Alice E. Helle
BrownWinick
666 Grand Avenue, Suite 2000
Des Moines, IA 50309-2510
Telephone: 515-242-2407
Facsimile: 515-323-8507
E-mail: helle@brownwinick.com
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT ARE
ALREADY IN EFFECT
• Small Employer Tax Credits
• Dependent Benefits for Adult Children (up to age 26)
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT ARE
ALREADY IN EFFECT
• No Lifetime Limits on Essential Health Benefits
• Restricted Annual Limit on Essential Health Benefits
(no less than $750,000 for 2011)
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT ARE
ALREADY IN EFFECT
• 100% Coverage Preventative Services and immunizations – No Cost Sharing o N/A to Grandfathered Plans (but grandfathered plans may adopt)
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT ARE
ALREADY IN EFFECT
• Rescissions of Coverage Not Allowed Absent Fraud,
Misrepresentation or Nonpayment of Premiums
• No Pre-Existing Condition Limitations for Children
Under Age 19
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT ARE
ALREADY IN EFFECT
• Internal and External Appeals Provisions o N/A to Grandfathered Plans
• OTC Drugs Not Reimbursable by HSA/FSA/HRA
Absent a Prescription o Exception for Insulin
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT ARE
ALREADY IN EFFECT
• Simple Cafeteria Plans o Deemed to Satisfy Nondiscrimination
Requirements of IRC § 125 o Limited to Employers w/ Fewer than 100
Employees
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT HAVE
BEEN DELAYED OR ELIMINATED
• Nondiscrimination Rules – IRC § 105(h)(2) – DELAYED o Previously applied only to self-insured health plans o Generally prohibit discrimination in favor of top 25% of employees o Excise tax of $100/day/employee o N/A to Grandfathered Plans o Rules were to be effective for plan years beginning after 9/23/10
Delayed indefinitely for regulations
Comment period expired in March of 2011
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT HAVE
BEEN DELAYED OR ELIMINATED
• Reporting on Form 1099 – REPEALED o Would have greatly expanded 1099 reporting requirements
• Reporting on Form W-2 – DELAYED o Value of employer-provided health insurance to be reported on Form W-2 (informational only) o Originally effective for 2011
Now effective for 2012 for employers who issue
250+ W-2s
Effective for 2013 for smaller employers o IRS recently issued Notice 2012-9
•
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT HAVE
BEEN DELAYED OR ELIMINATED
Automatic Enrollment – DELAYED o Employers w/ 200+ employees will be required to automatically enroll new employees o Delayed indefinitely for regulations o Not likely to take effect prior to 2014
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT HAVE
BEEN DELAYED OR ELIMINATED
• Small Business Wellness Grants – DELAYED o Grants totaling $200 million over 5 years o Employers with fewer than 100 employees and no existing wellness program eligible for grants o Was to be available 2011 o Delayed indefinably – Congress did not fund
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT HAVE
BEEN DELAYED OR ELIMINATED
• CLASS 1 Program – SUSPENDED o Voluntary long-term care insurance program for working adults o o
Championed by Senator Kennedy
Would have provided up to $50/day for nursing home care or home health care after years of paying monthly premiums o No employer obligation, but employers permitted to provide for participation by payroll deduction
_______________
1 Community Living Assistance Services and Supports
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT HAVE
BEEN DELAYED OR ELIMINATED
Administration analysts determined that basic
CLASS insurance plan might cost $235 - $391/mo for $50/day benefit
Program suspended due to concern that not enough people would enroll to make it sustainable
KEY PROVISIONS OF THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THAT HAVE
BEEN DELAYED OR ELIMINATED
• Free-Choice Vouchers – REPEALED o Would have been effective in 2014 for employers of
50+ employees
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC) o Uniform summary of benefits in format specified in regulations
12-point font
No more than 4 duplexed pages
Must include a uniform glossary of terms
Must include at least three different coverage examples to illustrate common scenarios under which coverage would be provided o Template provided with Notice of Proposed Rulemaking –
Copy is included in your materials o Purpose is to help participants better understand their health coverage and other coverage options o Tentative effective date is March 23, 2012
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Continued Phase-In of Annual Limit Rule – Essential
Health Benefits o 09/23/11 - $1,250,000 o 09/23/12 - $2,000,000 o 2014 – no annual limits permitted
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Limits on Health Flexible Spending Arrangements
(FSAs) o Contributions limited to $2,500/year effective
2013
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• FICA Medicare Tax Rate Increase for Certain Employees o Effective 2013 o The Medicare tax rate is increased from 1.45% to 2.35% for earnings over the threshold of $200,000 for an individual or $250,000 for a married couple filing jointly o The employer’s portion of the tax is not affected o The employer will be responsible for collecting the additional Medicare tax due from the employee o Employers are not responsible for determining a spouse’s earnings
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Plan Amendments – 2014 o No pre-existing condition limitations o No waiting periods over 90 days o No out-of-pocket limits greater than the limits for highdeductible health plans (currently $5,950/11,900)
N/A to grandfathered plans o Wellness program rewards based on satisfaction of health standards can’t exceed 30% of the cost of employee-only coverage (currently 20%)
• N/A to grandfathered plans o Expanded coverage of clinical trials
N/A to grandfathered plans
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Exchange Notice o Notice deadline is March 31, 2013 o Notice must inform employees of:
The existence of the exchanges
The services provided
How to contact the exchanges to request assistance.
The availability of premium assistance if the employer’s share of the cost of benefits is less than
60%
The circumstances under which the employee loses employer contributions to the health plan and explaining that tax-free employer contributions may be lost when an employee enrolls in an exchange plan
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• State Insurance Exchanges – 2014 o “Marketplace” where individuals and small employers
(under 50 employees) may purchase health insurance o Must offer four levels of coverage with different benefit levels and actuarial values o To participate, insurers must agree to charge the same premium for each Qualified Health Plan regardless of whether it is offered inside or outside the exchange o Plans must offer plans similar in scope to “typical” employer-sponsored plans
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Reporting Requirements – 2014 o Coverage – IRC § 6055
Plans providing “minimum essential coverage” to an individual must file report with IRS with info re covered persons
Plans must also provide statement to individuals who were listed on report filed with IRS o Additional Reporting – Large Employers – IRC § 6056
Applies to employers subject to § 4980H (50+ employees)
Must file report that includes info re premiums and contributions
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Individual Mandate – Effective 2014 o Individuals required to have health coverage or pay a penalty
2014 – greater of $95 or 1% of household income
2015 – greater of $325 or 2% of income
2016 - greater of $695 or 2.5% of income o Subsidies
Premium assistance tax credits for individuals with income between 100% and 400% of the federal poverty level
Cost-sharing subsidies for individuals with income up to
250% of the federal poverty level to reduce out-of-pocket costs for plans purchased through an exchange
PREVIEWS OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
• Large Employer Mandate (50+) o Must offer “minimum essential coverage” or pay a tax penalty o If employer does not offer coverage, penalty is $2,000 per employee, except that number of employees is reduced by 30 in calculating the penalty o If the employer offers coverage but doesn’t meet affordability and value tests, penalty is $3,000 for each full-time employee who receives premium assistance through an exchange
STATUS OF CONSTITUTIONAL
CHALLENGES
• More Than 20 Lawsuits Challenging ACA Filed In The
Federal District Courts To Date o 6 courts have ruled the law constitutional o 3 courts ruled at least part of the law unconstitutional o 9 cases dismissed on procedural grounds
STATUS OF CONSTITUTIONAL
CHALLENGES
• 8 Cases Have Reached The Federal Courts Of Appeals o 2 are still pending o 4 ruled against plaintiffs on various procedural grounds o 2 ruled on the constitutionality of the Act
6th Circuit Court of Appeals found the law constitutional on 06/29/11
Thomas More Law Center v. Obama
11th Circuit Court of Appeals found the individual mandate to be unconstitutional on 08/12/11
Florida v. HHS
STATUS OF CONSTITUTIONAL
CHALLENGES
• Thomas More Law Center v. Obama o
Plaintiffs argued that the Commerce Clause doesn’t permit the government to compel people to buy health insurance because that would be regulating “inactivity.” o District Court (E. D. Michigan) rejected that argument – decision not to buy insurance has an impact on health care providers and taxpayers and therefore is an activity that
“substantially affects interstate commerce.” o The 6th Cir. affirmed, ruling that Congress had a rational basis to impose the individual mandate.
o 2-1 ruling o Plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court on July 27
STATUS OF CONSTITUTIONAL
CHALLENGES
• Florida v. HHS o District Court (N. D. Florida) determined that the individual mandate was unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause o Also found that it was not severable from the remainder of the
Act, so struck down the entire Affordable Care Act o The 11th Cir. found the individual mandate unconstitutional (by a
2-1 vote) but determined that it is severable from the rest of the
Act, which is “legally operative.” o The government appealed to the Supreme Court on September
28
• Supreme Court has accepted and will hear arguments in
March o 3/26 – 1 hour on whether the Anti-Injunction Act blocks a challenge prior to 2014 o 3/27 – 2 hours on the constitutionality of the individual mandate o 3/28 – 2½ hours on the severability of the individual mandate and the constitutionality of the Medicaid expansion
• Decision expected in June or July
Website: www.brownwinick.com
Toll Free Phone Number: 1-888-282-3515
OFFICE LOCATIONS:
666 Grand Avenue, Suite 2000
Des Moines, Iowa 50309-2510
Telephone: (515) 242-2400
Facsimile: (515) 283-0231
616 Franklin Place
Pella, Iowa 50219
Telephone: (641) 628-4513
Facsimile: (641) 628-8494
DISCLAIMER: No oral or written statement made by BrownWinick attorneys should be interpreted by the recipient as suggesting a need to obtain legal counsel from
BrownWinick or any other firm, nor as suggesting a need to take legal action. Do not attempt to solve individual problems upon the basis of general information provided by any BrownWinick attorney, as slight changes in fact situations may cause a material change in legal result.