Title: Affordable Care Act/Healthcare Reform Legal Issues
1Affordable Care Act/Healthcare ReformLegal
Issues What You Need to Know!!
- Rebecca Dobbs Bush
- SmithAmundsen LLC
- rdobbs_at_salawus.com
- (630) 587-7928
2Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA)
- General Disclaimer
- At the outset note that the law is VERY
confusing. - There are many ambiguities where we are still
awaiting relevant government agencies to issue
detailed regulations.
32014 Are you Ready?
- Mandates Individual and Employer
- Automatic Enrollment (gt200 FT Employees)
- On Hold pending further guidance
- Insurer Fees/ Plan tax
- Benefit limits
- Premium Subsidies
- Maximum waiting period (90 days)
4Insurer Fees/Plan Taxes
- Paid annually
- For insured plans
- Will be paid by insurance company
- Passed on to employer noted as separate charge
on invoice - For 2014, estimated to be 63 per enrollee per
year - For self-insured plans
- For plan years ending on or after 9/30/12
- Each self-insured plan must pay to the IRS an
annual fee of 2 per participant (reduced to 1
for the first plan year)
5Benefit Limits
- Deductible limits applied to small group market
- Maximum of 2,000 deductible for single coverage
and 4,000 for other than single coverage - Out-of-pocket limits applied to all size
fully-insured and self-funded groups - Capped at HSA qualified plan limits (6,250
single/12,500 Family)
6Premium Subsidies/Exchanges
- States will receive funding to establish health
insurance exchanges - Individuals and small employers can purchase
coverage through an exchange - Individuals can be eligible for tax credits
- Limits on income and government program
eligibility - Employer plan is unaffordable and/or not of
minimum value - Three model options
- State-run facilitator
- State-run active purchaser
- Federally run
7Status of IL Exchange
- IL received approximately 39 million in
establishment funds from Federal Government - IL is only 10 complete has asked for
assistance from Federal Government in finalizing
set up - Illinois will use a Federal/State Partnership
Model - Supposed to be operational by October of 2013
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9Exchange Plan Designs
- Four Levels of coverage
- Platinum 90
- Gold 80
- Silver 70
- Bronze 60
- Other Factors
- Guaranteed availability and renewability of
coverage - Fair health insurance premiums (age-31 Tobacco
Family Size Geography) - Single statewide risk pools
- Catastrophic plans (lt30 years old financial
need) - Rate review program (annual review process)
10Individual Responsibility (and Premium Subsidies)
- Starting 1/1/14 individuals, including
children, must enroll in minimum essential
coverage, or pay a penalty-tax - Penalty Tax Amount Greater of amount or a of
income - 2014 95 or 1
- 2015 325 or 2
- 2016 695 or 2.5
- Family penalty capped at 300 of the adult flat
dollar penalty or bronze level premium - Assessed on a monthly basis
11Premium Credit and Subsidies
- Those who dont have access to affordable,
minimum essential coverage may be entitled to a
credit and/or subsidy based on income level. - Under 133 of Federal Poverty Level (FPL) driven
to Medicaid (provision still unclear) - Between 133 and 400 of the FPL
- For an individual, that is between 15,282 and
45,906 per year (2013) - For a family of four, that is between 31,322 and
94,200 per year (2013)
12Employer Responsibility Provisions
- To Whom Does it apply?
- Employers with 50 or more full-time equivalent
(FTE) employees - Initially for 2014, can use any consecutive
six-month period during 2013 to measure - Employers that are part of a controlled group
have to count total employees of controlled
group BUT, Pay or Play rule penalty generally
applies separately with respect to each
applicable large employer member of the control
group
13How do you count employees under the ACA?
- A full-time employee is one who works 30 hours a
week. - Part-time employees count as a fraction of an
employee. - When employee thresholds are referenced the
reference is to a full-time equivalent employee
(FTE).
14Counting Employees
- To figure out if an employer meets the
50-employee threshold - An employer would first count full-time
employees. - If they do not have 50 full-time employees, they
would then count part-time employees. - To count part-time employees
- Count the total number of part-time employees.
- Then, count all the hours worked by those
part-time employees in the month and divide them
by 120 (30 x 4) to figure out how many FTEs the
employer has.
15Example
- A company has 35 full-time employees (30 hours).
In addition, the company has 20 part-time
employees who all work 24 hours per week (96
hours per month). - These 20 part-time employees would be treated as
equivalent to 16 full-time employees based on the
following calculation - 20 employees x 96 hours / 120 1920 / 120 16
- Thus, this employer would be considered a large
employer with a total FTE count of 51 employees
(35 16 51).
16Pay or Play
- Employers with 50 or more employees
- The Sledge Hammer Tax -- Effective 2014, these
Employers are not required to offer coverage, but
where they do not (to at least 95 of their
full-timers) AND they have at least one full-time
employee receive a subsidy and purchase coverage
in an exchange, they will be required to pay
2,000 per full-time employee annually (167 per
full time employee monthly). - The first 30 employees will be excluded.
- Example
- So, an employer with 60 employees that does not
offer health coverage will be required to pay
60,000. - 60 employees less first 30 employees
multiplied by 2,000 60,000.
17The Sledge Hammer Tax vs. the Tack Hammer Tax
- Coverage offered must be affordable and of
minimum value - The Tack Hammer Tax -- For those employers
offering unaffordable coverage that is not of
minimum value, they will be assessed a 3,000
penalty for each full-time employee that receives
a subsidy and purchases coverage in an exchange.
18Criteria for assessing penalty Coverage must be
Affordable
- Coverage offered must be affordable
- For those employers offering unaffordable
coverage, they will be assessed a 3,000 penalty
for each full-time employee that receives a
subsidy and purchases coverage in an exchange. - Coverage is unaffordable where
- The employees share of the premium exceeds 9.5
of family income. - Example If you have a single employee working
full-time at Illinois minimum wage (8.25 as of
July 1, 2010), coverage would be unaffordable
if the employee has to pay more than 135.85 per
month.
19Criteria for assessing penalty Coverage must be
of Minimum Value
- To be of minimum value
- Plan must cover at least 60 of the total allowed
cost of benefits that are expected to be incurred
under the plan. - (i.e., actuarial value of the plan must be at
least 60) - Note A minimum value calculator was made
available by the IRS and the Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) on February 25, 2013
20Penalty Amount Examples
- 1. Employer does not offer coverage or offers
coverage to less than 95 of its FT employees,
and at least one (1) of the FT employees receives
a premium tax credit on the exchange. - 2,000 annual penalty (per full-time employee)
- First thirty (30) FT employees are exempt
- EXAMPLE Acme, Inc. has 100 FT equivalent
employees and 70 FT employees. They do not offer
coverage and one employee receives a premium
credit. - ANSWER 2,000 x (70-30) 80,000/year
21Penalty Amount Examples
- 2. Employer offers coverage to at least 95 of
its FT employees but at least one (1) of the FT
employees receives a premium tax credit on the
exchange. - 3,000 annual penalty
- Calculated by taking the number of FT employees
who receive the tax credit for that month
multiplied by 1/12 of 3,000. - Maximum penalty is capped at the number of the
employers FT employees for that month multiplied
by 1/12 of 2,000 (i.e., the penalty they would
have incurred for not offering coverage at all
and remember, the 1st 30 are exempt)
22When are the penalties effective?
- Generally effective for calendar months beginning
January 2014.
23Transition Rule
- Delayed effective date for some non-calendar year
health plans - First transitional rule states that no penalty
will be imposed against an employer with a
non-calendar year plan with respect to any
employees who are eligible to participate in a
fiscal year plan under its terms as of December
27, 2012 (whether or not they take coverage)
until the first day of the non-calendar year plan
starting in 2014. - Second transitional rule exists to allow a plan
additional time to expand eligibility provisions
and offer coverage to those who were not
previously eligible. - If you offered to at least 1/3 of the FT and PT
employees at the most recent open enrollment
period - OR, if you covered at least ¼ of the total
employees - Then, you are not subject to the penalty until
the 1st day of the plan year starting in 2014
provided that those FT employees will all be
offered coverage no later than that date. - In determining whether you meet the 1/3 or ¼
test, you can look at any day between October 31,
2012 and December 27, 2012.
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25What else should we be thinking about to get
ready for 2014?
- Should you lower eligibility criteria for your
health plan to 30 hours per week to meet the pay
or play sledge hammer tax requirements? - Do you need to increase the amount you contribute
towards premiums to meet the pay or play tack
hammer tax affordability considerations? - Do you need to schedule more employees to work
less than 30 hours per week? - How is guaranteed issue going to affect health
care costs? - Do you need to consider self-funding your health
plan? - Is it really an option to drop health insurance
and just pay the penalty?
26Questions???
- Rebecca Dobbs Bush
- rdobbs_at_salawus.com
- (630) 587-7928