Source: https://slphrbenefitsupdate.com/2014/11/03/supreme-court-delays-deciding-availabilities-of-aca-subsidies-for-coverage-purchased-on-federal-exchange/
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 13:01:07+00:00

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The Supreme Court apparently still has not decided whether it will hear the appeal filed by plaintiffs in King v. Burwell that challenges the legality of the Obama Administration’s plan to pay Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) premium subsidies to consumers living in those states that have declined to establish their own state exchanges under ACA who buy health care coverage from the Federal health care exchange. Despite discussing whether to hear the appeal last week, the Justices did not include King v. Burwell on the list of appeals scheduled for hearing published by the Supreme Court today. Instead, the Justices put off deciding whether to hear the appeal for now by relisting it.
Plaintiffs in King v. Burwell are asking the Supreme Court to set aside the July, 2014 ruling by the 4th Circuit ruling that ACA allows the Administration to pay ACA subsidies to individuals enrolling in health care coverage through either a state exchange or the Federal exchange. While the Obama Administration argues ACA allows payment of premium subsidies regardless of whether the coverage comes through a state exchange or a federal exchange, the King v. Burwell plaintiffs argue that language in the ACA law that provides for subsidies for Americans who enroll “through an Exchange established by the State” prohibits payment of the subsidies for coverage purchased via the federal exchange. Since ACA relies heavily on the payment of subsidies to help make health care coverage affordable for millions of Americans earning less than 400 percent of poverty level and many states have not established their own exchanges, a Supreme Court decision in favor of the plaintiff/appellants would deal a devastating blow to ACA’s goal of making its mandated coverage affordable to Americans living in States without their own State exchanges.
The Supreme Court’s decision to hold off its agreement to decide the King v. Burwell appeal does not mean that the Justices won’t agree to decide the appeal at a later time. Many commentators believe the Supreme Court delayed accepting the appeal now because there is not currently any appellate court decision that conflicts with its holding since the full D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the Halbig v. Burwell ruling that ACA does not authorize subsidy payments for consumers from states without their own exchanges that buy coverage through the federal exchange previously issued by a panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. The full D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals will not rehear and decide Halbig en banc. Oral arguments before the D.C. Circuit Court in Halbig now are scheduled December 17, 2014. If the Court of Appeals in Halbig or another Appeals Court reaches a conflicting decision to the 4th Circuit decision in King v. Burwell, the Supreme Court likely will accept and schedule for hearing the King v. Burwell appeal. Pending these decisions, that delay leaves a cloud of uncertainty for Americans, their employers and others about whether subsidies will be available to help individuals earning less than 400% of the poverty level living in States that don’t have a State exchange to pay premiums for health care coverage bought through the Federal exchange.
This entry was posted on Monday, November 3rd, 2014 at 2:21 PM and is filed under 105(h), ACA, Cafeteria Plans, Employee Benefits, Employers, Employment Tax, ERISA, Fiduciary Responsibility, Health Plans, HIPAA, Human Resources, Premium Subsidies, Reporting & Disclosure.	You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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