Senators heard a report on H741 and ordered the bill for third reading after the reporter said the measure would align Vermont insurance requirements with federal coverage rules for colorectal cancer screening for those not at high risk. The reporter said the bill preserves existing coverage for high-risk individuals and replaces the word "physician" with "clinician" to broaden the types of providers who may recommend or perform screening.
The reporter cited national trends and a recent New York Times article on rising colorectal cancer diagnoses in younger people, and described the bill’s effective-date language: it would take effect Jan. 1, 2025 and apply to plans issued, offered, or renewed on or after that date but not later than Jan. 1, 2026. The committee voted 5–0 in favor and the reporter listed several witnesses, including Mike Fisher (Chief Healthcare Advocate at Vermont Legal Aid), the House reporter on health care, and Sarah Teachout from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Vermont.
The presiding officer called for third reading and the ayes carried on a voice vote, with the body ordering a third reading. The transcript records committee unanimity and supportive testimony but no roll-call vote on the floor in the provided excerpt.