New Pay Cap Legislation
Currently, there is no maximum payment limit on what staffing agencies can charge hospitals and nursing homes for temporary travel nurse contracts. These nurses are essential to healthcare facilities in need of support during protests or ongoing worker shortages.
By limiting what staffing agencies can charge, hospitals will have more financial resources that can be diverted into recruiting and retaining permanent nursing staff.
House File 2319’s payment limit will include the hourly rate for temporary nurses, the agency’s administrative fees, contract fees, transportation/travel stipends for temporary nurses, per diems, and any additional costs charged by the agency, such as taxes or overtime. By including all fees in the limit, legislators hope that staffing agencies will not simply cut the wages of temporary nurses to meet the payment limit.
If the law is passed, temporary nurse staffing agencies would only be allowed to charge 150% of the state’s average nursing wage in their contracts. Violating this limit would result in a $5,000 fine and a 30-day notice to comply. If violations continued, the agency would be fined $25,000 and lose its staffing agency registration.
The bill will also require an annual allowable charge schedule from the State Department of Health and Human Services. This will standardize the cost of hiring temporary nurses across all agencies and set the standard for judging any potential violations.
