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1. PARTNERS BENEFIT GROUP2010 Federal Health Care Reform: The Impact on Employers and Group Health Plans
March 26, 2010 | Waltham, Massachusetts
Alden J. Bianchi, Esq., Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C., Boston, Massachusetts
3. Status of Legislation Senate Bill: the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (H.R. 3590)
Passed December 24, 2009 (including a subsequent Managers amendment)
House reconciliation bill: Health Care and Education Affordability Reconciliation Act of 2010
4. High Level Organization Early deliverables
Initial insurance reforms/consumer protections
New insurance pooling arrangements
Enhanced scrutiny of rate increases
Community health investments/Medicare
Substantive reforms
Coverage/mandates/exchanges, etc.
Financial assistance, etc.
5. Early Deliverables Restrictions on annual and lifetime limits
Prohibition on rescissions absent fraud or non-payment of premiums
High-risk pool for individuals with pre-existing conditions
Insurance rebates tied to loss ratios
Require public reporting of financial data
6. Substantive Reforms Individual coverage mandate
Employer mandate
Insurance reforms, e.g.
Minimum benefits standards, and
Creation of insurance exchanges
Sliding scale financial assistance to low-income individuals (up to 400% of FPL)
Selected Medicare improvements
7. Impact on Employers/Plans Requirements imposed directly on employers, e.g.
Pay-or-play/free rider mandate
Basic benefit package
Requirements imposed on health insurance carriers affecting employers and group health plans, e.g.
Guaranteed issue and renewability
Bans on pre-existing condition exclusions and lifetime limits
Other important provisions, e.g. individual mandate, health insurance exchanges
8. Free-Rider Surcharge Applies to applicable large employers (i.e., 50 or more employees)
Employer must pay an assessment only if one or more full-time employee(s) receives a premium tax credit
A full-time employee is an employee who works 30 or more hours per week on average
9. Free-Rider (contd) Seasonal employees excluded
Employers who do not offer coverage must pay an assessment of $750 for each full-time employee ($2,000 under House amendment)
Employers who offer coverage but have employee(s) receiving premium tax credits must pay the lesser of (i) $3,000 for each such employee or (ii) $750 per full-time employee ($2,000 under House amendment)
House amendment provides a free pass on the first 30 employees
10. Free-Rider (contd) There is an additional $600 per employee assessment for employers with waiting periods longer than 60 days
This provision is dropped in the House amendment, and waiting periods can be 90 days
Penalties are determined month-by-month
Alternatively, employer can offer to provide certain low-income employees with a free choice voucher in an amount equal to what the employee would have paid for coverage
11. Free-Rider (contd) Voucher eligibles include employees
With incomes less than 400% of FPL
Whose employee contribution is greater than 8% but less than 9.8% of income
Who choose to decline employer coverage
An employer that offers vouchers pays no other assessment
Auto-enrollment required for groups with more than 200 employees
12. Essential Benefits Coverage for purposes of the assessment means coverage with essential benefits
60% of the actuarial value of the covered benefits
Limits annual cost-sharing under HSAs ($5,950/individual and $11,900/family in 2010)
HHS establishes rules re: benefit package
Exception for grandfathered plans
13. Essential Benefits (contd) Ambulatory patient services, emergency services, hospitalization, maternity and newborn care, mental health/substance abuse (including behavioral health treatments), Rx coverage, rehabilitative services and devices, laboratory services, preventative and wellness services and disease management, and pediatric services (including oral and vision care)
14. Senate Bill: Exchange Four coverage options with varying actuarial values
Platinum
Gold
Silver
Bronze
All individual and group carriers must offer
Certain employer plans grandfathered
15. Medical FSA/OTC Drug Limits Impose annual caps on medical FSAs
$2,500 (indexed for increases in the cost-of-living)
House bill delays until 2013
Deny coverage for OTC drugs under a medical FSA, health reimbursement account, health savings account or Archer medical savings accounts
16. Wellness Programs Provides grants and assistance for small employers to establish wellness programs
Permits up to 30% premium discounts (can be expanded to 50% by regulation) under rules similar to current HIPAA rules
17. Small Employer Subsidies Small employer means 25 or fewer employees (Credit is phased in: 2010 to 2013, 35% if employer contributes at least 50% of premium cost)
2014 and later, 50% if employer contributes at least 50% of premium cost
100% for employer with 10 or fewer employees /average annual wages of less than $25,000
18. Other Employer Requirements New reporting requirements (e.g., reporting of the value of medical benefits on IRS Form W-2)
Tax employers who receive the retiree drug subsidy under the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 (but reduce the Part D coverage gap)
19. Effect on Self-Funded Plans Impact of bar on lifetime and annual limits on plan designhow will (and will) stop-loss vendors underwrite?
Code Section 105(h) extended to insured planswill this focus new attention on self-funded plan non-discrimination?
20. Carrier Mandates Guaranteed issue and renewability
Extended dependent requirements up to age 26
Ban on annual and lifetime limits
Non-discrimination testing requirements extended to insured plans
21. Individual Mandate All U.S. citizens and legal residents must have qualified health insurance coverage
Qualified health insurance coverage is similar to Houses acceptable coverage
Waivers available for hardship and for religious objectors
Penalty is $750 per person (phased in) for whom the taxpayer is liable, with certain limits
22. House Amendment Lowers the flat dollar assessments from $495 to $325 in 2015 and $750 to $695 in 2016, (subsequent years indexed at $695)
Raises the percent of income assessment that individuals pay if uninsured
Alternative payment amount goes from 0.5 to 1.0% (2014), 1.0 to 2.0% (2015), and 2.0 to 2.5% (2016 and later years)
23. Exchanges Exchanges established state-by-state
Each state must create:
An exchange to facilitate sale of qualified benefit plans to individuals
A SHOP (Small business Health Options Program) exchange for small businesses
These functions can be combined into a single exchange
24. Exchanges (contd) States may waive exchange requirement or establish regional or local exchanges with HHS approval
Insurers in exchange must offer at least one silver-level and one gold-level plan
All plans must meet state and Federal certification procedures
25. Low Income Tax Credit Available for individuals and families with incomes between 100% and 400% of FPL (but Medicaid is available at 133% of FPL)
Credits tied to a benchmark plan based on a sliding scale; premium contributions would be capped as a % of income:
2.8% at 100% of FPL, up to
9.8% at 400% of FPL
26. Tax Credit (contd) House amendment lowers premiums for families with income below $44,000 and above $66,000
Employees with access to employer-provided coverage are eligible for premium tax credits only if the employee share of the premium exceeds 9.8% of their income and employer plan provides certain levels of benefits
27. Financing: Senate Bill 40% tax on Cadillac health plans
$8,500 for individual coverage/$23,000 for family coverage
Includes medical FSAs, HRAs, HSAs, etc.
Increase HI portion of payroll tax to 2.35%
HSA penalty rises to 20% from 10%
Increase threshold on itemized deductions
28. Financing: House Amendment Increases the threshold for the excise tax on the most expensive health plans from $23,000 for a family plan to $27,500 and starting it in 2018 for all plans;
Establishes a rate authority to provide Federal assistance and oversight to States in conducting reviews of unreasonable rate increases and other unfair insurance practices
29. Misc. House Items Eliminating state-specific provisions
Increase Federal financing to all States for the expansion of Medicaid
Close the Medicare Rx donut hole
Strengthening the provisions to fight fraud, waste, and abuse in Medicare and Medicaid
30. Questions and Answers
Alden J. Bianchi | Member
Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C.
One Financial Center | Boston, MA 02111
Phone: 617.348.3057 | Fax: 617.542.2241
E-mail: abianchi@mintz.com