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Health Care Law Alert  March 24, 2010 

 

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 HEALTH REFORM AND THE IMPACT ON EMPLOYERS

Following a year long debate, the U.S. House of Representatives passed health care reform legislation last Sunday evening.  Both H.R. 3590, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the "Affordable Care Act"), and H.R. 4872, the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (the "Health Care Reconciliation Act") were passed by the House.  The Health Care Reconciliation Act eliminates and in some instances modifies a number of tax and revenue provisions previously set forth in the Senate's Affordable Care Act.  However, the Senate has not yet passed the Health Care Reconciliation Act. 

 

The Affordable Care Act was signed into law on Tuesday.  The Affordable Care Act is a 2,409 page document that is made up of ten distinct titles.  For the most part, the provisions affecting employers and employer plans are contained in Title I of the Affordable Care Act.  This article only focuses on key provisions of the Affordable Care Act with respect to employers and their plans:

 

EMPLOYERS

 

· Employers are not required to provide group health insurance to employees, but not offering coverage comes with a price, depending on employer size. 
 Effective Calendar Year 2010 

 

· The first phase begins for qualified small employers to receive a tax credit of up to 35% of their employee health care coverage expenses.  A "qualified small employer" is an employer that does not have more than 25 employees with average annual compensation levels not exceeding $50,000.  (In 2014, when exchanges are operational, tax credits will increase up to 50% of premiums.)

 

Effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2010:

 

· Employers will be required to report on W-2s the cost of employer sponsored health coverage that is excludable from an employee's gross income.

 

· The employer tax deduction for employees who receive Medicare Part D drug subsidies is eliminated.  

 

Effective January 1, 2014:

 

· Employers with more than 200 employees must automatically enroll employees in health insurance coverage offered by the employer; however, employees may opt out of employer coverage (and opt-out will trigger a tax to the employer).

 

· If an employer with greater than 50 employees (a "large employer") does not offer "essential" health insurance coverage and such employer has at least one full-time employee receiving a premium tax credit, then the employer will be assessed an additional fee of $750 per full time employee.  

 

· Employers with more than 50 employees that offer health insurance coverage and have at least one full-time employee receiving a premium tax credit will pay the lesser of $3,000 for each employee receiving a premium credit or $750 for each full-time employee.   

 

· Employers offering coverage will be required to provide a "free choice" voucher to employees with incomes less than 400% of Federal Poverty Level ("FPL") whose share of the premium cost exceeds 8%, but is less than 9.8% of their income.  Such employees will be permitted to obtain health insurance coverage from the health insurance exchange created by the legislation.  The free choice voucher amount will be equal to what the employer would have paid to provide coverage to the employee under the employer's plan.  Accordingly, the voucher will be used to offset the premium costs for the plan in which the employee is enrolled.  Employers providing free choice vouchers will not be subject to fines or penalties for employees that receive premium credits in the a state based health insurance exchange.

 

· Fees will apply per employee subject to a waiting period of greater than 30 days ($400 per employee), increasing to $600 per employee in a 60 to 90 day waiting period.  Waiting periods of greater than 90 days are prohibited.

 

· Employers that offer health insurance coverage will be required to offer an "essential" health benefits package.  This means that each employer plan offered must meet certain minimum health plan coverage requirements including a health plan that provides a comprehensive set of services, covers at least 60% of the value of the covered benefits, limits annual cost-sharing to the current HSA limits ($5,950 / individual and $11,900 / family in 2010), and is not more extensive than the typical employer plan.  Additionally, in 2014, all qualified health benefit plans, including those offered through the exchanges and those offered in the individual and small group markets (except grandfathered plans) must meet the requirements of an essential health benefits package.

 

·  Large employers will have additional reporting requirements to the IRS regarding plan enrollment, waiting periods, and plan cost information.

 

EMPLOYER PLANS

 

Effective for plan years beginning on and after September 23, 2010:

 

· Group health plans offering dependent coverage must make dependent coverage available for children up to age 26. 

 

· Group health plans are prohibited from discriminating in favor of highly compensated individuals.

 

· Group health plans are required to disclose the percentage of revenue spent on medical claims and provide a rebate to participants if the group health plan does not spend a minimum of 80% (small group or individual plans) or 85 % (large plans) of its revenue on claims  (the requirement to provide a rebate becomes effective January 1, 2011).

 

· Pre-existing condition exclusions for children are prohibited (Note:  there is controversy over the effective date of this provision.  Future guidance is expected.)  

 

· Group health plans must provide coverage for, and not impose any cost sharing requirements for:  (1) specified preventive items or services; (2) recommended immunizations; and (3) recommended preventive care and screenings for women and children.

 

· Requires reductions in the maximum limits for out-of-pocket expenses for individuals enrolled in "qualified health plans" whose incomes are between 100% and 400% of the poverty limit.

 

Effective for  tax years beginning after December 31, 2010:

 

· A "Simple Cafeteria Plan" becomes available to provide a vehicle through which small businesses can provide tax-free benefits to their employees by easing the administrative burdens of sponsoring a cafeteria plan.  This provision also exempts employers who make contributions for employees under a "Simple Cafeteria Plan" from nondiscrimination requirements.

 

Effective January 1, 2011:

 

· Health Savings Accounts ("HSA"), medical savings accounts, and health flexible spending accounts ("FSA") must exclude the cost of over-the-counter drugs not prescribed by a doctor from reimbursement.

 

· The law caps the maximum amount of contributions per health FSA to $2,500 per year (adjusted annually).   

 

Effective January 1, 2014:

 

· The law imposes an excise tax on insurers of "Cadillac" health plans with aggregate values that exceed $8,500 for individual coverage and $23,000 for family coverage (indexed annually), provided higher thresholds apply for retirees age 55 and over not eligible for Medicare (and subject to additional special limits) and employees in high risk professions.  The excise tax will equal 40% of the value of the plan that exceeds the threshold amounts.  The aggregate value of the health insurance plan includes reimbursements for health FSAs or health reimbursement arrangements ("HRA"), employer contributions to an HSA, and coverage for supplementary health insurance coverage. 

 

· Group health plans are prohibited from placing lifetime and annual limits on the dollar value of benefits for any participant or beneficiary (restricted annual limits for plan years beginning prior to January 1, 2014 are permitted).  However, group health plans may place annual or lifetime per-beneficiary limits on covered benefits that are not "essential health benefits" to the extent that such limits are otherwise permitted. 

 

· The law attempts to enhance wellness program provisions by increasing reward limits, providing technical guidance, and providing grants to small employers that establish wellness programs. 

 

· Waiting periods for health insurance coverage will be limited to 90 days, and waiting periods of 30-90 days will be subject to fees (see above).


CONCLUSION

 

Again, the Health Care Reconciliation Act is under review by the Senate and could eliminate and/or modify a number of the tax and revenue provisions set forth above.  If, and when, the Health Care Reconciliation Act becomes law, Clark Hill will provide you with a future alert outlining these changes.

 

As health reform becomes a reality, it will have a significant impact on employers whether or not they offer health insurance benefits.  Evaluating and implementing the employer requirements of health reform will be a monumental task.  There will be questions and issues for employers that may not have immediate answers, or may not even be contemplated due to the magnitude of this legislation.

 

As your organization evaluates the effect of certain health reform measures on labor agreements, fully-insured health plans, self-insured plans, and other employer based obligations, please feel free to contact the authors of this Alert or your Clark Hill attorney. 

 

*   *   *

 

NOTE:  All articles are also posted on the Clark Hill Website for future reference and can be accessed by visiting www.clarkhill.com  or www.clarkhill.com/HealthCare.aspx.


 

 

 

To find out more about Clark Hill and our Health Care Practice Group, visit clarkhill.com or call 800.949.3124

 

 

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