Bill

Bill > A3667


NJ A3667

Permits dental service corporations to be subsidiaries of nonprofit parent companies.


summary

Introduced
02/12/2024
In Committee
12/12/2024
Crossed Over
06/28/2024
Passed
01/30/2025
Dead
Vetoed
03/17/2025

Introduced Session

2024-2025 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill amends the current law to permit dental service corporations to be or become subsidiaries of nonprofit parents. Under the current law, a dental service corporation is prohibited from spending more than 10 percent of its assets or more than 50 percent of its surplus, whichever is less, on investments. This puts dental service corporations at a disadvantage compared to other health insurance companies, despite the fact that dental service corporations have more predictable risks of loss and thus have less need for limiting the use of company funds. Allowing dental service corporations to be or become subsidiaries of nonprofit parent companies, while still imposing all statutory requirements on the dental service corporations themselves, would give a nonprofit parent freedom to invest funds and be better able to help its dental service corporation subsidiary compete with larger health insurance companies that offer dental services. At the same time, the dental service corporation subsidiary would still have to comply with the "Dental Service Corporation Act of 1968," including the limitation on investing company funds. By amending the current law, this bill promotes competition in the dental service market and ensures that patients are still adequately protected.

AI Summary

This bill amends the current law to permit dental service corporations to be or become subsidiaries of nonprofit parent companies. Under the existing law, dental service corporations are prohibited from spending more than 10% of their assets or more than 50% of their surplus on investments, which puts them at a disadvantage compared to other health insurance companies. Allowing dental service corporations to be subsidiaries of nonprofit parent companies, while still requiring them to comply with all statutory requirements, would give the parent company more flexibility to invest funds and help its dental service corporation subsidiary compete with larger insurers that offer dental services. The bill aims to promote competition in the dental service market while still ensuring adequate patient protection.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry, Health and Social Services

Sponsors (6)

Last Action

Absolute Veto, Received in the Assembly (on 03/17/2025)

bill text


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