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Sen. Jenny Lyon: recent health reforms producing measurable savings for educator coverage

February 05, 2026 | Education, SENATE, Committees, Legislative , Vermont


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Sen. Jenny Lyon: recent health reforms producing measurable savings for educator coverage
At a Senate briefing on Feb. 5, Sen. Jenny Lyon said legislation passed by the health committee has begun to lower health-care costs for education budgets by reducing hospital and drug spending.

"We predicted last year that we would see a $12,000,000 savings for drugs and a 3% decrease in premiums," Lyon said, and reported that for educator health coverage the state is already seeing $14,600,000 in infusion-drug savings and projects $16,000,000 in 2027. Lyon said the educator cohort comprises roughly 32,000–33,000 people and that combined oversight of hospital rates and drug changes could yield about $40 million to $50 million in savings for that group.

The measures Lyon described include elements of the committee package she worked on last year (cited in discussion as Act 126), a Department of Financial Regulation order to increase transparency in insurer-provider contracts, a cap on high-cost infusion drugs (noted in the briefing as 120% of average sales price), and targeted rules on hospital payment such as reference-based pricing. Lyon said reference-based pricing sets payments as a percentage of Medicare and that the Green Mountain Care Board is calibrating use of those reference prices based on service utilization.

"If you can control and regulate hospital payment to hospitals, then you can begin to lower premium costs," Lyon said, noting the board has seen historical hospital payments as high as 580% of Medicare for some services and that reforms are intended to reduce those extremes. She added that hospital and insurer reserve needs are part of the current premium picture: "That increase will also include money for reserves for VHII for the business that manages health care."

Committee members pushed on several policy details. One legislator asked whether the reforms apply to a limited set of payers; Lyon identified Blue Cross and Blue Shield and MVP as major participants in the market and referenced VEHI as the education-related plan administrator but said she could not provide a full list of affected insurers on the spot. Another member observed Vermont’s overall health-care spending is far higher than neighboring New Hampshire; Lyon acknowledged the gap and attributed it to multiple factors including hospital pricing, administrative costs and demographic differences, while arguing that a mix of administrative reforms, pricing tools and investments in primary care can curb long-term growth.

Lyon emphasized the cohort focus and limits of current results: the savings she cited apply primarily to educators covered by the plans analyzed and are not claims about statewide universal effects. She offered to provide more detailed data and said hospital representatives will appear before the committee on Friday to discuss progress since the legislation passed.

The committee did not take formal votes during the briefing; members requested follow-up data from Lyon and agency staff.

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