Source: https://slphrbenefitsupdate.com/tag/pay-or-play/
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 14:27:24+00:00

Document:
Friday, December 5, 2014 is the last day for health insurers and certain self-insured group health plans that are “contributing entities” to submit their required 2014 enrollment counts for the transitional reinsurance program contributions under 45 CFR 153.405(b).
Section 1341 of the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act (ACA) established the transitional reinsurance program to help stabilize premiums in the individual market by partially offsetting issuers’ risk associated with high-cost enrollees.
The transitional reinsurance program will collect contributions from health insurance issuers and certain self-insured group health plans offering major medical coverage for the 2014, 2015 and 2016 benefit years. Under Final Rules published March 5, 2014, the insurer pays the fee for insured plans but where a group health plan is self-insured, the plan itself pays the fee.
In preparation for the collection of the transition reinsurance program fees, the Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) required that contributing entities, or third party administrators or administrative services-only contractors on their behalf, to complete the reinsurance contributions submission process through the Pay.gov website starting October 24, 2014. Subsequently, HHS extended the 2014 data submission deadline to submit the 2014 enrollment counts for transitional reinsurance program contributions but to date has not modified the deadline for making the required transition reinsurance program fees.
The reinsurance fee equals the yearly rate times the number of plan participants. The yearly rate is $63 for 2014, $44 for 2015, and to be announced for 2016.
Final Rules published March 5, 2014 provide that self-insured plans that are self-administered plans are exempt from the fees in 2015 and 2016. Since the guidance about these determinations is impacted by the allocation of fiduciary responsibilities under the plan and its associated vendor contracts, plan sponsors need to verify both whether their existing obligations qualifies as exempt and that any planned changes in their vendor contracts and other associated allocation of duties for its administration will not impact this determination. Employers and others sponsoring self-insured plans should consult with qualified counsel about whether they fall into this exception under the applicable rules, as well as to confirm that their program meets these and other applicable requirements.
Self-insured group health plan sponsors, fiduciaries and administrators should confirm with qualified legal counsel whether their program is a contributing entity required covered by the program and if so, both include the expected cost of the required payments in their budgets and obtain written confirmation from their third party administrator that the data reporting is completed and all other required steps to calculate, pay required contributions and fulfill reporting and other requirements of the program are completed for their records.
Employers and others concerned about the financial, reporting and other burdens of complying with the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act (ACA) “pay-or-play” employer shared responsibility rules imposed under Internal Revenue Code (Code) § 4980H and other rules should review and consider letting their elected representatives and other Senate leaders know if they support the ACA corrections H.R. 4, the “Jobs For America Act” (Act). With key leadership appointments completed for both Houses for when the new Congress takes office January 3, 2014, now is a key time for businesses and others to let Senate and other leaders know what businesses see as the key legislative priorities that Congress should enact over the next six months.
Repeal of Medical Device Excise Tax on medical devices.
The Act also provides for enactment of numerous reforms beyond these specifically relevant to health care that Congressional supporters say will reduce burdens on business that cost jobs by undermining the competitiveness of U.S. businesses and workers.
While President Obama has vowed to veto any attempt by Republicans that he perceives would roll back the reforms enacted as part of ACA, many members of Congress have expressed support for tightening the definition of full-time employee for purposes of the employer pay-or-play mandates and certain other reforms. Following the designation of the members of the House and Senate that will occupy key leadership positions completed last week, committee assignments and other key leadership assignments are clarifying and members of both houses of Congress are now discussing the key legislative priorities and their work schedule for the balance of 2014 and when the new Congress is sworn in on January 3, 2014. Consequently, business and other leaders supporting the Act’s reforms or other ACA reforms should identify the key Congressional players on the committees influencing the Act and other legislation and begin communicating with the key leaders and their elected Congressional leaders about this support.
Interested persons can review the Act and monitor its status here.
The Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) has yielded to requests for an extension of the deadline for contributing entities to submit their 2014 enrollment counts for transitional reinsurance program contributions under 45 CFR 153.405(b) required as part of the required under HHS’ rules implementing the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act (ACA) transitional reinsurance program. The extended deadline is now 11:59 p.m. on December 5, 2014. The January 15, 2015 and November 15, 2015 payment deadlines remain the same.
The transitional reinsurance program established as part of ACA imposes a reinsurance fee applies in 2014, 2015, and 2016. Under Final Rules published March 5, 2014, the insurer pays the fee for insured plans but where a group health plan is self-insured, the plan itself pays the fee. Final Rules published March 5, 2014 provide that self-insured plans that are self-administered plans are exempt from the fees in 2015 and 2016. Employers and others sponsoring self-insured plans should consult with qualified counsel about whether they fall into this exception under the applicable rules, as well as to confirm that their program meets these and other applicable requirements.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) plans to run the first risk adjustment and reinsurance calculation estimates in mid-December, 2014 using data to be collected from insurers and TPAs on the EDGE system. It is unclear how if at all the extension announced by HHS for reporting will impact the timing of these calculations.
Employers of 100 or more full-time employees that plan currently offering or planning to offer after November 4, 2014 health plans with mandate only or other “skinny” plan designs which do not provide “substantial coverage” for both in-patient hospitalization and physician services should re-evaluate the implications of their proposed plan design as well as existing and planned employee enrollment or other communications about those plans, in light of the new guidance provided by Notice 2014-69 released by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) today. Learn all the details about this new guidance and its implication by participating in our November 13 , 2014 briefing.
Notice 2014-69 makes it official that the Department of Treasury (including the IRS) and Department of Health and Human Services (collectively the Departments) believe that group health plans that fail to provide substantial coverage for in-patient hospitalization services or for physician services (or for both) (referred to in the Notice as Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plans) do not provide the “minimum value” necessary to fulfill the minimum value requirements of Code §36B and 4080H(b).
The Notice also notifies sponsoring employers about the Departments expectations about notifications and other communications to employees about Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plans) as well as shares details about the Departments plans for implementing their interpretation in planned final regulations by March, 2015.
Timely correct any prior disclosures that stated or implied that the offer of the Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan would preclude an otherwise tax-credit-eligible employee from obtaining a premium tax credit.
Without such a corrective disclosure, the Notice warns that a statement (for example, in a summary of benefits and coverage) that a Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan provides minimum value will be considered to imply that the offer of such a plan precludes employees from obtaining a premium tax credit. However, an employer that also offers an employee another plan that is not a Non-Hospital/Non/-Physician Services Plan and that is affordable and provides minimum value (MV) is permitted to advise the employee that the offer of this other plan will or may preclude the employee from obtaining a premium tax credit.
HHS intends to promptly propose amending 45 CFR 156.145 to provide that a health plan will not provide minimum value if it excludes substantial coverage for in-patient hospitalization services or physician services (or both).
Treasury and the IRS intend to issue proposed regulations that apply these proposed HHS regulations under Code section 36B. Accordingly, under the HHS and Treasury regulations, an employer will not be permitted to use the MV Calculator (or any actuarial certification or valuation) to demonstrate that a Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan provides minimum value.
Treasury and IRS anticipate that the proposed changes to regulations will be finalized in 2015 and will apply to plans other than Pre-November 4, 2014 Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plans on the date they become final rather than being delayed to the end of 2015 or the end of the 2015 plan year. As a result, a Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan (other than a Pre-November 4, 2014 Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan) should not be adopted for the 2015 plan year.
Solely in the case of an employer that has entered into a binding written commitment to adopt, or has begun enrolling employees in, a Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan prior to November 4, 2014 based on the employer’s reliance on the results of use of the MV Calculator (a Pre-November 4, 2014 Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan), however, Notice 2014-69 states the Departments anticipate that final regulations, when issued, will not be applicable for purposes of Code section 4980H with respect to the plan before the end of the plan year (as in effect under the terms of the plan on November 3, 2014) if that plan year begins no later than March 1, 2015.
Employers offering Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plans should “exercise caution in relying on the Minimum Value Calculator to demonstrate that these plans provide minimum value for any portion of a taxable year after publication of the planned final regulations.
The IRS will not require an employee to treat a Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan as providing minimum value for purposes of an employee’s eligibility for a premium tax credit under Code section 36B, regardless of whether the plan is a Pre-November 4, 2014 Non-Hospital/Non-Physician Services Plan before final regulations take effect.
The interpretation of minimum value and planned future regulatory changes announced in Notice 2014-69 primarily will impact large employers subject to the “pay or play” shared responsibility rules of Code § 4980H that offer a health plan providing coverage that meets the “minimum essential coverage” standards of Code § 4980H.
Under Code § 4980H(a), large employers that fail to offer employee and dependent coverage under a health plan providing “minimum essential coverage” to each full-time employee generally become liable to pay an employer shared responsibility payment of $165 per month ($2000 per year) (commonly referred to as the “A Penalty”) for each full-time employee.
To learn more about Notice 2014-69 and its implications on employer health plan obligations and Code § 4980H shared responsibility exposures, register to participate in a special Solutions Law WebEx Briefing on the new guidance conducted by Attorney Cynthia Marcotte Stamer on Thursday, November 13, 2014 from Noon to 1:00 p.m. Central Time here.
Assuming at least one full-time employee of a covered large employer receives a subsidy for enrolling in health coverage through a health care exchange or “Marketplace” established under ACA, the B Penalty generally is equal to $250 per month ($3000 per year) multiplied by the number of such subsidized employees of the employer.
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A Fellow in the American College of Employee Benefits Counsel, recognized in International Who’s Who, and Board Certified in Labor & Employment Law, attorney and health benefit consultant Cynthia Marcotte Stamer has 25 years experience advising and representing private and public employers, employer and union plan sponsors, employee benefit plans, associations, their fiduciaries, administrators, and vendors, group health, Medicare and Medicaid Advantage, and other insurers, governmental leaders and others on health and other employee benefit. employment, insurance and related matters. A well-known and prolific author and popular speaker Board Certified in Labor & Employment Law, Ms. Stamer presently serves as Co-Chair of the ABA RPTE Section Welfare Plan Committee, Vice Chair of the ABA TIPS Employee Benefit Committee, an ABA Joint Committee on Employee Benefits Representative, an Editorial Advisory Board Member of the Institute of Human Resources (IHR/HR.com), Insurance Thought Leadership,com and Employee Benefit News, and various other publications. With extensive domestic and international regulatory and public policy experience, Ms. Stamer also has worked extensively domestically and internationally on public policy and regulatory advocacy on health and other employee benefits, human resources, insurance, tax, compliance and other matters and representing clients in dealings with the US Congress, Departments of Labor, Treasury, Health & Human Services, as well as state legislatures, attorneys general, insurance and labor departments, and other agencies and regulators. A prolific author and popular speaker, Ms. Stamer regularly authors materials and conducts workshops and professional, management and other training and serves on the faculty and planning committees of a multitude of symposium and other educational programs. See http://www.CynthiaStamer.com for more details.
A Fellow in the American College of Employee Benefits Counsel, recognized in International Who’s Who, and Board Certified in Labor & Employment Law, attorney and health benefit consultant Cynthia Marcotte Stamer has 25 plus years’ experience advising and representing private and public employers, employer and union plan sponsors, employee benefit plans, associations, their fiduciaries, administrators, and vendors, group health, Medicare and Medicaid Advantage, and other insurers, governmental leaders and others on health and other employee benefit. employment, insurance and related matters. A well-known and prolific author and popular speaker Board Certified in Labor & Employment Law, Ms. Stamer presently serves as Co-Chair of the ABA RPTE Section Welfare Plan Committee, Vice Chair of the ABA TIPS Employee Benefit Committee, an ABA Joint Committee on Employee Benefits Representative, an Editorial Advisory Board Member of the Institute of Human Resources (IHR/HR.com), Insurance Thought Leadership,com and Employee Benefit News, and various other publications. With extensive domestic and international regulatory and public policy experience, Ms. Stamer also has worked extensively domestically and internationally on public policy and regulatory advocacy on health and other employee benefits, human resources, insurance, tax, compliance and other matters and representing clients in dealings with the US Congress, Departments of Labor, Treasury, Health & Human Services, as well as state legislatures, attorneys general, insurance and labor departments, and other agencies and regulators. A prolific author and popular speaker, Ms. Stamer regularly authors materials and conducts workshops and professional, management and other training and serves on the faculty and planning committees of a multitude of symposium and other educational programs. See http://www.CynthiaStamer.com. for more details.
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The temporary reinsurance fee and risk adjustment provisions of ACA are intended to generate $25 billion in revenues from assessments on insured and self-insured group health plans that the federal government plans to use to partially reimburse commercial insurers writing policies in public exchanges for individuals with high health care costs.
ACA generally provides that the reinsurance fee applies to covered entities that are not excluded under ACA in 2014, 2015, and 2016. Under Final Rules published March 5, 2014, the insurer pays the fee for insured plans but where a group health plan is self-insured, the plan itself pays the fee. Final Rules published March 5, 2014 provide that self-insured and self-administered plans are exempt from the fees in 2015 and 2016, however.
Non-employer established voluntary employees beneficiary associations under Internal Revenue Code § 501(c)(9) entities.
That a controlled group does not have to report for a controlled group member who would not qualify as a covered entity in the 2014 fee year if it were a single-person covered entities.
For the 2014 fee year, the IRS and Treasury will not treat any entity as a covered entity if it is excluded from the definition of a covered entity because it qualifies for one of the exclusions under § 9010(c)(2) for the entire 2013 data year or qualifies for one of the exclusions under § 9010(c)(2) for the entire 2014 fee year, which began on January 1, 2014. Since the IRS and Treasury will not treat such an entity as a covered entity, it should not report its net premiums written for the 2013 data year.
For the 2014 fee year, a controlled group must report net premiums written only for those persons who are controlled group members at the end of the day on December 31 of the 2013 data year and who would qualify as a covered entity in the fee year if it were a single-person covered entity. A controlled group should not report net premiums written for any controlled group member who would not qualify as a covered entity in the 2014 fee year if it were a single-person covered entity. Such entity will be treated as a member of the controlled group for other purposes, however, such as joint and several liability for the fee amount allocated to the controlled group.
The IRS and Treasury will publish additional guidance in the future about the scope of the exclusions in ACA § 9010(c)(2) from the general definition of the term covered entity for fee years after the 2014 fee year.
Any entity that needs to correct a previously submitted Form 8963, “Report of Health Insurance Provider Information,” due to the clarification provided in this notice must do so by faxing the corrected Form 8963 to 877-797-0235 (a toll-free number) no later than Monday, August 18, 2014. The IRS cannot process a Form 8963 received after this date. The IRS and Treasury recognize that entities will not know whether they qualify for one of the exclusions under § 9010(c)(2) for the entire 2014 fee year until the end of 2014. Entities that reasonably project that they will qualify for an exclusion under § 9010(c)(2) for the entire 2014 fee year may submit a corrected Form 8963 on or before August 18, 2014, even though the 2014 fee year is not yet over.
The clarifying guidance of Notice 2014-47 comes as the Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) is warning group health insurers third party administrators (TPAs) of self-insured group health plans that are covered entities to get moving on their preparations to register and conduct required interactions with the EDGE Server that HHS plans to use to collect and administer the data necessary to administer the temporary reinsurance fee and risk adjustment provisions of ACA by mid-September, 2014.
Group health plans and their administrators are urged to evaluate and confirm their status and if necessary, file a corrected Form 8963 no later than August 18, 2014. Additionally, any health insurance issuer or non-excepted group health plan should ensure that appropriate arrangements are in place to fulfill responsibilities for registration and use of the EDGE system as required to meet the reporting requirements.
The Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) is warning group health insurers third party administrators (TPAs) of self-insured group health plans and to get moving on their preparations to register and conduct required interactions with the EDGE Server that HHS plans to use to collect and administer the data necessary to administer the temporary reinsurance fee and risk adjustment provisions of the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act (ACA). HHS says insurers and TPAs have work to complete by 9/27 to prepare to comply with the EDGE system data reporting that HHS will require them to conduct as part of ACA’s reinsurance premium and risk adjustment risk sharing provisions.
ACA provides that the reinsurance fee applies in 2014, 2015, and 2016. Under Final Rules published March 5, 2014, the insurer pays the fee for insured plans but where a group health plan is self-insured, the plan itself pays the fee. Final Rules published March 5, 2014 provide that self-insured and self-administered plans are exempt from the fees in 2015 and 2016, however.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) plans to run the first risk adjustment and reinsurance calculation estimates in mid-December, 2014 using data to be collected from insurers and TPAs on the EDGE system.
In an August 7, 2014 webinar, HHS gave issuers and TPAs an overview of the EDGE server implementation schedule and guidance on the key pre-registration tasks that must be completed prior to the start of the EDGE server registration process scheduled to begin on September 27, 2014.
HHS warned issuers and TPAs must be ready to start the EDGE registration process on September 27, 2014 in order to have sufficient time to set-up their servers and test their data submissions prior to the mid-December estimate calculations.
In the webinar, HHS outlined a series of key pre-registration activities that issuers and TPAs of self-insured health plans impacted by the new requirements need to complete between now and September 26, 2014, in order to prepare for EDGE implementation.
Review the pre-registration checklist, timeline and other information shared by CMS in the 90-minute presentation here.

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