Colorado Code § 10-16-402

Issuance of certificate of authority - denial
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) (a) Repealed.
(b) The commissioner shall determine whether the applicant for a certificate of authority,
with respect to health-care services to be furnished:
(I) Has demonstrated the willingness and potential ability to assure that such health-care
services will be provided in a manner to assure both availability and accessibility of adequate
personnel and facilities and in a manner enhancing availability, accessibility, and continuity of
service;
(II) Has arrangements, established in accordance with regulations promulgated by the
commissioner, for an ongoing quality of health care assurance program concerning health-care
processes and outcomes; and
(III) Has a procedure, established in accordance with regulations of the commissioner, to
develop, compile, evaluate, and report statistics relating to the cost of its operations, the pattern
of utilization of its services, the availability and accessibility of its services, and such other
matters as may be reasonably required by the commissioner.
(c) Repealed.
(2) The commissioner shall issue a certificate of authority upon payment of the
application fee prescribed in section 10-16-110 (2) if the commissioner is satisfied that the
following conditions are met:
(a) The persons responsible for the conduct of the affairs of the applicant are competent,
trustworthy, and possess good reputations;
(b) The commissioner determines in accordance with subsection (1) of this section that
the health maintenance organization's proposed plan of operation meets the requirements of
subsection (1)(b) of this section;
(c) (I) The health maintenance organization will effectively provide or arrange for the
provision of basic health-care services, through insurance or otherwise, except to the extent of
reasonable requirements for copayments, deductibles, and payments for out-of-network services
received pursuant to section 10-16-704 (2).
(II) Nothing in this paragraph (c) shall prohibit a carrier from offering to a small
employer additional options of a health benefit plan that:
(A) Provides for different benefits for insureds and dependents of insureds covered by
the same policy; and
(B) Encourages appropriate health-care condition management based on clinical
guidelines by providing case management benefits to covered persons.
(d) The health maintenance organization is financially responsible and may reasonably
be expected to meet its obligations to enrollees and prospective enrollees. In making this
determination, the commissioner may consider:
(I) The financial soundness of the health-care plan's arrangements for health-care
services and the schedule of charges used in connection therewith;
(II) The adequacy of working capital;
(III) Any agreement with an insurer, a nonprofit hospital, medical-surgical, and health
service corporation, a government, or any other organization for insuring the payment of the cost
of health-care services or the provision for automatic applicability of an alternative coverage in
the event of discontinuance of the plan;
(IV) Any agreement with providers for the provision of health-care services;
(V) Any surety bond or deposit of cash or securities submitted in accordance with
section 10-16-412 as a guarantee that the obligations will be duly performed.
(e) The enrollees will be afforded an opportunity to participate in matters of policy and
operation pursuant to section 10-16-404;
(f) Nothing in the proposed method of operation, as shown by the information submitted
pursuant to section 10-16-401 or by independent investigation, is contrary to the public interest;
(g) Any deficiencies certified by the commissioner have been corrected.
(3) A certificate of authority shall be denied only after compliance with the requirements
of section 10-16-419.
(4) A certificate of authority shall expire on the last day of June in each year and shall be
renewed annually if the company has continued to comply with the laws of this state.

‹ Prev All Colorado sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.