What You Need to Know
- Originally, WA Cares was supposed to begin collecting taxes in 2022.
- The program is supposed to starting paying up to $36,500 in benefits to eligible participants starting July 1, 2026.
- WA Cares could serve as a model for a public LTC benefits program in California.
Long-term care planners are about to get a better idea of how a state long-term care insurance program might work when Washington state’s new WA Cares Fund program begins collecting premiums from most of the state’s workers.
Starting Saturday, employers are supposed to begin paying for WA Cares by applying a 0.58% payroll tax to the paychecks of workers who did not have private long-term care insurance arrangements in place by Nov. 1, 2021.
Managers expect the program to start paying up to $36,500 in benefits to participants who need care starting July 1, 2026.
The program could serve as a model for California, where a Long Term Care Insurance Task Force is developing recommendations for its own public LTC program.
What It Means
The start of the WA Cares program will give you a chance to talk to clients about long-term care planning, and it will show clients that state officials agree that the need to pay for LTC services is one of the biggest threats facing people today.
The Background
Medicaid — a program funded by state governments and the federal government — pays for nursing home care for people who meet state eligibility criteria.
Medicaid will account for about $58 billion of the $201 billion in U.S. spending on nursing home care and similar types of facility care this year, according to projections reported by the Medicare Office of the Actuary.
States are looking for new ways to encourage residents to plan ahead for long-term care costs because of concerns about the effect of nursing home benefits on state Medicaid program budgets and worries about residents’ access to care.
Because Medicaid programs in most states pay far less than the amount nursing homes need to provide care, getting someone who will pay for care with Medicaid into a high-quality facility in a preferred location can be difficult.
WA Cares
WA Cares officials say they expect about 70% of state residents to eventually need some long-term care.
Workers in the program will be eligible for benefits if they have contributed for at least 10 years, or if they have contributed during three of the last six years and have a sudden need for care.
Participants born before 1968 can earn partial benefits for each year they work and contribute.
Concerns
Some critics of the program object to the principle of government agencies starting new long-term care benefits programs.
Stephen Moses, president of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform — which is based in Seattle — has long argued that Medicaid and other government programs should focus on helping people who are poor, rather than encouraging middle-income and high-income people to avoid planning for their own, easy-to-foresee care costs.