To Open Eyes, W-2s List Cost of Providing a Health Plan

Source: https://www.nytimes.com
By Robert Pear

As workers open their W-2 forms this month, many will see a new box with information on the total cost of employer-sponsored health insurance coverage. To some, it will be a surprise, perhaps even a shock.

Workers often have little idea how much they and their employers are paying for coverage. In many cases, economists say, workers give up cash compensation to get and keep health benefits.

The disclosures, required by the 2010 health care law, are meant to make workers more cost-conscious. Health benefits are still tax-free. But labor unions and employer groups say it could be easier to tax them in the future, now that employers must report their value to the government.

The new information appears in Box 12 of the standard W-2 form, with a two-letter code, DD. The box shows the “cost of employer-sponsored health coverage.” And that amount is not taxable, the Internal Revenue Service says on the back of the form.

Jay J. Makled, a union steward for the United Automobile Workers at the Ford plant in Dearborn, Mich., described his reaction after seeing that his health coverage cost nearly $16,000 last year: “It’s quite expensive. I was surprised to see how much the company was paying for that benefit.”

Hourly employees represented by the union there said they generally did not pay any of the premium.

The number on the W-2 form is supposed to reflect the part of the cost paid by the employer and the part paid by the employee.

Prof. Nicole Huberfeld, an expert on health law at the University of Kentucky, who received her W-2 form on Monday, said, “Most people who get health insurance from their employers have no idea how much it costs.”

“People are often shocked when they see the cost, $12,000 to $16,000 a year,” Ms. Huberfeld said. “Many Americans believe this is something they get free. But employers pay lower wages because they provide insurance.”

In 2012, according to an annual survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation, premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance averaged $5,615 a year for single coverage and $15,745 for family coverage. Over five years, the costs have increased 25 percent for individual coverage and 30 percent for family coverage.

“Health coverage is a big piece of people’s income and a large part of the social welfare budget,” said C. Eugene Steuerle, a tax economist at the Urban Institute. “But the benefits are not taxable, and most of the spending is hidden, so we don’t consider the trade-offs. If we want to get control of health care costs, people have to be aware of them.”

That is the goal of the disclosure requirement, which was proposed by a bipartisan group of senators: two Republicans, Charles E. Grassley of Iowa and Michael B. Enzi of Wyoming, and two Democrats, Max Baucus of Montana and Ron Wyden of Oregon.

Congress acted after Peter R. Orszag, then the director of the Congressional Budget Office, told lawmakers: “The economic evidence is overwhelming, the theory is overwhelming, that when your firm pays for your health insurance, you actually pay through reduced take-home pay. The firm is not giving that to you for free.”

The tax-free treatment of employer-provided health benefits is the largest tax break in the tax code, costing the government roughly $180 billion a year in lost revenue, or 80 percent more than the home mortgage interest deduction, according to the administration.

Katie W. Mahoney, the executive director of health policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said, “It’s useful for employees to know the value of coverage their employers provide.” But she said some employers worried that reporting the benefit on the W-2 form could lead to taxing the benefit.

“That’s not the intent of the current requirement,” Ms. Mahoney said. “But once the information is collected by the government, it’s very easy for another administration to have a different intent.”

An employee of the A.F.L.-C.I.O. whose health coverage was listed as costing more than $20,000 said: “That knocks my socks off. When I saw the number, my eyes popped out. I appreciate my employer all the more.”

The employee said he had been told not to discuss the cost publicly because the union did not want to suggest that some employees had “Cadillac coverage.”

An employer that fails to comply with the reporting requirement could be subject to penalties of $200 per W-2 form, up to a maximum of $3 million, tax lawyers said.

Employers are exempt from the reporting obligation if they are required to file fewer than 250 W-2 forms, the I.R.S. said. That could change, but the agency said employers would be given at least six months’ notice.

 


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.

 


Retirement reform a likely target for Obama's second term

Source: https://www.benefitspro.com
By Andy Stonehouse

If you think that the retirement industry suddenly fell off the radar with the end of the first round of fiscal cliff fixes, think again - substantial reform, courtesy of the second-term Obama administration, is likely on the way.

That's the belief of Marcia Wagner, a prominent ERISA attorney serving as keynote at this year's sixth annual Profit-Driven Strategies in the DCIO Market, organized by Financial Research Associates - held this week in Wagner's base of operations, Boston.

Wagner contends that the allure of taxes deferred by America's retirement plans continues to be too strong to politicians - some $70 billion a year, and as much as $361 million over a four-year period - meaning that tangible reform efforts are certainly a possibility.

And with today's news of the retirement of Sen. Tom Harkin, chairman of the Senate pensions and education committee, Wagner says she suspects a harder push on his part to gain support for his own proposal creating a nationalized retirement system, an Americanized rendition of plans found in Western European nations.

Wagner says that in an era where "the power of inertia" helps guide an otherwise shell-shocked and financially confused participant public, the most likely change will probably be an Obama-led move to mandatory, automatic IRAs for most American workers.

Under that slightly revolutionary plan, companies with at least 10 employees would be required to establish a deferral rate of 3 percent into IRA plans (a post-tax Roth IRA would be the default but pre-tax traditional IRAs would be available as a second choice). Workers as young as 18 would be included in the plan.

"People tend to associate this idea with a left-wing, Democratic policy, but it's actually a joint product from think tanks that goes back to John McCain's run for president," Wagner noted.

She also concedes that the changes would not only be burdensome and present a challenge to the private sector, but could also be deemed unconstitutional - as well as a further intrusion by government, in the eyes of many Americans.

In the meantime, as U.S. workers continue to look for ways to more simply and safely invest for their retirement, Wagner says that a recent spate of class-action suits have also opened up the floodgates for the possibility of participants litigating their way into other retirement world changes - requiring plan sponsors to be especially cautious when considering how to protect and grow their investments.

Plan sponsors, she admits, are caught between a rock and a hard place: they want to render useful advice to participants, but their advisors who receive variable fees also want to avoid being caught up in prohibited transactions. A move to computerized planning models, she suggests, could offer a slight level of fiduciary safety.

Wagner says the industry also needs to begin to deal with the growing requirements for decumulation planning, with changes including the use of deferred annuities, better methods of rollover to DB plans and even some relief of RMD rules as likely topics in the coming years.

 


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.


More adults need vaccines, and not just for flu: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Source: https://www.reuters.com
By David Beasley

The flu isn't the only illness adults should be immunized against, U.S. health officials said on Tuesday, as a new study found current adult vaccination rates in the country "unacceptably low."

The report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) concluded that a "substantial increase" in adult vaccinations is needed to prevent diseases including pneumonia, tetanus, diphtheria, hepatitis, shingles and whooping cough.

"Far too few adults are getting vaccinated against these important diseases, and we need to do more," said Dr. Howard Koh, an assistant secretary for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

In 2011, there were 37,000 cases of invasive pneumonia in the United States, and most of the 4,000 people who died from the illness were over the age of 50, Koh said.

The CDC, a federal agency, recommends that older patients at risk for pneumonia receive vaccinations for the disease, he said.

Adults who don't get vaccinated can put others, including children, at risk, Koh said. In 2012, 9,300 adults were diagnosed with whooping cough out of a total of 42,000 cases.

"When the source is identified, four out of five babies who got whooping cough caught it from someone in the home, a parent, sister, brother, grandparent or babysitter," he said. "These are just examples of why adult vaccines are critical to the public health of our country."

Some vaccines, such as flu shots, are recommended for all adults, the CDC said. Others are suggested based on a patient's age and overall health.

"We are encouraging all adults to talk with their health care providers about which vaccines are appropriate for them," Koh said.

(Reporting by David Beasley; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Cynthia Johnston and Andrew Hay)

 


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.

 

 


Medicare Part D Disclosure to CMS Due February 28

Have you made your 2012 Medicare Part D Disclosure to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) yet?

If not, we want to remind you that the deadline is approaching.

Employers who sponsor group health plans that cover any prescription drugs generally must disclose whether the plan provides creditable or noncreditable prescription drug coverage to CMS within 60 days of the start of a new plan year. The deadline for calendar year plans is February 28.

Filing is done electronically using the CMS web site. Instructions also are available there.


Extended absences put small, mid-size companies at risk

Source: https://eba.benefitnews.com
By Tristan Lejeune

Disability insurance experts with the Guardian Life Insurance Company are in the final stages of developing an index for measuring and predicting the success of companies’ absence management programs in conjunction with their short-term and long-term disability. Guardian’s Andrew Hutchison, assistant vice president of group life and disability products, and Judy Buczek, manager of group disability products, are taking the opportunity to encourage small and mid-size employers who haven’t yet implemented absence management to do so.

“Absence management is not new, but it’s really kind of a large-case concept," Buczek says. "Larger employers understand the importance of managing absenteeism, but it’s just as important for mid-size and smaller employers. And actually, they’re usually the folks who don’t have access to the type of tools they need to manage a program. ... We're trying to help employers recognize the need for absence management programs, and also to help bring some of those programs downstream to the smaller employers."

Hutchison recommends that every company explore their absence management options, especially those without enough human resources personnel to dedicate exclusively to the cause. “To outsource” a coordinated, umbrella approach to reining in absenteeism and long-term disability, he says, may seem like a big expense, but it “really becomes a cost-saving measure, and it takes away a lot of the worry.” Small companies, he says, are particularly vulnerable to extended absences.

“These days, everyone is asked to do two jobs,” Hutchison says. “So having a person out, really, really has an impact on the organization today. Getting people back to work sooner … really does impact the bottom line.”

To that end, Buczek says, Guardian is planning a spring release for its Absence Management Activity Index Report and Tool.

“It’s an employer tool that they can use to find out the effectiveness of what they have in place,” she says. “We’ve done some research on our existing plan holders, both large and small, and we’ve looked at what type of programs they have in place, from wellness to a seamless FMLA program to an STD/LTD program and we said, ‘OK, what programs work the best and what are most effective at managing absences?’ It’s geared toward making sure that the appropriate tools are put in place.”


Tax the rich – and limit retirement contributions? It doesn’t add up

Source: https://eba.benefitnews.com
By: Aaron Friedman

Tax the rich!  Raise their rates! Limit their deductions! That seems to be the populist mantra. It’s perpetuated in the press, and there’s some indication that the general public seems to support the idea. Now middle class workers with higher than average incomes seem to be caught up in discussions defining those that are “rich.”

As this applies to tax-exempt organizations, we’re talking about hospital administrators, educators, executive directors of local community and other charitable organizations – people who generally earn a better than average income, yet by no stretch of the imagination do their incomes compare to Warren Buffett’s. And when it comes to the impact on their employers’ retirement plans, shouldn’t the tax structure support retirement readiness for those who have dedicated their careers to giving back to their communities?

For example, current conventional belief supports that people should be saving 11-15% of their pay, including matching contributions, every year throughout their working careers in order to save enough to be retirement ready. Assuming a 3% match, and therefore an average of a 12% annual savings need, anyone earning less than approximately $146,000 annually should be fine. (12% of $146,000 is approximately the $17,500 annual limit.)

However, what about the person making $250,000 per year? Contributing a maximum of $17,500 only equates to 7% of pay. When the match is included it’s still short of the target necessary for retirement readiness — yet as the numbers show, these limitations currently in place put these people at a disadvantage for retirement savings. In addition, one of the alternatives under consideration is limiting qualified plan contributions even further.

Fortunately, there is something that can be done. Private (non-governmental) tax-exempt organizations can maintain a deferred compensation plan under section 457 of the internal revenue code. These 457 plans allow for additional benefits for a select group of management or highly compensated individuals, over and above the limitations in their 403(b) or 401(k) plan.

457 plans are an excellent tool for tax-exempt organizations to be able to recruit, retain, reward and retire key personnel. In other words, they help meet the goals of the organization (which in turn, serves their communities) while empowering key employees to meet their financial goals.

Last summer, Sen. Tom Harkin released a report called “The Retirement Crisis and a Plan to Solve It.”  One premise of the report is that there is inadequate savings for Baby Boomers and Gen Xers to pay for basic expenses in retirement. The report footnotes studies that show this ”retirement income gap” is between $4.3 and $6.6 trillion, but as we see above, there is already pressure in regular tax rules that make it difficult for higher-than-average income people to achieve retirement readiness.

As Congress continues the tax debate, it’s important that we consider what’s good for the long term, and helping all plan participants achieve retirement readiness should be of paramount importance. Tax reform and retirement policy should not be at odds.