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City of Sarasota. Introduction to Health Reimbursement Arrangements “HRAs”. Presented by: Mark R. Wilkerson, CFP HRA Consultant December 1, 2004. Topics. HRA Team Growing Need HRA Basics HRA Advantages Eligible Expenses Trust Structures
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City of Sarasota Introduction to Health Reimbursement Arrangements “HRAs” Presented by: Mark R. Wilkerson, CFP HRA Consultant December 1, 2004
Topics HRA Team Growing Need HRA Basics HRA Advantages Eligible Expenses Trust Structures Adoption Implementation and Ongoing Administrative Process Group Structures & Voting Contribution Requirements Employer Funding Sources Aggressive HRA Plan Designs VALIC National HRA Plan
HRA Service Team • Combining: • AIG VALIC - education and enrollment expertise and resources • HRA Consultants - HRA experience • Rehn & Associates, Inc. - HRA third party administration experience
AIG VALIC • Education Services • Enrollment Services • Special Pay Plan Companion
HRA Consultants, a Division of VSG • 21 years HRA consulting experience with governmental employers • 7 trust clients • Single or multiple employer plans • 30,000+ participants • 400+ employers • Custom or turnkey plans
Rehn & Associates, Inc. • TPA with more than 40 years experience • 11 years HRA experience • 30,000+ HRA accounts • 400+ HRA participating employers • Employer billing services • Individual participant services • Claims adjudication • Account service • Statement generation • Online participant account access • COBRA Administration • HIPAA Compliance
Growing Need for HRAs(post-employment medical funding) The projections listed above are the amounts that a Washington retiree and spouse could spend during their lifetime assuming retirement at age 60, participation in the State of Washington PEBB Uniform Medical Plan, living a normal life expectancy to age 84, assuming purchase of medical insurance and dental insurance for retiree and spouse, plus annual out-of-pocket expenditures of $500 on non-covered items. We assume 5% annual increases for premiums and non-covered out-of-pocket costs. Current PEBB premiums before age 65 for retiree and spouse are $7,700 per year for medical insurance and $850 per year for dental insurance. Current PEBB Medicare supplement premiums are $3,500 per year for retiree and spouse.
MonthlyGrowth Example What will my account be worth when I retire? Starting Age Monthly Employer Contribution Balance at age 65 w/ 5% return 25 $100 $148,856 35 $100 $81,870 45 $100 $40,746 55 $100 $15,499
$40,000 Cash-Out Without an HRA $40,000 available 25% federal income tax 7.65% FICA tax 40,000 Cash $ Taxes 13,060 - 26,940 Net Cash $
$40,000 With HRA Contribution $40,000 benefit available $ 40,000 Benefit Taxes 0 - $ 40,000 HRA Balance
HRA Basics • Provide reimbursements of medical expenses only • In-service and/or post-retirement • Employer contributions only (no contribution limits) • Reimbursements limited to account balance • Carry forward from year to year • IRS Notice 2002-45, HRAs • Revenue Ruling 2002-41, HRAs • Revenue Ruling 2004-45 – Coordinating HSAs, HRAs, & FSAs
Employee/Participant • Advantages • Tax-free • Contributions • Earnings • Withdrawals for qualified expenses • Excellent resource to pay the rapidly rising cost of post- employment health care • List of qualified expenses is quite extensive • Portable • Unused balances carryover • Allocated accounts with ability to self-direct investments
Employee/Participant (cont.) • Disadvantages • Limited to medical only • Group contributions and decision process
Employer • Advantages • FICA savings • Offer employees new benefit • Solution to job-locked employee problem • Means of pre-funding retiree health care obligation • May choose vesting schedule for post-employment benefits
Employer (cont.) • Disadvantages • 105(h) non-discrimination rules apply • New benefit requires assistance with administration • New cost if custom plan used
Who’s expenses are eligible? • Employee/retiree • Spouse • Qualified dependents
Qualified Insurance Premiums • Medical • Dental • Vision • Long-term care (tax-qualified) • Medicare Part B • Medicare supplements
Qualified Expenses • Expenses defined in Internal Revenue Code Section 213(d) • Medical, dental, and vision expenses not paid by insurance • Co-pays, deductibles, co-insurance • Prescription and certain over-the-counter drugs (OTC) • Crowns • Eyeglasses, etc.
Trust Structures • Expertise in both 501(c)(9) VEBA and 115 trusts • VEBAs • VEBA stands for “voluntary employees’ beneficiary association” • Rely on 501(c)(9) letter of determination from IRS • Stand alone VEBA more expensive to develop and maintain than a multiple employer turnkey plan • Multiple employer VEBA subjects employers to non-discrimination violations of other employers
Trust Structures (cont.) • Individual 115 trusts • 115 trust also known as governmental integral part trust • No legal approval required for HRA offered within 115 trust • Rely on private letter rulings • Private letter ruling may optionally be obtained by individual employers • Insulates employer from non-discrimination violations of other employers
Adoption Implementation and Ongoing Administrative Process • Employer Responsibilities • CBA or Employer Policy • Adopt Adoption Agreement Plan and Trust • Contributions • Notify TPA of employee eligibility for distributions • Instruct TPA of any forfeiture reallocations of unvested accounts • Notify TPA of COBRA events
Adoption Implementation and Ongoing Administrative Process Turnkey Plan – Services Provided New employee education Enrollment Participant service Claims Account statements Website COBRA Compliance HIPAA Compliance Audit/Tax forms filed
Contribution Requirements • Must be employer contributions • Collective bargaining or employer policy change can recharacterize compensation from salary to employer HRA contributions • All employees defined as eligible must be treated uniformly • Must eliminate individual choice of salary vs. HRA contribution • More flexibility in collective bargaining groups
Employer Funding Sources • Sick leave or vacation leave cash-outs (terminal payments) • Cash choice must be eliminated • Other leave cash-outs • Monthly employer contributions • Unused monthly benefit dollars • Percent of pay (group salary reduction) • Through collective bargaining or for post-employment benefits only • Other
Group Structures & Voting – No Individual Choice! • Collective Bargaining Groups/Non-Represented • Termination Payment Contributions • Vote each collective bargaining agreement or annually • Members “eligible” to retire may vote • Can split-percent in cash and percent to HRA • Monthly Contributions • Percent of pay • Flat dollar amount - $100 • Eligibility may vary by age or pension plan or other criteria – CBA only
Aggressive HRA Plan Designs • Medical benefits plus severance, death, and small account cash-outs (disqualifies 105(b) exclusion) • Individual election of salary or sick leave (contributions probably subject to income and employment tax withholding) • After-tax contributions (probably no exclusion from income on earnings or benefits) • Claim account is not an HRA • Questions? - Call IRS Office of Chief Counsel Employee Benefits Division: (202)622-6080
VALIC National HRA Plan • 115 trust • Employer self-trusteed • 12 mutual fund options • 1 money market fund • 5 – 50 BP fund management expense • Per participant fee • BP administrative fee