The States: Where They Stand

State Type of Exchange Medicaid Expansion
Alabama Federal No
Alaska Federal Undecided
Arizona Federal Yes
Arkansas Partnership Yes
California State Yes
Colorado State Yes
Connecticut State Yes
Delaware Partnership Yes
Florida State Yes
Georgia Federal Undecided
Hawaii Federal No
Idaho State Yes
Illinois State No
Indiana Federal Undecided
Iowa Partnership Undecided
Kansas Federal Undecided
Kentucky State Undecided
Louisiana Federal No
Maine Federal No
Maryland State Yes
Massachusetts State Yes
Michigan Partnership Undecided
Minnesota State Yes
Mississippi Federal No
Missouri Federal Yes
Montana Federal Yes
Nebraska Federal Undecided
Nevada State Yes
New Hampshire Federal Undecided
New Jersey Federal Undecided
New Mexico State Yes
New York State Undecided
North Carolina Federal No
North Dakota Federal Undecided
Ohio Federal Yes
Oklahoma Federal No
Oregon State Undecided
Pennsylvania Federal Undecided
Rhode Island State Yes
South Carolina Federal No
South Dakota Federal No
Tennessee Federal Undecided
Texas Federal No
Utah State Undecided
Vermont State Yes
Virginia Federal Undecided
Washington State Yes
West Virginia Partnership Undecided
Wisconsin Federal Undecided
Wyoming Federal Undecided

 

Source for exchange elections: Kaiser Family Foundation

Source for Medicaid expansion: The Advisory Board Co.


 

 

 

 


Top 5 issues facing physicians, patients in 2013

Source: https://www.benefitspro.com

 

By Kathryn Mayer

As health reform continues to changes the landscape of our country’s health system, what’s to watch in this new year? A lot, industry insiders say.

Lou Goodman, president of The Physicians Foundation and CEO of the Texas Medical Association, says 2013 will be “a watershed year” for the U.S. health care system. Most of those changes will have a big impact on both patients and the physicians caring for them.

“It’s clear that lawmakers need to work closely with physicians to ensure we're well prepared to meet the demands of 30 million new patients in the health care system and to effectively address the impending doctor shortage and growing patient access crisis.”

The Physicians Foundation identified five issues that are likely to have a significant impact on patients and physicians in 2013.

1. Ongoing uncertainty over PPACA

Despite the Supreme Court decision upholding most of the provisions in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the re-election of President Obama, considerable uncertainty persists among patients and physicians regarding actual implementation of the act. Much of the law has yet to be fully defined and a number of key areas within PPACA—including accountable care organizations, health insurance exchanges, Medicare physician fee schedule and the independent payment advisory board—remain nebulous, the foundation says. Their research found that uncertainty surrounding health reform was among the key factors contributing to 77 percent of physicians being pessimistic about the future of medicine. In 2013, physicians will need to closely monitor developments around the implementation of these critical provisions, to understand how they will directly affect their patients and ability to practice medicine.

2.  More consolidation

Consolidation means bigger, but is bigger better? Large hospital systems and medical groups continue to acquire smaller/solo private practices at a steady rate. According to the foundation's report pertaining to the future of U.S. medical practices, many physicians are seeking employment with hospital systems for income security and relief from administrative burdens. But increased consolidation may potentially lead to monopolistic concerns, raise cost of care, and reduce the viability and competitiveness of solo/private practice. As the trend toward greater medical consolidation continues across 2013, it will be vital to monitor for possible unintended consequences related to patient access and overall cost of care.

3. A scramble to fix the doctor shortage

In 2014, PPACA will introduce more than 30 million new patients to the U.S. health care system, a provision that has considerable implications relative to patient access to care and physician shortages. According to the Foundation’s Biennial Physician Survey, Americans are likely to experience significant challenges in accessing care if current physician practice patterns continue. If physicians continue to work fewer hours, more than 47,000 full-time-equivalent physicians will be lost from the workforce in the next four years. Moreover, 52 percent of physicians have limited the access of Medicare patients to their practices or are planning to do so. As the 12-month countdown to 30 million continues across 2013, physicians and policy makers will need to identify measures to help ensure a sufficient number of doctors are available to treat these millions of new patients – while also ensuring the quality of care provided to all patients is in no way compromised.

4. Erosion of physician autonomy

The Physicians Foundation believes that physician autonomy – particularly related to a doctor’s ability to exercise independent medical judgments without non-clinical personnel interfering with these decisions – is markedly deteriorating. Many of the factors contributing to a loss of physician autonomy include problematic and decreasing reimbursements, liability/defensive medicine pressures and an increasingly burdensome regulatory environment. In 2013, physicians will need to identify ways to streamline these processes and challenges, to help maintain the autonomy required to make the clinical decisions that are best for their patients.

5. Growing administrative burdens

Increasing administrative and government regulations were cited as one of the chief factors contributing to pervasive physician discontentment, according to the Foundation’s 2012 Biennial Physician Survey. Excessive “red tape” regulations are forcing many physicians to decrease their time spent with patients in order to deal with non-clinical paper work and other administrative burdens. In 2013, physicians and policy makers will need to work closely together to determine steps that will effectively reduce gratuitous regulations that negatively affect physician–patient relationships. According to a recent Foundation report, the creation of a Federal Commission for Administrative Simplification in Medicine could help reduce these regulations by evaluating and reducing cumbersome physician reporting requirements that do not result in cost savings or measurable reductions in patient risk.

 


Additional proposed regulations addressing open issues under PPACA

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Department of Labor (DOL) have recently issued more FAQs and proposed rules that address several employer obligations under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA).

Notice of Exchange Has Been Delayed

On Jan. 24, 2013, the DOL issued a FAQ that delays the due date for providing employees with a notice about the affordable health exchanges.  The notice had been due March 1, 2013 but the due date has been delayed until late summer or early fall of 2013.  The delay will result in the notice being provided closer to the start of open enrollment for the exchanges, which will begin Oct. 1, 2013, for a Jan. 1, 2014, effective date.

To read the FAQ, click here: https://www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq-aca11.html

HRA Restrictions

Because PPACA prohibits annual dollar limits on essential health benefits, HRAs that are not integrated with other group health coverage (usually a major medical plan) will not be permitted after Jan. 1, 2014.

The Jan. 24, 2013, DOL FAQ also addresses HRAs, and states that an employer-provided HRA will not be considered integrated (and therefore will not be allowed) if it:

  • Provides coverage through individual policies or individual market coverage; or
  • Credits amounts to an individual when the individual is not enrolled in the other, major medical coverage

Existing HRAs that cannot meet the 2014 requirements generally will be allowed to reimburse expenses incurred after 2014, in accordance with the terms of the plan.

Premium Tax Credit/Subsidy

On Feb. 1, 2013, the IRS issued a final regulation that provides the long awaited answer of whether family members of an employee who has access to affordable self-only coverage are eligible for a premium tax credit/subsidy.  The answer is that they are not – if the employee has access to affordable self-only coverage, the spouse and children are also considered to have access to affordable employer-sponsored coverage, and therefore the spouse and children are not eligible for premium tax credits/subsidies.  To read the final IRS rule, click here:
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2013-02-01/pdf/2013-02136.pdf

Minimum Essential Coverage

On Feb. 1, 2013, HHS and the IRS issued two proposed regulations that provide details on the individual shared responsibility requirement.

PPACA requires that non-exempt individuals obtain “minimum essential coverage” or pay a penalty. Minimum essential coverage includes individual insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, TRICARE, VA and similar government programs, and employer-sponsored coverage.  The proposed IRS rule defines minimum essential “employer-sponsored” coverage as an insured or self-funded governmental or ERISA welfare benefit plan that provides medical care directly or through insurance or reimbursement. (An HMO is considered an insured plan.)

Generally, any policy offered in the small or large group market that meets the above requirements will be minimum essential coverage. The proposed IRS regulation states that these types of coverage will not qualify as minimum essential employer-sponsored coverage:

  • Accident only
  • Disability income: Liability, including general, automobile, and supplemental liability;
  • Workers compensation
  • Automobile medical payment
  • Credit only
  • On-site medical clinics
  • Limited scope dental or vision
  • Long-term care, nursing home care, home health care, community-based care or any combination of these
  • Specified diseases or illness
  • Hospital indemnity or other fixed indemnity insurance
  • Medicare supplement
  • Similar limited coverage

Public comments are due March 18, 2013.  To read the proposed IRS rule, click here: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2013-02-01/pdf/2013-02141.pdf

The HHS proposed rule provides details on how an individual can claim an exemption from the individual shared responsibility penalty.

Public comments on this rule also are due March 18, 2013.  To read the proposed HHS rule, click here: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2013-02-01/pdf/2013-02139.pdf

Women’s Preventive Care Services

Proposed rules that would make it simpler for religious organizations and religious-affiliated not-for-profit organizations like hospitals and schools that have a religious objection to providing contraceptive services were released by the DOL on Feb. 1, 2013. These employers would notify their insurer of their objection, and the insurer automatically would be required to notify the employees that it will provide the coverage without cost sharing or other charges through separate individual health insurance policies.

For religious-affiliated workplaces that self-insure, the third party administrator would be expected to work with an insurer to arrange no-cost contraceptive coverage through separate individual health insurance policies.

The administration believes the cost of free contraceptive coverage will be offset by fewer maternity claims, but is exploring allowing an offset of the cost against federally facilitated exchange user fees.

The proposed rule offers no exemption for private employers that object to covering contraceptive services on religious or moral grounds.

The proposed rule is here: https://www.ofr.gov/OFRUpload/OFRData/2013-02420_PI.pdf

Important: Some of these rules are still in the “proposed” stage, which means that there may be changes when the final rule is issued.  Employers should view the proposed rules as an indication of how plans will be regulated beginning in 2014, but need to understand that changes are entirely possible.

 

 


Health Care Reform and the Benefits Renewal Process

Source: United Benefit Advisors

By Mick Constantinou

The Supreme Court decision last June removed the remaining obstacles blocking implementation of health care reform. Prior to the ruling, many employers took a “wait and see” approach and were left scrambling to qualify and quantify how those aspects of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) of 2010 that went into effect January 2013 would impact their business and their employees.

Beginning in 2014, the requirements of PPACA will change the way employers plan and execute their benefits renewal process. The difference is that the impacts forthcoming, both financially and in terms of access to health care, will be far greater than those elements of health care reform that have been implemented to date.

Employers and employees will be left scrambling again if the age-old, “I worry about our benefits during the last three months of our plan year,” paradigm continues. There are decisions that should be made between now and 2014 because the changes are far greater in scope. Mishandling or delaying the question of health benefits now can carry a big price tag in dollars, reputation, competitiveness, retention, employee engagement or a combination of all of the above.

In its current form and implementation schedule, PPACA will forever alter how health care is purchased, delivered and funded by employers. The complexities of the law will touch all employers, regardless of their size, and all employees in a variety of ways and to varying degrees. The impact, often referred to as “play or pay” or “the mandate”, is different for groups with under 50 or more than 50 full-time employees.

Employers that currently offer group benefits or are thinking about offering group benefits, regardless of the number of full-time equivalent employees, should include the following as part of their planning process during 2013:

Minimum Value - Determine the actuarial value (AV) of their current plan design as well as calculate the AV of plans under consideration for 2013 to ensure the designs comply with the minimum requirement to cover an estimated 60 percent (the bronze standard) of covered health care expenses.

Affordability – Confirm your current employee contributions satisfy the affordability test of costing no more than 9.5 percent of an employee’s earnings.

Tax Subsidies – Identify which employees may qualify for subsidized health care through the exchanges and therefore subject you to a $3,000 annualized penalty.

Penalties – If you decide to pay the $2,000-per-employee penalty rather than continue to offer employer-sponsored group coverage, you should calculate which of your employees would be better off and which would be worse off with such a decision.

Medicaid – Quantify how the expansion of Medicaid will impact your costs and which employees will qualify under the new rules and Medicaid tables.

Eligibility – Review how your current benefits eligibility will be altered by the new regulations on eligibility.

Enforcement – Understand when and how the new rules are expected to be enforced, and be aware of the new requirements placed on employers and employees to ensure compliance with the provisions of the health care reform law.

The capabilities, expertise and analytical tools available to benefit advisors that support employers are key value-adds. Employer groups should consider these as part of their checklist when vetting the advisory firm that can best support them through 2013 in preparation for 2014 and beyond. Employers require compliance programs, solutions and services designed to help them stay informed, manage changes in benefits compliance and labor laws, and be prepared for the impacts in 2014 with sound analytics.

Employers will have a number of obligations and opportunities related to health care reform. This law is complicated, and each employer will need to base its decisions on its particular situation, which will require an advisor with the analytical tools to model a variety of scenarios specific to your company.

 


Significant Changes for Health Care Providers, Health Plans, and Their Business Associates and Subcontractors in Final HIPAA Privacy Regulations

Source: United Benefit Advisors
By: Jackson Lewis LLP

The Office for Civil Rights ("OCR") of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services published its long-awaited final privacy and security regulations ("Final Rule") under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act ("HIPAA") on January 25, 2013. The Final Rule becomes effective March 26, 2013, and, in general, covered entities and business associates are required to comply by September 23, 2013.

The Final Rule addresses four key areas: (i) changes made by the Health Information for Economic and Clinical Health Act ("HITECH Act"); (ii) the HIPAA enforcement rule; (iii) updates to the data breach notification regulations; and (iv) changes made by the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act. Some significant changes are summarized below.

Business Associates and Subcontractors

One of the most significant changes under the HITECH Act is that it makes Business Associates (“BAs”) directly liable under certain provisions of the HIPAA privacy and security rules (“HIPAA Rules”). In addition, the Final Rule provides further guidance concerning which entities are BAs, resulting in the treatment of certain subcontractors of BAs as BAs themselves, directly subject to the HIPAA Rules. The Final Rule, for example, clarifies that a BA is a person who performs functions or activities on behalf of, or certain services for, a covered entity or another BA that involve the use or disclosure of protected health information (“PHI”).

Importantly, the Final Rule establishes that a person becomes a BA by definition, not by the act of contracting with a covered entity or otherwise. Therefore, direct liability for the BA under the HIPAA Rules and HITECH Act for impermissible uses and disclosures and other provisions attaches immediately when a person creates, receives, maintains, or transmits PHI on behalf of a covered entity or BA and otherwise meets the BA definition. As a result of some of these changes, covered entities and BAs should consider re-examining their relationships with their subcontractors to ensure they obtain the appropriate, satisfactory assurances concerning the PHI they make available to those subcontractors. For more information about identifying BAs and subcontractors, see Final HIPAA Regulations: “Business Associates” Include Subcontractors, Data Storage Companies (Cloud Providers?).

The Final Rule also clarifies the BAs are directly liable under the HIPAA Rules for:

  1. uses and disclosures of PHI not permitted under HIPAA;
  2. a failure to provide breach notification to the covered entity;
  3. a failure to provide access to a copy of electronic PHI to the covered entity, the individual, or the individual's designee (as specified in the business associate agreement ("BAA");
  4. a failure to disclose PHI to the Secretary of Health and Human Services to investigate or determine the BA's compliance with the HIPAA Rules;
  5. a failure to provide an accounting of disclosures; and
  6. a failure to comply with the HIPAA Security Rule.

BAs remain contractually liable for the other provisions of BAAs.

In attempting to minimize this liability, the Final Rule also confirms that OCR does not endorse any "certification" process for compliance with the HIPAA Rules or HITECH Act. Thus, BAs and subcontractors should not rely on such programs that may be available. However, it is critical that BAAs be updated to reflect new requirements and to allocate certain liabilities and responsibilities. A transition rule under the Final Rule permits covered entities and BAs to continue operation under certain existing contracts for up to one year beyond the compliance date (September 23, 2013). A qualifying BAA will be deemed compliant until the earlier of (i) the date such agreement is renewed or modified on or after September 23, 2013, or (ii) September 22, 2014. The transition rule applies only to the language in the agreements, the parties must operate as required under the HIPAA Rules in accordance with the applicable compliance dates.

Breach Notification Rule

The Final Rule retains many requirements from the interim final breach notification rule. However, it removes the "risk of harm" standard in exchange for a more objective standard for determining whether a "breach" has occurred. (Thus, inquiry into whether there is a significant risk of harm to privacy and security is no longer appropriate.) The Final Rule establishes a presumption that impermissible uses and disclosures of PHI are breaches, unless an exception applies. Covered entities can rebut that presumption (removing the notification requirement) by engaging in a risk assessment to determine whether there is a low probability that PHI has been compromised. However, because of the presumption, covered entities may avoid the risk assessment and provide notification.

A risk assessment would examine at least the following four factors:

  1. the nature and extent of the PHI involved, including the types of identifiers and the likelihood of re-identification;
  2. the unauthorized person who used the PHI or to whom the disclosure was made;
  3. whether the PHI was actually acquired or viewed; and
  4. the extent to which the risk to the PHI has been mitigated.

 

If no exception applies and, after reviewing all of these factors, the covered entity cannot demonstrate that there is a low probability of compromise to the PHI, notification is required. The OCR cautioned that, when working through these factors, many forms of health information can be sensitive, not just information about sexually transmitted diseases, mental health diseases or substance abuse. In addition, the OCR confirmed that violations of the minimum necessary rules also could result in breaches requiring notification.

OCR clarified other aspects of the breach notification rule:

  • The time for notification begins to run when the incident is known to have occurred, not when it has been determined to be a breach. However, a covered entity is expected to make notifications after a reasonable time to investigate the circumstances surrounding the breach in order to collect and develop the information required to be included in the notice to the individual(s).
  • The obligation to determine whether a breach has occurred and to notify individuals remains with the covered entity. However, covered entities can delegate these functions to third parties or BAs.
  • Written notification by first-class mail is the general, default rule. However, individuals who affirmatively agree to receive notice by e-mail may be notified accordingly. In limited cases, individuals who affirmatively agree to be notified orally or by telephone may be contacted though those means with instructions on how to pick up the written notice.
  • Notices of Privacy Practices must include a statement that covered entities must notify affected individual following a breach.

 

Enforcement Rule

The Final Rule implements the changes HITECH Act made to the enforcement provisions of the HIPAA rules, including penalty amounts, which now also apply to BAs. The HITECH Act penalty scheme can be summarized as follows:

  • "Did not know" penalty - amount not less than $100 or more than $50,000 per violation when it is established the covered entity or BA did not know and, by exercising reasonable diligence, would not have known of a violation;
  • "Reasonable cause" penalty - amount not less than $1,000 or more than $50,000 per violation when it is established the violation was due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect;
  • "Willful neglect-corrected" penalty - amount not less than $10,000 or more than $50,000 per violation when it is established the violation was due to willful neglect and was timely corrected;
  • "Willful neglect-not corrected" penalty - amount not less than $50,000 for each violation when it is established the violation was due to willful neglect and was not timely corrected.

A penalty for violations of the same requirement or prohibition under any of these categories may not exceed $1,500,000 in a calendar year.

In addition, OCR made clear in the Final Rule that it will investigate a complaint and it will conduct a compliance review when the circumstances or its preliminary review suggests willful neglect is possible. Willful neglect is defined at 45 CFR § 160.401 as the "conscious, intentional failure or reckless indifference to the obligation to comply with the administrative simplification provision violated." The term not only presumes actual or constructive knowledge a violation is virtually certain to occur, but also encompasses a conscious intent or degree of recklessness with regard to compliance obligations. The proposed regulations provided examples of where willful neglect may be found:

  • A covered entity disposed of several hard drives containing electronic PHI in an unsecured dumpster, in violation of § 164.530(c) and § 164.310(d)(2)(i). HHS's investigation reveals the covered entity had failed to implement any policies and procedures to reasonably and appropriately safeguard PHI during the disposal process.
  • A covered entity failed to respond to an individual's request that it restrict its uses and disclosures of PHI about the individual. HHS's investigation reveals the covered entity does not have any policies and procedures for consideration of restriction requests it receives and refuses to accept any requests for restrictions from individual patients who inquire.
  • A covered entity's employee lost an unencrypted laptop that contained unsecured PHI. HHS's investigation reveals the covered entity feared its reputation would be harmed if information about the incident became public and, therefore, decided not to provide notification as required by § 164.400 et seq.

 

Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act

The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) prohibits discrimination on the basis of an individual's genetic information. GINA also contains privacy protections for genetic information that requires HHS to modify the HIPAA Rules. The protections require (i) clarification that genetic information is health information and (ii) health plans, health plan issuers and issuers of Medicare supplemental policies be prohibited from using or disclosing genetic information for underwriting purposes. The Final Rule implements these protections by incorporating certain definitions from GINA and other provisions relating to health plans (health care providers are generally not subject to these provisions). In addition, the Final Rule requires a change to the Notice of Privacy Practices for health plans. Namely, if a covered health plan will be using PHI for underwriting purposes (such as in a wellness program), the plan's Notice of Privacy Practices must include a statement that PHI that is genetic information may not be used for this purpose.

Action Needed

The Final Rule includes substantial changes to the HIPAA Final Rules for covered health care providers and health plans, as well as their BAs. These entities will need to review these regulations carefully and make appropriate adjustments in their policies and procedures, workforce training, privacy and other notices, systems, as well as their agreements. Most of this will need to be completed by September 23, 2013, although a transition rule will allow a one-year extension until September 23, 2014 to amend certain existing business associate agreements.


Exchange Notice Requirements Delayed

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires employers to provide all new hires and current employees with a written notice about ACA’s health insurance exchanges (Exchanges), effective March 1, 2013.

On Jan. 24, 2013, the Department of Labor (DOL) announced that employers will not be held to the March 1, 2013, deadline. They will not have to comply until final regulations are issued and a final effective date is specified.

This Power Group Companies Legislative Brief details the expected timeline for the exchange notice requirements.

Exchange Notice Requirements

In general, the notice must:

  • Inform employees about the existence of the Exchange and give a description of the services provided by the Exchange;
  • Explain how employees may be eligible for a premium tax credit or a cost-sharing reduction if the employer's plan does not meet certain requirements;
  • Inform employees that if they purchase coverage through the Exchange, they may lose any employer contribution toward the cost of employer-provided coverage, and that all or a portion of this employer contribution may be excludable for federal income tax purposes; and
  • Include contact information for the Exchange and an explanation of appeal rights.

This requirement is found in Section 18B of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which was created by the ACA. The DOL has not yet issued a model notice or regulations about the employer notice requirement.

When do Employers have to Comply with the Exchange Notice Requirements?

Section 18B provides that employer compliance with the notice requirements must be carried out "[i]n accordance with regulations promulgated by the Secretary [of Labor]." Accordingly, the DOL has announced that, until regulations are issued and become applicable, employers are not required to comply with the exchange notice requirements.

The DOL has concluded that the notice requirement will not take effect on March 1, 2013, for several reasons. First, this notice should be coordinated with HHS's educational efforts and IRS guidance on minimum value. Second, the DOL is committed to a smooth implementation process, including:

  • Providing employers with sufficient time to comply; and
  • Selecting an applicability date that ensures that employees receive the information at a meaningful time.

The DOL expects that the timing for distribution of notices will be the late summer or fall of 2013, which will coordinate with the open enrollment period for Exchanges.

The DOL is considering providing model, generic language that could be used to satisfy the notice requirement. As a compliance alternative, the DOL is also considering allowing employers to satisfy the notice requirement by providing employees with information using the employer coverage template as discussed in the preamble to the Proposed Rule on Medicaid, Children's Health Insurance Programs and Exchanges.

Future guidance on complying with the notice requirement under FLSA section 18B is expected to provide flexibility and adequate time to comply.

 

 


2013 Inflation Adjustments

Source: United Benefit Advisors
By: Chadron J. Patton

Following recent announcements by both the IRS and the Social Security Administration, we now know most of the dollar amounts that employers will need to administer their benefit plans for 2013.  Many of the new numbers are slightly higher than their 2012 counterparts. For instance, the annual 401(k), 403(b), or 457(b) deferral limit will increase from $17,000 to $17,500; the Section 415 limit on annual additions to a participant's account will go from $50,000 to $51,000; and the annual compensation limit will increase from $250,000 to $255,000.  (The annual retirement plan catch-up contribution limit -- $5,500 -- will remain unchanged for 2013.)

The annual compensation threshold used in identifying highly compensated employees (HCEs) remains unchanged for 2013 (at $115,000).  In identifying HCEs for 2013, employers should consider employees who earned at least $115,000 during 2012 (as well as 5% owners during either 2012 or 2013).  This is due to the "look-back" nature of the HCE definition.

The annual limit on IRA contributions (whether traditional or Roth) will increase from $5,000 to $5,500, while the annual limit on IRA catch-up contributions will remain at $1,000.

The maximum contribution to an HSA will increase slightly -- from $3,100 to $3,250 for individual coverage, and from $6,250 to $6,450 for family coverage -- while the maximum HSA catch-up contribution will remain at $1,000.  The minimum deductible for any high-deductible health plan (which must accompany any HSA) will also increase slightly -- from $1,200 to $1,250 for individual coverage, and from $2,400 to $2,500 for family coverage.

A new $2,500 limit on employee deferrals to health FSAs will apply for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2013.  This $2,500 limit applies only to salary reduction contributions under a health FSA and not to employer contributions.  For this purpose, however, any employer FSA contributions that could have been received in cash are treated as salary reduction contributions.

The Social Security taxable wage base will increase for 2013 -- from $110,100 to $113,700.  A question yet to be answered is whether employees will continue to enjoy a temporary reduction in the long-standing 6.2% "OASDI" tax rate.  For 2011 and 2012, that rate has been temporarily reduced by two percentage points (to 4.2%), as a way of helping to stimulate the economy.  Although there does not appear to be significant sentiment in either of the major political parties to extend this reduction, there is a slight chance that the 4.2% rate will remain in effect for 2013.  (In any event, the employer OASDI tax rate will remain at 6.2%.)

The Medicare tax rate has long been set at 1.45% -- for both employees and employers.  Beginning in 2013, however, the employee Medicare tax rate will increase by 0.9% (to a total of 2.35%) on wages in excess of $200,000 for single filers or $250,000 for joint filers ($125,000 for married individuals filing separately).  Employers must start withholding this additional Medicare tax once an employee's Medicare wages have exceeded $200,000.  This additional Medicare tax does not apply to the employer's share.

To obtain a quick reference card listing the 2013 annual benefit plan amounts, please contact Saxon Financial Consulting

 


Cheat Sheet: What employers need to know about the Affordable Care Act

Source: https://www.insidecounsel.com

By: Alanna Byrne, Mary Swanton

President Obama’s Election Day victory ends, or at least postpones, Republican promises to overhaul or repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), a hallmark piece of legislation from the president’s first term. This means that, starting on Jan. 1, 2014, employers with more than 50 full-time equivalent employees must either provide health care coverage for their workers or pay a penalty.

In the November feature “Pay or Play,” InsideCounsel provides a look at the key factors that companies should consider when deciding whether to comply with the law—or face a stiff fine for failing to do so.

Does the size of a business matter?

The PPACA applies to all companies with more than 50-full time employees. Employers can choose not to provide coverage, but will pay $2,000 for every worker they do not insure, excluding the first 30 employees.

A General Accounting Office review of several studies on the subject found that larger employers are less likely to drop health care coverage when the new reforms take effect, largely to remain competitive in attracting the best employees. Smaller companies with less than 100 workers, on the other hand, could face a disadvantage on the health care market, as they often can’t get the same deals on insurance as their larger counterparts, so paying the penalty may make sense to them.

How are part-time and full-time workers affected?

Currently, many employers offer benefits only to full-time employees, generally defined as those working 35 or more hours a week. The PPACA, however, has lowered the standard for full-time employment from 35 to 30 hours, leaving companies that rely on part-time employees with a difficult choice to make.

“The problem arises when you have a workforce where your criteria [for receiving health benefits] was 35 hours per week, and now the threshold is 30,” says Patricia Cain, a partner at Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg. “If you have a lot of employees working 30-plus hours but less than 35, your choices are to cut them back to under 30 hours, pay the penalty tax or offer coverage.”

What industries will be most affected by the new reforms?

Unsurprisingly, the hardest-hit industries are likely to be those that have not provided health coverage—or have provided very minimal insurance—to workers in the past, while offering insurance to executives. These include restaurant chains, retail outlets and other businesses in the service sector. A nondiscrimination clause in the PPACA now requires that companies provide the same coverage to all employees at all levels, or face a $3,000 per employee penalty.

Complicating matters for these businesses, the coverage they offer must be affordable, which is defined as coverage that does not cost more than 9.5 percent of an employee’s yearly W-2 wages.  “To get out of all penalties, you have to offer [coverage] at 9.5 percent of household income. That’s a pretty low threshold for servers or shift cooks,” says BakerHostetler Partner John McGowan. “The business will incur some meaningful costs it doesn’t have in the budget right now.”

Are there hidden costs?

Ideally, the health care reforms will reduce health care costs by providing affordable preventative care and putting new regulations on health care providers. But the future of health care costs remains murky, and if they continue to rise after 2014, employers may be more likely to drop coverage.

“[The PPACA] mandates certain types of coverage be provided and mandates preventative coverage be provided at no cost, all of which are good for employees. But it doesn’t appear to take an aggressive stand toward lowering costs, and that’s what troubles employers,” says Littler Mendelson Shareholder Steve Friedman.

What role will state-run health care exchanges play?

The PPACA requires everyone to have health insurance, meaning that those employees who don’t receive it from their companies likely will have to seek it on state-run health care exchanges. But officials in some states have signaled their unwillingness to establish and oversee these exchanges, leaving the task to the federal government. And even if states do implement exchanges, some employers, particularly those operating in multiple states, are concerned about the quality and consistency of the programs.

“The big unknown is whether the exchanges will be a viable alternative to employer coverage,” says Michael Tomasek, a partner at Freeborn & Peters. “How good will the quality be? Will they function well? Will they be administered well? We just don’t know that yet. Until we know what the alternative to employer coverage is, it’s impossible for employers to make a rational choice about pay or play.”

 


Notice of Exchange Option is Delayed

In an FAQ issued January 24, 2013 by the Department of Labor, the employer mandate to provide employees with a notice of coverages available through the Exchanges is being delayed.  The original required distribution date of March 1, 2013 has been delayed until the late summer or fall of 2013.

The Department of Labor FAQ states…..

“The Department of Labor has concluded that the notice requirement under FLSA section 18B will not take effect on March 1, 2013 for several reasons.  First, this notice should be coordinated with HHS’s educational efforts and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidance on minimum value.  Second, we are committed to a smooth implementation process including providing employers with sufficient time to comply and selecting an applicability dates that ensures that employees receive the information at a meaningful time.  The Department of Labor expects that the timing for distribution of notices will be the late summer or fall of 2013, which will coordinate with the open enrollment period for Exchanges.”


FAQs about Affordable Care Act Implementation Part XI

Source: https://www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq-aca11.html

Set out below are additional Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding implementation of various provisions of the Affordable Care Act. These FAQs have been prepared by the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services (HHS), and the Treasury (collectively, the Departments). Like previously issued FAQs (available at https://www.dol.gov/ebsa/healthreform/), these FAQs answer questions from stakeholders to help people understand the new law and benefit from it, as intended.

The Departments anticipate issuing further responses to questions and issuing other guidance in the future. We hope these publications will provide additional clarity and assistance.

Notice of Coverage Options Available Through the Exchanges

Section 18B of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), as added by section 1512 of the Affordable Care Act, generally provides that, in accordance with regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Labor, an applicable employer must provide each employee at the time of hiring (or with respect to current employees, not later than March 1, 2013), a written notice:

  1. Informing the employee of the existence of Exchanges including a description of the services provided by the Exchanges, and the manner in which the employee may contact Exchanges to request assistance;
  2. If the employer plan's share of the total allowed costs of benefits provided under the plan is less than 60 percent of such costs, that the employee may be eligible for a premium tax credit under section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) if the employee purchases a qualified health plan through an Exchange; and
  3. If the employee purchases a qualified health plan through an Exchange, the employee may lose the employer contribution (if any) to any health benefits plan offered by the employer and that all or a portion of such contribution may be excludable from income for Federal income tax purposes.

 

Q1: When do employers have to comply with the new notice requirements in section 18B of the FLSA?

Section 18B of the FLSA provides that employer compliance with the notice requirements of that section must be carried out "[i]n accordance with regulations promulgated by the Secretary [of Labor]." Accordingly, it is the view of the Department of Labor that, until such regulations are issued and become applicable, employers are not required to comply with FLSA section 18B.

The Department of Labor has concluded that the notice requirement under FLSA section 18B will not take effect on March 1, 2013 for several reasons. First, this notice should be coordinated with HHS's educational efforts and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidance on minimum value. Second, we are committed to a smooth implementation process including providing employers with sufficient time to comply and selecting an applicability date that ensures that employees receive the information at a meaningful time. The Department of Labor expects that the timing for distribution of notices will be the late summer or fall of 2013, which will coordinate with the open enrollment period for Exchanges.

The Department of Labor is considering providing model, generic language that could be used to satisfy the notice requirement. As a compliance alternative, the Department of Labor is also considering allowing employers to satisfy the notice requirement by providing employees with information using the employer coverage template as discussed in the preamble to the Proposed Rule on Medicaid, Children's Health Insurance Programs, and Exchanges: Essential Health Benefits in Alternative Benefit Plans, Eligibility Notices, Fair Hearing and Appeal Processes for Medicaid and Exchange Eligibility Appeals and Other Provisions Related to Eligibility and Enrollment for Exchanges, Medicaid and CHIP, and Medicaid Premiums and Cost Sharing (78 FR 4594, at 4641), which will be available for download at the Exchange web site as part of the streamlined application that will be used by the Exchange, Medicaid, and CHIP. Future guidance on complying with the notice requirement under FLSA section 18B is expected to provide flexibility and adequate time to comply.

Compliance of Health Reimbursement Arrangements with Public Health Service Act (PHS Act) section 2711

Section 2711 of the PHS Act, as added by the Affordable Care Act, generally prohibits plans and issuers from imposing lifetime or annual limits on the dollar value of essential health benefits. The preamble to the interim final regulations implementing PHS Act section 2711 (75 FR 37188) addressed the application of section 2711 to health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs) and certain other account-based arrangements. HRAs are group health plans that typically consist of a promise by an employer(1) to reimburse medical expenses (as defined in Code section 213(d)) for a year up to a certain amount, with unused amounts available to reimburse medical expenses in future years. The preamble distinguished between HRAs that are "integrated" with other coverage as part of a group health plan and HRAs that are not so integrated ("stand-alone" HRAs). The preamble stated that "[w]hen HRAs are integrated with other coverage as part of a group health plan and the other coverage alone would comply with the requirements of PHS Act section 2711, the fact that benefits under the HRA by itself are limited does not violate PHS Act section 2711 because the combined benefit satisfies the requirements." (75 FR 37188, at 37190-37191). The corollary to this statement is that an HRA is not considered integrated with primary health coverage offered by the employer unless, under the terms of the HRA, the HRA is available only to employees who are covered by primary group health plan coverage provided by the employer and meeting the requirements of PHS Act section 2711.

Questions 2 through 4 below address certain issues relating to HRAs. The Departments anticipate issuing future guidance addressing HRAs.(2)

Q2: May an HRA used to purchase coverage on the individual market be considered integrated with that individual market coverage and therefore satisfy the requirements of PHS Act section 2711?

No. The Departments intend to issue guidance providing that for purposes of PHS Act section 2711, an employer-sponsored HRA cannot be integrated with individual market coverage or with an employer plan that provides coverage through individual policies and therefore will violate PHS Act section 2711.

Q3: If an employee is offered coverage that satisfies PHS Act section 2711 but does not enroll in that coverage, may an HRA provided to that employee be considered integrated with the coverage and therefore satisfy the requirements of PHS Act section 2711?

No. The Departments intend to issue guidance under PHS Act section 2711 providing that an employer-sponsored HRA may be treated as integrated with other coverage only if the employee receiving the HRA is actually enrolled in that coverage. Any HRA that credits additional amounts to an individual when the individual is not enrolled in primary coverage meeting the requirements of PHS Act section 2711 provided by the employer will fail to comply with PHS Act section 2711.

Q4: How will amounts that are credited or made available under HRAs under terms that were in effect prior to January 1, 2014, be treated?

The Departments anticipate that future guidance will provide that, whether or not an HRA is integrated with other group health plan coverage, unused amounts credited before January 1, 2014, consisting of amounts credited before January 1, 2013 and amounts that are credited in 2013 under the terms of an HRA as in effect on January 1, 2013 may be used after December 31, 2013 to reimburse medical expenses in accordance with those terms without causing the HRA to fail to comply with PHS Act section 2711. If the HRA terms in effect on January 1, 2013, did not prescribe a set amount or amounts to be credited during 2013 or the timing for crediting such amounts, then the amounts credited may not exceed those credited for 2012 and may not be credited at a faster rate than the rate that applied during 2012.

Disclosure of Information Related to Firearms

Q5: Does PHS Act section 2717(c) restrict communications between health care professionals and their patients concerning firearms or ammunition?

No. While we have yet to issue guidance on this provision, the statute prohibits an organization operating a wellness or health promotion program from requiring the disclosure of information relating to certain information concerning firearms. However, nothing in this section prohibits or otherwise limits communication between health care professionals and their patients, including communications about firearms. Health care providers can play an important role in promoting gun safety.

Self-Insured Employer Prescription Drug Coverage Supplementing Medicare Part D Coverage Provided through Employer Group Waiver Plans

Medicare Part D is an optional prescription drug benefit provided by prescription drug plans. Employers sometimes provide Medicare Part D coverage through Employer Group Waiver Plans (EGWPs) under title XVIII of the Social Security Act and often supplement the coverage with additional non-Medicare drug benefits. For EGWPs that provide coverage only to retirees, the non-Medicare supplemental drug benefits are exempt from the health coverage requirements of title XXVII of the PHS Act, Part 7 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and Chapter 100 of the Code. (For ease of reference, the relevant provisions of the three statutes are referred to here as "the health coverage requirements.") Moreover, for EGWPs that are insured under a separate policy, certificate, or contract of insurance, the non-Medicare supplemental drug benefits qualify as excepted benefits under PHS Act section 2791(c)(4), ERISA section 733(c)(4), and Code section 9832(c)(4) and are, therefore, similarly exempt from the health coverage requirements.

Q6: Must self-insured prescription drug coverage that supplements the standard Medicare Part D coverage through EGWPs comply with the health coverage requirements?

Pending further guidance, the Departments will not take any enforcement action against a group health plan that is an EGWP because the non-Medicare supplemental drug benefit does not comply with the health coverage requirements of title XXVII of the PHS Act, part 7 of ERISA, and chapter 100 of the Code. This enforcement policy does not affect other requirements administered by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that apply to providers of such coverage. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services intends to issue related guidance concerning insured coverage that provides non-Medicare supplemental drug benefits shortly.

Fixed Indemnity Insurance

Fixed indemnity coverage under a group health plan meeting the conditions outlined in the Departments' regulations(3) is an excepted benefit under PHS Act section 2791(c)(3)(B), ERISA section 733(c)(3)(B), and Code section 9832(c)(3)(B). As such, it is exempt from the health coverage requirements of title XXVII of the PHS Act, part 7 of ERISA, and chapter 100 of the Code. The Departments have noticed a significant increase in the number of health insurance policies labeled as fixed indemnity coverage.

Q7: What are the circumstances under which fixed indemnity coverage constitutes excepted benefits?

The Departments' regulations provide that a hospital indemnity or other fixed indemnity insurance policy under a group health plan provides excepted benefits only if:

  • The benefits are provided under a separate policy, certificate, or contract of insurance;
  • There is no coordination between the provision of the benefits and an exclusion of benefits under any group health plan maintained by the same plan sponsor; and
  • The benefits are paid with respect to an event without regard to whether benefits are provided with respect to the event under any group health plan maintained by the same plan sponsor.

The regulations further provide that to be hospital indemnity or other fixed indemnity insurance, the insurance must pay a fixed dollar amount per day (or per other period) of hospitalization or illness (for example, $100/day) regardless of the amount of expenses incurred.

Various situations have come to the attention of the Departments where a health insurance policy is advertised as fixed indemnity coverage, but then covers doctors' visits at $50 per visit, hospitalization at $100 per day, various surgical procedures at different dollar rates per procedure, and/or prescription drugs at $15 per prescription. In such circumstances, for doctors' visits, surgery, and prescription drugs, payment is made not on a per-period basis, but instead is based on the type of procedure or item, such as the surgery or doctor visit actually performed or the prescribed drug, and the amount of payment varies widely based on the type of surgery or the cost of the drug. Because office visits and surgery are not paid based on "a fixed dollar amount per day (or per other period)," a policy such as this is not hospital indemnity or other fixed indemnity insurance, and is therefore not excepted benefits. When a policy pays on a per-service basis as opposed to on a per-period basis, it is in practice a form of health coverage instead of an income replacement policy. Accordingly, it does not meet the conditions for excepted benefits.

The Departments plan to work with the States to ensure that health insurance issuers comply with the relevant requirements for different types of insurance policies and provide consumers with the protections of the Affordable Care Act.

Payment of PCORI Fees

Section 4376 of the Code, as added by the Affordable Care Act, imposes a temporary annual fee on the sponsor of an applicable self-insured health plan for plan years ending on or after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2019. The fee is equal to the applicable dollar amount in effect for the plan year ($1 for plan years ending on or after October 1, 2012, and before October 1, 2013) multiplied by the average number of lives covered under the applicable self-insured health plan during the plan year. In the case of (i) a plan established or maintained by 2 or more employers or jointly by 1 or more employers and 1 or more employee organizations, (ii) a multiple employer welfare arrangement, or (iii) a voluntary employees' beneficiary association (VEBA) described in Code section 501(c)(9), the plan sponsor is defined in Code section 4376(b)(2)(C) as the association, committee, joint board of trustees, or other similar group of representatives of the parties who establish or maintain the plan.

Q8: Does Title I of ERISA prohibit a multiemployer plan's joint board of trustees from paying the Code section 4376 fee from assets of the plan?

In the case of a multiemployer plan defined in ERISA section 3(37), the plan sponsor liable for the fee would generally be the independent joint board of trustees appointed by the participating employers and employee organization, and directed pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement to establish the employee benefit plan. Normally, such a joint board of trustees has no function other than to sponsor and administer the multiemployer plan, and it has no source of funding independent of plan assets to satisfy the Code section 4376 statutory obligation. The fee involved is not an excise tax or similar penalty imposed on the trustees in connection with a violation of federal law or a breach of their fiduciary obligations in connection with the plan. Nor would the joint board be acting in a capacity other than as a fiduciary of the plan in paying the fee.(4) In such circumstances, it would be unreasonable to construe the fiduciary provisions of ERISA as prohibiting the use of plan assets to pay such a fee to the Federal government. Thus, unless the plan document specifies a source other than plan assets for payment of the fee under Code section 4376, such a payment from plan assets would be permissible under ERISA.

There may be rare circumstances where sponsors of employee benefit plans that are not multiemployer plans would also be able to use plan assets to pay the Code section 4376 fee, such as a VEBA that provides retiree-only health benefits where the sponsor is a trustee or board of trustees that exists solely for the purpose of sponsoring and administering the plan and that has no source of funding independent of plan assets.

The same conclusion would not necessarily apply, however, to other plan sponsors required to pay the fee under Code section 4376. For example, a group or association of employers that act as a plan sponsor but that also exist for reasons other than solely to sponsor and administer a plan may not use plan assets to pay the fee even if the plan uses a VEBA trust to pay benefits under the plan. The Department of Labor would expect that such an entity or association, like employers that sponsor single employer plans, would have to identify and use some other source of funding to pay the Code section 4376 fee.

Footnotes

  1. An HRA may be sponsored by an employer, an employee organization, or both. For simplicity, this section of the FAQs refers to employers. However, this guidance is equally applicable to HRAs sponsored by employee organizations, or jointly by employers and employee organizations.
  2. With respect to HRAs that are limited to retirees, the exemption from the requirements of ERISA and the Code relating to the Affordable Care Act for plans with fewer than two current employees means that retiree-only HRAs generally are not subject to the rules of PHS Act section 2711. See the preamble to the interim final rules implementing PHS Act section 2711 (75 FR 37188, at 37191). See also ACA Implementation FAQs Part III, issued on October 12, 2010 (available at https://www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq-aca3.html).
  3. See 26 CFR 54.9831-1(c)(4), 29 CFR 732(c)(4), 45 CFR 146.145(c)(4).
  4. See generally, ERISA Field Assistance Bulletin 2002-02 (trustees of multiemployer plans, if allowed under the plan documents, may act as fiduciaries in carrying out activities that otherwise would be settlor in nature), available at https://www.dol.gov/ebsa/regs/fab2002-2.html.