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Updated:   2026-04-07

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Measure
Authors Allen  
Subject Public Agency Benefits Intermediary Compensation Disclosure Act.
Relating To relating to health care coverage.
Title An act to add Article 3.9 (commencing with Section 53059) to Chapter 1 of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 of the Government Code, relating to health care coverage.
Last Action Dt 2026-03-25
State Amended Senate
Status In Committee Process
Flags
Vote Req Approp Fiscal Cmte Local Prog Subs Chgs Urgency Tax Levy Active?
Majority No Yes No None No No Y
i
Leginfo Link  
Bill Actions
2026-03-26     Withdrawn from committee.
2026-03-26     Re-referred to Com. on RLS.
2026-03-25     From committee with author's amendments. Read second time and amended. Re-referred to Com. on INS.
2026-03-04     Referred to Coms. on INS. and HEALTH.
2026-02-20     From printer. May be acted upon on or after March 22.
2026-02-19     Introduced. Read first time. To Com. on RLS. for assignment. To print.
Versions
Amended Senate     2026-03-25
Introduced     2026-02-19
Analyses TBD
Latest Text Bill Full Text
Latest Text Digest

Existing law requires various disclosures to be made regarding health care service plan and health insurance benefits and coverages. Existing law generally regulates the conduct of business between health care service plans and solicitors and health insurers and broker-agents, including requirements regarding contracts in which the solicitor represents the health care service plan or the broker-agent represents the insurer.

This bill, the Public Agency Benefits Intermediary Compensation Disclosure Act, would require a covered service provider, defined to mean a broker, agent, consultant, or advisor that meets specified criteria, to disclose to a public agency, defined to only include local entities, or its group health plan the direct and indirect compensation it expects to receive for providing brokerage or consulting services, among other information, before it enters into, extends, renews, or materially amends a contract or arrangement for brokerage services or consulting services with the public agency or its plan. The bill would also require a covered service provider to disclose compensation and material financial interests related to a covered health care benefits arrangement that the covered service provider recommends, places, renews, services, or materially influences for the public agency or its group health plan. Disclosure would be required under these provisions if the covered service provider reasonably expects it would receive $1,000 or more in compensation during the term of the contract or arrangement. The bill would require these disclosures at specified times.

This bill would prohibit a covered service provider from requesting, accepting, or receiving direct or indirect compensation in connection with brokerage services or consulting services provided to a public agency or its plan unless the compensation is disclosed, and would prohibit evasion of disclosure requirements.