top of page
logo_clearBKG_MNIndy (1).png
Image by Tingey Injury Law Firm

Solutions

The situation is dire, but not hopeless. 

OUR BILLS

Click on the buttons to view bills that our group is helping pursue in the Minnesota Legislature during the 2026 session.

Image by Matt Barton

is critical to the health of Minnesota's

local pharmacies, patients, & communities

PBM REFORM

Pharmacy reform is healthcare reform.

And pharmacy reform IS possible, but solutions must be an improvement on current statute, comprehensive, and informed by the expertise of working pharmacists and independent pharmacy owners. Additionally, enforcement of pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) regulations must be timely, stringent, and result in penalties that actually dissuade illegal behavior (currently, all large PBMs are known to have a budget specifically for settling lawsuits, which oftentimes result in fines that are a "drop in the bucket" compared to their profit margins).

 

Our group is actively working on the following approaches to fixing pharmacy:

  • Reforming reimbursement so that pharmacies are paid fairly for the essential healthcare services they provide.

    • See SF3299 / HF3922 above

  • Promoting competition through addressing monopolization and encouraging competition between PBMs, which helps increases accountability and ensure fair negotiations with pharmacies and drug manufacturers.

  • Reviewing and updating existing regulations to address legislative loopholes used by PBMs to ensure that they operate in a way that benefits pharmacies, patients, and healthcare as a whole.

  • Implementing regulations that enhance transparency regarding PBM practices, including pricing arrangements and rebates.

Regulatory reforms

The health insurance industry spends a LOT of money each year lobbying for laws that protect their profit margins. Reviewing and updating existing regulations helps address legislative loopholes used by PBMs to ensure that they operate in a way that benefits pharmacies, patients, and the healthcare industry as a whole.

Demanding transparency

Today, PBMs operate in a "black box"," regularly claiming that their claims and reimbursement data is "proprietary" and leaving entities that work with them—including pharmacies, employers, and even the government—completely in the dark. Implementing regulations that enhance transparency about PBM practices, including pricing arrangements and rebates, is KEY to uncovering where exactly money is (and is not) flowing to and from PBMs.

Promoting competition

Addressing monopolization and encouraging competition between PBMs helps to increase accountability and ensure fair negotiations with pharmacies and drug manufacturers.

Improving enforcement

Currently, PBMs skirt the law so often that they have a budget specifically for settling lawsuits—it's more financially beneficial for them to ignore the rules and pay the price, which is usually an amount so small to be is insignificant to their multi-billion dollar bottom lines. Effective PBM reform includes strengthening enforcement and implementing penalties that actually discourage unlawful conduct.

Establishing an index-based reimbursement model

such as one that utilizes the National Average Drug Acquisition Cost (NADAC)—as many states across the U.S. have already done, with hundreds of millions in savings already reported—ensures that pharmacies are paid fairly for the essential work they do AND that PBMs don't just get to make up their own prices upon which reimbursements to pharmacies are based. This also increases transparency and encourages standardization of drug pricing.

See If your legislator
supports pbm reform!

Our legislative tracker also includes contact and website information for each legislator, as well as their support "grade."

 

Leave a comment for our team on the spreadsheet if you have something to add!

MNIndys in action

Members of our organization succeeded in helping pass two critical pharmacy-focused provisions during the 2025 MN state legislative session:

1. Establish a Single PBM (SPBM) model for Medicaid to increase transparency and ensure fair reimbursement to pharmacies. All Managed Care Organizations (MCOs), such as HealthPartners and UCare, who administer prescription benefits on behalf of Medicaid patients must use a single PBM, which will be chosen by the state of Minnesota. This will save the state a ton in admin fees, ensures that pharmacies are paid appropriately (NADAC + the state’s fee-for-service dispensing fee), and increases transparency.

2. Establish a Directed Pharmacy Payment Program (DPPP), which will help prevent further closures until the SPBM goes into effect. Qualified pharmacies will be paid a $4.50 dispensing fee for all MCO claims for Medicaid patients, effectively increasing pharmacies’ current dispensing fee of $0.00 to $0.80 per prescription to $4.50. Qualified pharmacies are defined as Indys, pharmacies in pharmacy deserts, and common ownership with 12 or less stores. This legislation will be in effect until mid-2027.

 

Currently, our Legislative Working Group and other MNIndys members are continuing to work with lobbyists, a public affiars team, and MN state legislators to craft a game plan for the 2026 MN legislative session. Stay tuned via our newsletter, the MNIndys Mailer!

Pharmacy advocates protest outside Optum headquarters in Eden Prairie, Minnesota

MNIndys members testify at the MN Capitol

The MNIndys' Legislative Working Group serves as a go-to resource for legislators working on bills to support Minnesota's independent and other community-based pharmacies.

Check out these videos to see MNIndys leaders Andrew Russell, RPh (Elko New Market Family Pharmacy), John Hoeschen, RPh (St. Paul Corner Drug), and Hildie Hoeschen, RN (St. Paul Corner Drug) testify before the MN Legislature in support of bills we fought to pass during the 2025 session.

FUNDING

MNIndys is a nonprofit organization.

Our efforts are entirely funded by MNIndys members and donors. 

bottom of page