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PACE Act Update

March 3, 2016

The PACE Act gives states the option of expanding their small group markets to include businesses with up to 100 employees.

• The ACA required state small group markets to be expanded to certain larger businesses.

• On Oct. 7, 2015, President Obama signed the PACE Act into law to repeal this requirement.

On Oct. 7, 2015, President Obama signed the Protecting Affordable Coverage for Employees (PACE) Act into law. The PACE Act repeals the Affordable Care Act (ACA) requirement that the small group market in every state be expanded to include businesses with 51-100 employees.

Although some sources questioned whether he might veto the law, the President signed the PACE Act into law in light of its bipartisan support in Congress.

This new law does not affect the definition of an applicable large employer (ALE) for purposes of the ACA’s employer shared responsibility rules, which applies to employers that employ, on average, 50 or more full-time employees (including full-time equivalent employees) in the prior calendar year.

Small Group Market Expansion

Most states have historically defined “small employers” as those with 50 or fewer employees for purposes of defining their small group health insurance market. Effective for 2016 plan years, the ACA expanded the definition of a “small employer” to include those that employed an average of between one and 100 employees.

• States are no longer required to expand their small group market to include businesses with up to 100 employees.

• The PACE Act does not affect the ALE definition for purposes of the ACA’s employer penalties.

The PACE Act eliminates the ACA’s new definition and, instead, gives states the option of expanding their small group markets to include businesses with up to 100 employees.

Impact on Employers

The expansion of the small group market was expected to have a significant effect on mid-size businesses. These businesses would have been required to buy coverage for employees in the small group market, which is more heavily regulated than the large group market.

This change was expected to increase premiums costs for employers and employees and reduce flexibility in plan design due to added small group market requirements.

Some states have already amended their state laws to adopt the expanded small group market definition. These states will have to take action to undo those changes.

Most states are already taking advantage of a transition rule provided by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). HHS has said that it will not enforce small group market regulations for mid-size businesses if their policies are renewed by Oct. 1, 2016.  We will work to continue to keep you updated on this new law.

Filed Under: Affordable Care Act

Minimum Value: What Does It Mean?

March 3, 2016

An employer that offers minimum essential coverage to substantially all of its full-time employees may still owe penalties if the coverage it offers is inadequate because it is not “affordable” or it does not provide “minimum value.” It also may owe penalties on the employees it does not offer coverage to who receive a premium subsidy.more

Here we answer the top questions related to minimum value penalties based on the IRS’s final regulation.

Q1: What is “minimum value” coverage?
A1: Coverage is “minimum value” if the coverage is expected to pay at least 60 percent of covered claims costs. It must provide substantial coverage for inpatient hospital and physicians’ services.

Fully insured plans provided to small groups must provide coverage at bronze level, or better. Bronze level is an actuarial value of approximately 60 percent, and those plans are automatically considered to provide minimum value.

The government has provided a calculator and several safe harbor plan designs to assist large insured plans and self-funded plans with their minimum value determinations.

Q2: May an employer use wellness incentives when determining minimum value?
A2: The employer may use non-smoking incentives when determining minimum value if non-smoking incentives are used to reduce cost-sharing (deductibles, coinsurance, copays, or the out-of-pocket maximum). If non-smoking incentives are available to reduce cost-sharing, essentially the employer may assume that all employees qualify for the non-smoker incentive. All other wellness incentives must be disregarded.

Q3: May an employer use HRA contributions when determining minimum value?
A3: When determining minimum value, an employer may apply HRA contributions for the current year if those contributions may only be used by employees for cost-sharing. (Cost-sharing generally means deductibles, coinsurance, or copays.)

Q4: May an employer use HSA contributions when determining minimum value?
A4: When determining whether coverage is affordable, an employer’s contributions to an HSA may be considered as a first-dollar benefit.

Q5: What is the penalty for not offering affordable, minimum value coverage?
A5: The penalty is $250 per month ($3,000 per year, indexed) for each full-time employee who:

• Is not offered coverage that is both minimum value and affordable coverage, and

• Purchases coverage through a government Marketplace, and

• Is eligible for a premium tax credit/subsidy (so his household income must be below 400 percent of federal poverty level).

Q6: Does the employer owe a penalty if the employee declines affordable, minimum value coverage offered by the employer and buys coverage through the Marketplace instead?
A6: No. The employer simply has to offer affordable, minimum value coverage. (Specifically, the least expensive plan that provides minimum value coverage must be affordable based on the cost of self-only coverage.) If the employee chooses to obtain coverage through the Marketplace, he or she can, but the employee will not be eligible for a premium tax credit/subsidy and therefore the employer will not owe a penalty.

Q7: Does the employer owe a penalty if the employer offers minimum essential coverage that is not affordable and minimum value coverage to an employee who would be eligible for a premium tax credit/subsidy, but the employee chooses to enroll in the employer’s plan?
A7: No. If the employee chooses to obtain coverage through his or her employer instead of through the Marketplace, the employee can, but he or she will usually not be eligible for a premium tax credit/subsidy and therefore the employer will not owe a penalty.

Q8: Is it possible for an employee to qualify for a premium tax credit/subsidy even though his or her employer offers affordable coverage?
A8: Yes. If the cost of self-only coverage through the Marketplace is more than 9.5 percent (indexed to 9.56 percent in 2015, and 9.66 percent in 2016) of an employee’s actual household income, an employee could be eligible for the subsidy even though the coverage offered by his or her employer is affordable under one of the three safe harbors. This will be a fairly unusual occurrence, but could happen because certain deductions are allowed when determining household income.

Q9: Must all plan options provide affordable, minimum value coverage?
A9: No. Only the lowest cost option that provides minimum value coverage needs to be affordable to avoid the penalty. An employer is free to offer other options that do not meet affordability.

Q10: Are there special rules for multi-employer plans?
A10: Yes. If the employer is required to make a contribution to a multi-employer plan with respect to some or all of its employees under a collective bargaining agreement or related participation agreement and the multi-employer plan offers affordable, minimum value coverage to eligible employees, the employer will be considered to have offered affordable, minimum value coverage. In addition to the three affordability safe harbors, coverage under a multi-employer plan is considered affordable if the employee’s contribution toward self-only coverage does not exceed 9.5 percent (indexed to 9.56 percent in 2015, and 9.66 percent in 2016) of the wages reported to the multi-employer plan, based on either actual wages or an hourly wage rate under the bargaining agreement.

Therefore, determining how many employees you have under ACA is critical to avoiding penalties. Please contact our office with any particular questions or concerns.

Filed Under: Affordable Care Act

IRS Final Rule on Minimum Value

March 3, 2016

In December 2015, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued a final rule that clarifies various topics relating to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) and premium tax credit eligibility provisions. The rule finalizes regulations that were proposed years earlier.

Child Income

The final rule clarified language relating to the calculation of a taxpayer’s household income, which includes the modified gross adjusted income of the taxpayer and the members of their family who are required to file an income tax return. The final rule provides that when a parent makes an election, household income includes the child’s gross income on the parent’s return. Premium tax credit eligibility is based on the child’s modified adjusted gross income (MAGI), which might not be the same as the amount reported as gross income.

Wellness Incentives

When calculating affordability of employer coverage when wellness incentives or penalties are offered through a wellness program, the final regulations state that employers must assume each employee fails to satisfy the requirements of the wellness program, unless it is a non-discriminatory wellness program related to tobacco use. For nondiscriminatory tobacco use incentives, the affordability calculation can assume all employees earn the incentive or are not charged the penalty.

HRA Contributions and Flex Credits

Mirroring guidance from IRS Notice 2015-87, the final rule clarifies that health reimbursement arrangement (HRA) contributions by an employer that may be used to pay premiums for an eligible employer sponsored plan are counted toward the employee’s required contribution, subsequently reducing the amount required for their contribution.

Similarly, an employer’s flex contributions to a cafeteria plan can reduce the amount of the employee portion of the premium so long as the employee may not opt to receive the amount as a taxable benefit, the flex credit may be used to pay for the minimum essential coverage (MEC), and the employee may use the amount only to pay for medical care. If the flex contribution can be used to pay for non-health care benefits (such as dependent care), it could not be used to reduce the amount of the employee premium for affordability purposes. Furthermore, if an employee is provided with a flex contribution that may be used for health expenses, but may be used for non-health benefits, and is designed so an employee who elects the employer health plan must forego any of the flex plan’s non-health benefits, those flex benefits may not be used to reduce the employee’s premium for affordability purposes.

Continuation Coverage

The final rule also provides guidance on continuation coverage post-employment. Individuals who are offered coverage post-employment (through COBRA or retiree coverage) will not be disqualified from a premium tax credit eligibility unless they enroll in the coverage. If an individual who is still an employee is offered COBRA coverage (typically due to a reduction in hours) that is affordable and minimum value, he or she will not be eligible for premium tax credits.

Mid-month Enrollment

Children who are enrolled mid-month due to birth, adoption, placement by court order, or placement for adoption or foster care, will be treated as being enrolled from the first day of the month for purposes of premium tax credit eligibility.

Filed Under: Taxes

Final Regulations and Updates with ACA

March 3, 2016

On February 29, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued final regulations that address a wide range of benefit and payment parameters under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2017. The final regulations include some changes from the proposed rules that were issued in November 2015, and delayed a few provisions contained in the proposed rules until 2018.

On the same date:

• The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued an FAQ that clarified the suspension of the 2017 Health Insurance Industry Fee. The moratorium will apply to the Health Insurance Industry Fee that would have been due in the 2017 calendar year based on 2016 data.

• CMS also issued a bulletin announcing that non-grandfathered individual policies and small group plans may extend their exemption from certain ACA provisions under the previously announced transitional relief.  If the applicable state permits, an extension may be granted through December 31, 2017. As of January 1, 2018, these policies and plans will need to comply with all ACA requirements. Earlier guidance had required these policies and plans to end by October 1, 2017.

Here is an overview of some key regulations in the final 2017 Benefit Payment and Parameters.

2017 Out-of-Pocket Maximums

The 2017 annual out-of-pocket maximums will be $7,150 for individual coverage and $14,300 for family coverage.

Marketplace Enrollment Period

The 2017 and 2018 open enrollment periods will follow the same timing as 2016 enrollment: November 1 through January 31 of the following year.

For 2019 and future years, the annual enrollment period will be November 1 through December 15.

Marketplace Automatic Re-enrollment

If the plan in which an individual is currently enrolled is no longer available, Marketplaces may enroll consumers in a plan offered by another insurer if the current insurer does not have a plan available for re-enrollment through the Marketplace.

2017 User Fee

The fee insurers pay to sell individual policies through the Federally Facilitated Marketplace (FFM) will remain at 3.5% of the monthly premium. Insurers transitioning to selling policies through State-Based Marketplaces on the Federal Platform (SBM-FPs) will pay a reduced user fee of 1.5% of premium for 2017 and 3% of premium in future years.

Network Adequacy Standards

The final rules have adopted several changes related to network adequacy requirements for plans sold on the Marketplace.

• Transparency of network size – Beginning in 2017, HealthCare.gov plans to include a rating of each plan’s relative network size compared to other plans available in the same geographic area.

• Coverage when a provider leaves the network – New continuity-of-care requirements will apply in the Federal Marketplace. Insurers must provide 30 days’ advance notice to patients receiving treatment from a provider who is leaving the network. Insurers will have to continue in-network coverage for individuals receiving active treatment, until the treatment is complete or for 90 days, whichever occurs first.

• Treating certain out-of-network expenses as in-network – Beginning in 2018, cost-sharing amounts for certain services performed by out-of-network ancillary providers (e.g. anesthesiologists) at in-network facilities must be counted toward the in-network, annual out-of-pocket maximum. Only when the insurer provides written notice to the patient – at least 48 hours prior to the time of service – may the out-of-network service be billed at an additional cost. This is intended to help limit “surprise bills” for consumers.

Standardized Plan Options in the Individual Marketplace

The standardized plan system will remain in place to make it easier for consumers to compare costs for similar plans offered by different insurers in the Federal Marketplace. The current proposal includes four silver, one bronze and one gold plan. The standardized plans have:

• Standard deductible amounts

• Four-tier drug formularies

• Only one in-network provider tier

• Some services, such as office visits, urgent care and generic drugs, not subject to the deductible

• A preference for copayments over coinsurance

Insurers can choose to offer standardized plans, non-standardized plans or both. Standardized plans will be displayed on HealthCare.gov in a manner intended to make them easy for consumers to find.

New Model for State/Federal Marketplace Partnerships

State Marketplaces that use HealthCare.gov’s technology for eligibility and enrollment will be known as State-Based Marketplaces on the Federal Platform (SBM-FPs). States will retain primary responsibility for plan management and consumer assistance, and for ensuring all Marketplace requirements are met. States will use the Federal platform for eligibility determinations and enrollment processing. This model is intended to make the transition easier should additional states decide to move to this arrangement in the future.

Navigator Responsibilities Beyond Enrollment

Beginning in 2018, Navigators will be required to provide post-enrollment assistance for functions such as Marketplace eligibility appeals, application for exemptions through the Marketplace, and helping consumers understand how to use their benefits. Navigators will also be required to assist vulnerable and underserved populations, as identified by the state-based exchange in their area.

Marketplace Enrollment Directly on Broker and Insurer Websites Delayed until 2018

Beginning in 2018, individuals may enroll in Marketplace coverage directly through an insurer or broker’s website. Further guidance and requirements will be issued. Until then, the current Marketplace enrollment process will continue.

Changes to Federally Facilitated SHOP Plans

As of January 1, 2017, a new employee choice option will be offered on the Federally facilitated Small Employer Health Options Program (SHOP). Currently, employers can offer employees a single plan or a choice of plans within a metal level. Under the new “vertical choice” model, employers will be able to offer employees a choice of all plans across all available levels of coverage from a single insurer. States can choose to opt out of offering vertical choice.

Read the Fact Sheet

Filed Under: Affordable Care Act

Updates on the Cadillac Tax

March 3, 2016

MORE TALK ON an excise tax for high-cost coverage that would come to be referred to as the Cadillac tax. Although the tax isn’t slated to be imposed until 2018, we get a lot of questions about it. So here’s a look at where we are now and how far we have to go before the tax is actually imposed on anyone.

Basically, the Cadillac tax is a 40 percent tax on the amount by which the monthly cost of an employee’s employer-sponsored health coverage exceeds a certain threshold. With that basic premise come many other questions:

What Is the Threshold? The threshold amount for 2018 is $10,200 for self-only coverage and $27,500 for other-than-self-only coverage (e.g., self + spouse, self + children, family).

What Goes into That Cost Calculation? At this time, the value of the plan is expected to include the cost of medical coverage in addition to coverage provided through reimbursement arrangements. So, in essence, cost equals the medical premium amount plus FSA, HSA and HRA coverage. Also keep in mind that coverage for long-term care and for HIPAA-excepted benefits isn’t included.

Who Pays the Tax? The tax is imposed on “coverage providers.” For insured plans, the insurer is the coverage provider, and the insurer is responsible for paying the tax. Keep in mind that the insurer will likely pass that cost onto the employer/group health plan. For self-insured plans and HSAs, the employer is the coverage provider and is responsible for the tax. For all other types of coverage, the coverage provider is the “person that administers the plan.”

Are There Special Considerations? Yes. The annual limits are increased by $1,650 and $3,450, respectively, for employees who are in high-risk professions – such as law enforcement officers, paramedics, construction workers, miners and longshoremen – and for 55-year-old individuals who are not Medicare eligible and are receiving employer-sponsored retiree health coverage. Additionally, for multi-employer plans, the $27,500 family threshold will be used for all insureds regardless of the tier of coverage.

Although the tax isn’t to be imposed for another two and a half years, some employers are already considering what changes may need to be made to avoid the tax — hence the question of whether or not “greatness will go out of style” when it comes to Cadillac-level benefit plans. However, we caution employers not to jump ahead of themselves by making changes based on the Cadillac tax. (Admittedly, this is probably the only time that compliance will ever tell employers to hold off on considering compliance, but follow me here.)

The first reason we say to hold off on making changes based on the Cadillac tax is that the IRS has issued very little guidance. There hasn’t been a final regulation or even a proposed regulation on the Cadillac tax. All we’ve seen in the way of guidance is IRS Notice 2015-16, which was really just a request for comments in anticipation of a proposed rule. Although the IRS revealed some “possible” future regulations, they really only addressed two aspects of the tax: possibly allowing employers to calculate cost based on the number of participants in the family instead of based on two tiers (self-only and anything-other-than-self-only) and possibly changing the threshold values ($10,200 and $27,500) to base figures with index factors added.

However, the notice doesn’t settle anything. The IRS solicited comments that were due in May, after which they’ll publish a proposed regulation. That proposed regulation will then be open to a comment period and hearing before a final regulation can be passed. It’s clear that we’re still in the early stages of the regulations on the Cadillac tax.

Second, a lot could happen politically before 2018. Although we don’t generally give compliance advice based on the political climate, it’s important to note that we could have a different composition of Congress and will definitely have a different president between now and 2018. Considering the fact that there’s still a lot of debate surrounding this tax, the 2018 version of the Cadillac tax – if it even still exists – may be virtually unrecognizable from the provision we have today. As such, it may not be the best idea for employers to completely change their benefits before we know more.

Obviously, a discussion about the basics of the Cadillac tax will be important for clients who sponsor self-insured plans.

However, other than that, we’re waiting to receive additional guidance, which we’ll definitely pass on as we get closer to the effective date of the provision. Once that guidance is received, we’ll be able to better assist in providing advice to employers on appropriate plan design changes.

Filed Under: Taxes

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