Advocates worry new law will raise drug prices, harm self-insured businesses

Spread the love

A national pharmaceutical manufacturer advocacy group is suing Illinois over its 2025 Prescription Drug Affordability Act.

The Pharmaceutical Care Management Association filed a complaint June 16 in Springfield federal court against the Illinois Department of Insurance and Ann Gillespie, its director. PCMA wants a judge to agree the law is pre-empted by the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act, a position it argues is in line with a 2016 U.S. Supreme Court opinion, Gobeille v. Liberty Mutual Insurance.

That decision clarified any state law requiring an ERISA plan or agents of a plan to make detailed disclosures to state agencies establishes a relationship sufficient to trigger the exemption.

Representing PCMA are Foley Hoag, of Boston, and Brown Hay + Stephens, of Springfield.

“Prescription drug prices are far too high for too many Illinoisans, said David Marin, PCMA president and CEO. “Yet this bill threatens to make them even higher. Our lawsuit aims to protect the self-insured businesses and labor unions who provide health benefits for Illinois workers. Unless challenged, Illinois’ pharmacy network restrictions and stringent reporting requirements will lead to higher costs and burdens for these employers while raising cost-sharing and premiums for patients.

“There are many ways to lower prescription drug prices and deliver affordability to patients and employers. But prohibiting the use of tools proven to lower costs and deliver cost-efficient, high-quality pharmaceutical care to patients and imposing onerous reporting burdens is not one of them. The court has an opportunity to uphold the ability of self-insured employers to design benefits that meet the needs of their workforce without unnecessary state interference.”

According to the complaint, the state law improperly requires pharmacy benefit managers to submit annual reports to the insurance department starting Sept. 1, 2026, with those documents to list, by plan, “a list of drugs including corresponding information on therapeutic class, brand name, generic name or specialty drug name,” “number of covered individuals,” “number of drug-related claims,” “dosage units,” “dispensing channel used” and “average wholesale acquisition cost per drug” along with how much each plan spends on drugs, in gross, and plan customers’ total net spending, among other obligations.

Pointing back to Gobeille, PCMA noted ERISA already requires reporting on some of the same information, such as the mandate for most self-funded ERISA plans to report to the U.S. Department of Labor a form covering liabilities, assets, receipts, paid claims and other disbursements. It said failure to comply with the new Illinois law can trigger fines of up to $10,000 daily.

PCMA also challenged the state law’s prohibition on steering patients toward affiliated pharmacies, including financial incentives or penalties. The complaint noted, “Plans cannot offer a preferred pharmacy network without providing beneficiaries discounts and other forms of incentives to drive their prescriptions to preferred pharmacies.” It further said the types of provisions it challenges have already been invalidated in some litigation or are currently subject to injunctions elsewhere, a sign they are likely to be rules as pre-empted under ERISA.

“Going forward, PBMs will have to develop burdensome administrative processes and state-specific plan designs applicable to ERISA plans in Illinois but not to ERISA plans in other states,” according to the complaint. “The inefficiencies inherent in these kinds of state-by-state compliance efforts are precisely those that ERISA’s express preemption clause was designed to prevent.”

In addition to a court order declaring the PDAA’s reporting requirements and its anti-steering and network decision provisions invalid and unenforceable, PCMA seeks a court order permanently halting the state from implementing or enforcing the law as applied to any benefit plans that fall under ERISA regulations.

PCMA is represented in the case by attorney Kristyn DeFilipp and others with the firms of Foley Hoag, of Boston, and Brown Hay + Stephens, of Springfield.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

NASA reorganizes to accelerate Moon Base, lunar programs

NASA reorganizes to accelerate Moon Base, lunar programs

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square NASA announced a reorganization of the agency Friday, restructuring key mission directorates to accelerate its lunar exploration program even as Congress and the White House...
Gabbard announces resignation, cites personal reasons

Gabbard announces resignation, cites personal reasons

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard announced her resignation Friday afternoon, citing personal reasons. The former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii will remain at her post...
Illinois Quick Hits: Community College reimbursement bill passed

Illinois Quick Hits: Community College reimbursement bill passed

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A bill expanding state taxpayer-funded tuition assistance for students in community college is headed to Gov. J.B....
Powell out, Warsh in as new chair of Federal Reserve

Powell out, Warsh in as new chair of Federal Reserve

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Kevin Warsh, an economist and former member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, is now chair of the central bank, replacing longtime chair, Jerome...
Nessel pushes back as Trump administration extends order keeping coal plant open

Nessel pushes back as Trump administration extends order keeping coal plant open

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square The Trump administration has again extended its emergency order keeping a west Michigan coal plant operating. U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright issued a fifth emergency...
Bipartisan praise for federal charges in Minnesota fraud cases

Bipartisan praise for federal charges in Minnesota fraud cases

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Minnesota officials are applauding after federal prosecutors announced sweeping fraud charges against 15 people accused of stealing more than $90 million from state-managed Medicaid programs....
Congress rejects Trump's proposed NASA budget cuts

Congress rejects Trump’s proposed NASA budget cuts

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square House lawmakers advanced a spending bill rejecting President Donald Trump's proposed cuts to NASA, keeping the agency's budget flat at $24.4 billion. The White House...
Comptroller, Chicago officials debate tax fund sweeps

Comptroller, Chicago officials debate tax fund sweeps

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration are at odds over legislation that would...
Casey Westfield School Board.1

Casey-Westfield School Board Approves $560,000 HVAC Phase 2, Annexes Tennis Court Parking Lot

Casey-Westfield CUSD C-4 Board of Education Meeting | May 18, 2026 Article Summary: The Casey-Westfield Community Unit School District C-4 Board of Education on Monday, May 18, 2026, approved a...
No public funds for new transit safety group

No public funds for new transit safety group

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office says no public funds are being used for the agency’s new...
The future of American troops in Europe; Iran lead Rubio's meeting with NATO

The future of American troops in Europe; Iran lead Rubio’s meeting with NATO

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Defense spending, troop placement and Iran took center stage during a meeting between Secretary of State Marco Rubio and NATO leaders on Friday in Sweden....
Tennessee congressman files articles of impeachment against Roberts

Tennessee congressman files articles of impeachment against Roberts

By Kim JarrettThe Center Square U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tennessee, filed six articles of impeachment against U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Roberts, saying Roberts's leadership is marked by "arbitrary, unexplained,...
Illinois Quick Hits: Chicagoland chamber opposes ditigal ad tax

Illinois Quick Hits: Chicagoland chamber opposes ditigal ad tax

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce is urging the Illinois legislature to reject a proposed new tax on...
Board suspends Camp Mystic co-owner's nursing license

Board suspends Camp Mystic co-owner’s nursing license

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The Texas Board of Nursing has suspended the nursing license of Mary Liz Eastland, a co-owner of Camp Mystic, the flooded all-girls camp in Hunt,...
Illinois bill banning ‘easily convertible’ handguns could pass this session

Illinois bill banning ‘easily convertible’ handguns could pass this session

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois measure to prohibit the sale and manufacture of handguns some legislators say are “easily convertible”...