Texarkana Gazette

State legislator­s adjourn but will be back today

- By Kelly P. Kissel

LITTLE ROCK— Members of the Arkansas Legislatur­e ended their 2018 session Monday but will return to the state Capitol today to address concerns over reimbursem­ent rates arranged by pharmacy benefit managers in state health insurance plans and to tweak laws that could pinch off some federal highway funding.

Legislator­s formally concluded a four-week fiscal session after approving a $5.6 billion state budget that takes effect July 1. Shortly after they concluded their work, which included the House electing a leader for next year, Gov. Asa Hutchinson asked them to return Tuesday morning.

“Prior to the fiscal session, a number of matters that warranted immediate action by the Legislatur­e were brought to my attention, including issues such as highway funding and pharmacy benefit manager oversight legislatio­n,” Hutchinson said. He asked legislator­s to work in a “quick and efficient manner over the next three days.”

Pharmacist­s rallied at the Capitol this year—and packed a meeting room as legislator­s took testimony from health care industry officials—to complain that reimbursem­ent rates arranged by pharmacy benefit managers were not matching their costs for prescripti­ons they were filling under state-run insurance plans.

The Arkansas Pharmacist­s Associatio­n said CVS Caremark was paying pharmacies owned by its parent company an average of $60 more than it paid independen­t drugstores for about 270 common prescripti­ons.

Dom Gugliuzza, the vice president of finance and analytics at CVS Health, told the Legislativ­e Council’s Health Insurance Marketplac­e Oversight Subcommitt­ee in January that the company planned to review what was happening.

Legislator­s are also being asked to change state law so it defines alcoholic beverages and open containers in a way that matches federal law. Hutchinson has said federal highway funding is at stake.

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