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What you really need to know to prepare and protect your business. The Essentials of Healthcare Reform in 2014. Primary Resources.
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What you really need to know to prepare and protect your business The Essentials of Healthcare Reform in 2014
Primary Resources Important Notice: The information contained in this presentation have been compiled from a variety of resources. While our representatives are well schooled regarding the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) and its many regulations, we are not lawyers and therefore do not intend to give legal advice or guidance. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) HR 3590 and HR 4872 (The Reform Laws), and associated rules and regulations Department of Labor (DOL) Internal Revenue Service (IRS) National Association of Health Underwriters (NAHU) Kaiser Family Foundation
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act • On March 21, 2010, The House passed HR 3590, the bill passed by the Senate on December 24, 2009, with a 219-213 vote • The House and Senate also passed a reconciliation bill, HR 4872, with packages of “fixes,” to the Senate Bill • President Obama signed both bills into law • Many components of the new laws are still yet to be defined • Still awaiting final regulations on many provisions
Top 10 Employer Questions What are the chances this law can still be repealed? When do the big changes take effect for us? Are we a large group or small group under the law (and what does that mean to us)? Are we subject to penalties? How will new taxes impact us? How high will premiums go? What are the carriers planning to do to comply? Are we better off dropping coverage for our employees? How can we get and stay compliant? What else should I know?
1. What are the chances this law can still be repealed? • Minimal • Best opportunities were in 2012 • Supreme Court ruling • Presidential election • Minor legal challenges still in play • Shift in GOP platform of “repeal or nothing” • Example: Senate vote to repeal “medical device tax” • Wholesale changes in 2014 may drive modifications
Potential Problems on the Horizon! • Cost Problems • Overall premiums/costs will increase under reform (mandates, taxes, etc.) • Reform laws do not address cost controls • Risk Management/Compliance Problems • An onslaught of new regulations • Stiff penalties • 17,000 IRS agents to be hired to enforce • Unfunded due to “fiscal cliff” compromise • Education/Communication Problems • 2,600 pages of law • Tens of thousands of pages of regulations • Implementation Problems • “Messy” • Delay of “Employer Mandate” until January 2015
2. When do the big changes take effect for us? 2014 For most employers, the changes take effect upon renewal of coverage in 2014
Key Provisions Already In Play If you like your plan you can keep it! • Grandfathering • Small Business Tax Credit • Only available through the public exchange/marketplace beginning in 2014 • No Lifetime Limits • Dependent Coverage to 26 • No Cost Preventive Care • MLR Requirement - Health plans are required to maintain a minimum medical loss ratio (MLR) • 85% for large group plans, 80% for individual and small group plans • New SBCs (Summary of Benefits and Coverage) • No OTC Drugs under FSAs, HSAs, HRAs unless prescribed by a doctor • Pharmaceutical Industry Tax • Health Savings Account penalty increases from 10% to 20% • Reporting the value of health benefits on W-2 forms
Key Provisions This Year • Medical Devise Tax • Impose an excise tax of 2.3% on the sale of any taxable medical device • Itemized Medical Deductions • Increases threshold on unreimbursed medical expense deductions from 7.5% to 10% of AGI • The increase would be waived for individuals age 65 and older for tax years 2013 through 2016 • FSA Cap • A $2,500 cap on Medical FSA contributions annually indexed for inflation begins • Notice of Marketplaces • All employers must provide notice to employees of the existence of state-based Marketplaces/Exchanges • Delayed until later in 2013
Preparing for 2014 Prepare for Change!
Waiting Period 30 Hours Per Week Is The New Full-Time! Cannot exceed 90 days Recommendation if at 90 days now…revise policy to “first of the month following 60 days”
Auto-Enrollment • For employers with 200 or more employees • Required to auto-enroll all new employees into any available employer sponsored health insurance plan • Employees may waive coverage if they have another source of coverage
Wellness Incentives Increases HIPAA workplace wellness program incentives to 30% of premiums with HHS ability to raise it to 50%
Guaranteed Issue • Requires all health plans to issue coverage regardless of health status • Eliminates the use of pre-existing conditions exclusions • Must be guaranteed renewable • Opens door to eligibility to all American citizens • Redefines small groups as 2-100 employees (states may elect to keep defining it as 2-50 until 2016) • PA defines small group as 2-50 Marks the end of medical questionnaires for individual coverage and small group coverage
Individual Mandate • Penalty • Greater of… • 2014 - $95 or 1%* • 2015 - $325 or 2%* • 2016 - $695 or 2.5%* • *of AGI (Adjusted Gross Income) • Requires all American citizens to purchase qualified health insurance coverage (with some exceptions) or be fined for non-compliance • Ruled constitutional by Supreme Court in July 2012 • Impact • Higher costs are expected as carriers have less ability to predict risk • Individual mandate penalty is too low, which will result in uninsured population purchasing insurance when they are sick and dropping when they are well due to “guaranteed issue” provision • Penalty identified by Federal tax return • Many citizens don’t pay Federal taxes • Access to care may be compromised as 30 million uninsured citizens enter the system
Formation of Marketplaces • Formerly called “exchanges” • Each state is required to create a “marketplace” to facilitate the sale of qualified benefits plans for: • Individual coverage • Small group coverage (2-50 employees) – referred to as SHOP marketplace • SHOP may extend to groups with over 100 employees in 2017 • Only source for sliding-scale tax credits for individuals with incomes between 133% and 400% of Federal Poverty Level (FPL) • Portions of SHOP are delayed until 2015 • Groups limited to select one carrier and one plan design
0% to Poverty Guideline is presently Medicaid-eligible • Poverty Guideline to 133%** will be added to Medicaid eligibility under PPACA through the Public Exchange • Pennsylvania to date has not accepted the Medicaid expansion and funding from the Federal Government • This could become a coverage gap • 133% to 400% may be eligible for government subsidies through the Public Exchange** **Effective rate of 138% with 5% income disregard for childless adults Many employees may qualify for subsidies through the Exchange which could lead to penalties unless employer properly sets up its plan and employee payroll contributions
Medicaid Expansion • Would expand Medicaid eligibility to those with incomes between 100% and 133% of the Federal Poverty Limit • Optional state-by-state decision as a result of Supreme Court ruling in 2012 • Federal government would fully fund through 2016, but PA’s share would be $500 million a year thereafter (90/10 split) • PA Governor Corbett so far has made the decision not to accept the Medicaid expansion • 13% of PA adults are currently on Medicaid, would more than double under expansion • States may opt in at any time • Decision will leave a gap in PPACA mission to cover uninsured
PA’s Public “Marketplace” For small groups (SHOP) and the individual market Governor Corbett made decision to have the federal government run the Exchange for PA as an FFM (Federally-Facilitated Marketplace) Only source for federally subsidized tax credits HHS has begun referring to Exchanges as Marketplaces FFE will charge carriers 3.5% to participate (will be added to premiums)
Modified Community Rating • New methodology that applies to small group and individual policies • Premium variations only allowed for: • Age (3:1) • Tobacco use (1.5:1) • Family composition • Geography - 9 geographic regions in PA, including 4 in Western PA • Impact • Higher rates for younger groups due to compression of age ratio • End to rate negotiation – no leeway under the law • No more fear of a high claimant impacting rates • Higher costs in general as carriers have less ability to predict risk (without medical underwriting)
3. Are we a large group or small group under the law? (And what does that mean to us?) 30 Hours Per Week Is Full-Time! Under PPACA If you are a large group (50 or more FT/FTE)… • You may be subject to “pay or play” penalties • If you fail to offer affordable and qualified coverage • And an employee (or employees) qualify for a subsidy through the public exchange/marketplace • Implementation delayed until 2015 If you are a small group (2-50 FT/FTE)… • Fully insured rates will be set under new “modified community rating” rules • Plans designs must meet “essential benefits” requirements • You are not subject to “pay or play” penalties
Are You A Small or Large Employer Under PPACA? Large Employer = 50 or more FT/FTE Monthly FT FT Employees: 30+ hrs/wk OR 130 hrs/month FTEs: All non-FT hours (up to 120 per employee) for month divided by 120 + = AVG # of FT Employees Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun / 12 = Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec If seasonal hours put the employer over 50, may subtract seasonal hours (Safe harbor - Notice 2012-58)
Common Ownership Parent Company 5 4 3 1 1 2 2 10 7 9 8 6 6 • Application of Aggregation Rules • IRC section 414(b), (c), (m), and (o) • If the total exceeds 50 full time or equivalent employees across all commonly owned organizations, each is treated as a large employer • Designed to prevent large employers from breaking up into smaller affiliated companies to avoid potential penalties
Other Considerations • Calculation of full-time status must be made every year • Must include sick time, vacation, personal time • Applies to U.S. companies with employees overseas • Tough decisions need to be made now due to the look-back period • Defined look-back period that is less than or equal to 12 consecutive months but no less than 3 months • Complex measurement for “variable” employees • Stability Period • Administrative Period • Standard Measurement Period
Essential Benefits Ambulatory patient services Emergency services Hospitalization Maternity and newborn care Mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health treatment Prescription drugs Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices Laboratory services Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management Pediatric services, including oral and vision care • Plans offered in the individual and small group markets, both inside and outside of the marketplace, must include the 10 categories on the right • Four “metal” categories – bronze (60%), silver (70%), gold (80%), platinum (90%) • Percentages represent actuarial value of each category • In Western PA, this could mean an end to very rich, first dollar coverage plans • Allows catastrophic-only policies for those 30 and younger • Pediatric services will include dental and vision care (yet to be defined), which will increase costs • Caps deductibles ($2,000/$4,000) and out-of-pocket maximums
OverviewEmployer Shared Responsibility Delayed until 2015 • Applied to large groups only • “Employer Mandate” or “Pay or Play” • Employers with 50 or more full-time employees or equivalents must offer coverage to 95% of full-time employees and dependents (not including spouses) • Penalties only apply to full-time employees • Penalties are assessed on a monthly basis • To avoid penalties, coverage must meet the following criteria: • Minimum Essential Coverage - The employer must offer its full-time employees (and their dependents not including spouse) the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential coverage • 60% actuarial value (plus or minus 2%) • Affordable – Employee-only payroll contributions cannot be higher than 9.5% of line 1 of the W-2
Analysis of 9.5% Affordability Rule Possible Strategies • Vary contributions by income or class • Shift contribution dollars from non-self-only tiers (employee + spouse, employee + child(ren), family) to self-only tier • Introduce separate self-only contribution and separate dependent contributions • Base contributions off of a low option plan $11,310 W-2 Earnings based on $7.25 minimum wage (in most states), multiplied by 30 full-time hours per week, times 52 weeks Maximum Self-Only Employee Payroll Contribution Assuming W-2 Earnings (not household income) by Contribution Period
Employer Shared Responsibility Penalties Keys to Avoiding Penalties Offer Minimum Essential Benefits to All Full-Time Employees and Dependents Make Sure Self-Only Payroll Contributions do not exceed 9.5% of Employee W-2 Income *Note: DOL Technical Release 2012-01 says employers MIGHT be able to use employee W-2 since household income is not known by employers and violates privacy rules – pending regulations Unaffordable or Ineligible Coverage • If employer offers its full-time employee (and their dependents – not including spouse) the opportunity to enroll in a medical plan, and • Either, the employee’s share of the self-only premium exceeds 9.5% of household income* • And/Or, the actuarial value of coverage is less than 60% • And, one or more full-time employees enrolls for coverage in the public marketplace and qualifies for a premium tax credit (subsidy) • Then, the employer penalty is $3,000 for each full-time employee who receives a tax credit (subsidy) • Or $2,000 for each full-time employee in the workforce (after the first 30), whichever is the lower amount
Employer Shared Responsibility Penalties No Coverage Offered • Employer penalty = $2,000 for each full-time employee in the workforce, with the first 30 exempted • If one or more full-time employees enrolls for coverage in the public marketplace and qualifies for a premium tax credit (subsidy)
4. Are we subject to penalties? Yes • But not if you comply • If you are a large group, Employer Shared Responsibility penalties (pay or play) • Other Penalties • Non-discrimination penalties • Non-compliance with SBC penalties • Additional non-compliance penalties
Non-discrimination Rules • Prohibits employers from discriminating in favor of highly compensated individuals relative to other employees in eligibility and benefits under a group plan • Sanctions will not be required of fully insured plans until guidance is provided (has been delayed) • Applies to all non-grandfathered groups • Section 105(h) of IRS Code, applies to non-grandfathered plans • Violators are subject to a $100 per day per failure penalty • Will likely apply to each non-highly compensated employee who is impermissibly excluded under the plan
Dozens of Taxes or “Reverse Taxes” 5. How will new taxes impact us?
Taxes That Directly Impact Employers • Tax on Health Insurers - $8 billion in 2014, $11.3 billion in 2015 and 2016, $13.9 billion in 2017, $14.3 billion in 2018 • Tax will be passed on by insurers • This tax will not apply to self-insured plans • Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute Fee (PCORI) – Fee (on plan sponsors and issuers of individual and group policies) • The first year of the fee is $1 per covered life per year, the second year the fee adjusts to $2 per covered life and then it's indexed to national health expenditures thereafter until it ends in 2019 • Carrier pays if fully insured, employer pays if self-funded (IRS Form 720)
Taxes That Directly Impact Employers • Transitional Reinsurance Tax (2014-2016) – Tax on group plans (fully insured and self-funded) to support high risk enrollment in individual market • 2014 = $12 billion, 2015 = $8 billion, 2016 = $5 billion • 2014 contributions = $5.25 PMPM plus $.11 PMPY (total of $63.11 PMPY) • Cadillac Tax – In 2018, a 40% excise tax on insurers of employer-sponsored health plans with aggregate values that exceed $10,200 for individual coverage and $27,500 for family coverage • Applies to values that exceeds the threshold amounts
6. How high will premiums go? • Varies by state and region • Local carriers are hinting that average small group premiums may rise by an average of 25% • Individual premiums are expected to rise as high as 100% • Though subsidies through the exchange/marketplace will offset some of the increase for qualified individuals • Taxes • Direct impact of taxes on fully insured groups in 2014 projected at 3.8% increase in premiums • $5 per member per month for self-funded groups • Risk Adjustments • Carriers will have less ability to assess risk due to guaranteed issue provision (end of medical underwriting) • Compliance Costs
7. What are the carriers planning to do to comply? All carriers serving Western PA are very busy… • Rates and plan designs for the public marketplace were filed by 4/30/2013 • Building new infrastructures • Systems platforms to comply with new rating requirements • Private marketplaces/exchanges • Creating new products and plan designs that are compliant with the law • Developing educational tools for customers, employees, providers, and more • Seeking new ways to impact cost and quality • Training and educating staff and many new employees • Hoping their 2014 rate filings don’t miss the mark
Formation of Private Marketplaces • Primarily driven by the carriers to compete with the public marketplace • Defined Contribution Model in which employer determines how much it will contribute toward coverage and employee selects online from choice of multiple plan options • Employee may also purchase ancillary coverage (dental, vision, life, etc.) • Western PA carriers have or are developing private marketplace models • Highmark and UnitedHealthcare have launched their solutions • UPMC Health Plan, Aetna, HealthAmerica are gearing up for 2014 • Foundation of Utah and Massachusetts exchanges
Self-Funding for Smaller Employers • Carriers are beginning to offer self-funding to smaller employers • With stop loss protection to offset risk • Offers greater flexibility in plan design • Do not have to comply with modified community rating and essential health benefits • Eliminates premium taxes and some other taxes under PPACA
Early Renewal Strategy • Carriers in Western PA are offering December 1, 2013 early renewals to buy time for clients • And to potentially lock in a lower rate under current underwriting rules versus modified community rating
8. Are we better off dropping coverage for our employees? Here are some reasons why most employers will continue to offer medical coverage No Pre-Tax Through Marketplace Employee contributions are pre-tax under IRS Section 125 Will “Pay or Play” Penalties Rise? What do you think? Gross Up of Salaries Shortcomings FICA tax will increase for all and some employees will wind up in a higher tax bracket Subsidy Qualification Not all employees will qualify for a subsidy and will have to pay full price • Best and Brightest • You’ve never had to offer coverage, but you want to attract and retain quality employees • Savings to Employees • Even with subsidies, individual premiums will often be higher than employee payroll contributions • Employer Tax Deduction • Premiums are tax deductible, penalties are not • Health and Productivity of Employees • Minimal penalties mean some employees won’t purchase insurance on their own
10. What else should I know? Know that… • We only scratched the surface of this massive law • But hit the key priorities at this time • More regulations are forthcoming and provisions will continue to change • Carrier offerings are being revamped as we speak • There are still many unanswered questions • We are on it!
Plenty More to Come We’re here to help!