encourages solutions that are practical, compassionate, and sustainable. Virginia’s aging population is growing, and with it comes an increased demand for high-quality long-term care. HB 1357 positions the Commonwealth to meet this demand responsibly by examining what is working, what is not, and how we can do better. Supporting this bill is a clear statement that Virginia values the safety, dignity, and quality of life of its older adults and individuals receiving rehabilitative services. For these reasons, I urge support for HB 1357 and commend the General Assembly for prioritizing the care and protection of some of our most vulnerable residents.
I write in strong support of HB 1357, which directs the Virginia Department for Aging and Rehabilitative Services to conduct a comprehensive study of nursing facilities across the Commonwealth. This legislation is both timely and necessary to ensure that our seniors and individuals with disabilities receive care that is safe, dignified, and centered on their well-being. Nursing facilities serve some of Virginia’s most vulnerable residents. Families entrust these institutions with the care of their loved ones, often during the most fragile stages of life. HB 1357 acknowledges this responsibility by calling for a thorough review of quality of care, resident safety, staffing, and operational practices. A comprehensive study paired with the formation of a knowledgeable work group -creates an opportunity to identify gaps, highlight best practices, and recommend meaningful improvements grounded in real data and lived experiences. This legislation also reflects a commitment to accountability and transparency. By requiring a formal report, HB 1357 ensures that findings are shared with policymakers, advocates, and the public, fostering informed decision-making and long-term systemic improvements. It moves the Commonwealth beyond reactive responses toward proactive oversight and continuous quality improvement. Importantly, HB 1357 brings multiple stakeholders to the table, recognizing that improving nursing facility care requires collaboration among providers, regulators, advocates, residents, and families. This inclusive approach strengthens trust and encourages solutions that are practical, compassionate, and sustainable. Virginia’s aging population is growing, and with it comes an increased demand for high-quality long-term care. HB 1357 positions the Commonwealth to meet this demand responsibly by examining what is working, what is not, and how we can do better. Supporting this bill is a clear statement that Virginia values the safety, dignity, and quality of life of its older adults and individuals receiving rehabilitative services. For these reasons, I urge support for HB 1357 and commend the General Assembly for prioritizing the care and protection of some of our most vulnerable residents.
HB66 - Medical assistance and social services programs; DMAS and DSS to modernize technology systems.