2010
Health Care Legislation – Employer Requirements to Offer
Coverage
The recently enacted health
overhaul legislation requires certain employers to offer
and contribute to their workers’ health insurance or pay
a penalty. Under the new law, effective for months beginning
after Dec. 31, 2013, a large employer that does not offer
coverage for all its full-time employees, offers minimum
essential coverage that is unaffordable, or offers minimum
essential coverage that consists of a plan under which
the plan’s share of the total allowed cost of benefits
is less than 60%, is required to pay a penalty if any
full-time employee is certified to the employer as having
purchased health insurance through a state exchange with
respect to which a premium tax credit or cost-sharing
reduction is allowed or paid to the employee. Here are
the details:
Who is subject
to the employer mandate? Only an “applicable
large employer,” defined as someone who employed an average
of at least 50 full-time employees during the preceding
calendar year, is subject to the requirement to offer
coverage. Most small businesses, since they have fewer
than 50 employees, are thus exempt from the employer requirement.
In counting the number of employees for purposes of determining
whether an employer is an applicable large employer, a
full-time employee (meaning, for any month, an employee
working an average of at least 30 hours or more each week)
is counted as one employee and all other employees are
counted on a pro-rated basis. However, even an employer
with 50 or more employees isn’t subject to the penalty
for not offering coverage if the employer doesn’t have
any full-time employees who are certified to the employer
as having purchased health insurance through a state exchange
with respect to which a premium tax credit or cost-sharing
reduction is allowed or paid to the employee. In other
words, if an employer doesn’t have any full-time employees
who have a lower income that might qualify him or her
to receive a subsidy when purchasing a health plan in
the proposed health insurance exchange, the employer will
not pay a “pay or play” penalty.
Penalty for employers
not offering coverage. An applicable large employer
who fails to offer its full-time employees and their dependents
the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential coverage
under an employer-sponsored plan for any month is subject
to a penalty if at least one of its full-time employees
is certified to the employer as having enrolled in health
insurance coverage purchased through a state exchange
with respect to which a premium tax credit or cost-sharing
reduction is allowed or paid to the employee. The penalty
for any month is an excise tax equal to the number of
full-time employees over a 30-employee threshold during
the applicable month (regardless of how many employees
are receiving a premium tax credit or cost-sharing reduction)
multiplied by one-twelfth of $2,000. For example, if an
employer fails to offer minimum essential coverage and
has 60 full-time employees, 10 of whom receive a tax credit
for the year for enrolling in a state exchange-offered
plan, the employer will owe $2,000 for each employee over
the 30-employee threshold, for a total penalty of $60,000
($2,000 multiplied by 30 (60 minus 30)). This penalty
is assessed on a monthly basis.
Penalty for employers
that offer coverage but have at least one employee receiving
a premium tax credit. An applicable large employer
who offers coverage but has at least one full-time employee
receiving a premium tax credit or cost-sharing reduction
is subject to a penalty. The penalty is an excise tax
that is imposed for each employee who receives a premium
tax credit or cost-sharing reduction for health insurance
purchased through a state exchange. For each full-time
employee receiving a premium tax credit or cost-sharing
subsidy through a state exchange for any month, the employer
is required to pay an amount equal to one-twelfth of $3,000.
The penalty for each employer for any month is capped
at an amount equal to the number of full-time employees
during the month (regardless of how many employees are
receiving a premium tax credit or cost-sharing reduction)
in excess of 30, multiplied by one-twelfth of $2,000.
For example, if an employer offers health coverage and
has 60 full-time employees, 15 of whom receive a tax credit
for the year for enrolling in a state exchange-offered
plan, the employer will owe a penalty of $3,000 for each
employee receiving a tax credit, for a total penalty of
$45,000. The maximum penalty for this employer is capped
at the amount of the penalty that it would have been assessed
for a failure to provide coverage, or $60,000 ($2,000
multiplied by 30 (60 minus 30). Since the calculated penalty
of $45,000 is less than the maximum amount, the employer
pays the $45,000 calculated penalty. This penalty is assessed
on a monthly basis.
Requirement to
offer “free choice vouchers.” After 2013, employers
offering minimum essential coverage through an eligible
employer-sponsored plan and paying a portion of that coverage
will have to provide qualified employees with a voucher
whose value could be applied to purchase of a health plan
through the insurance exchange. Qualified employees would
be those employees: who do not participate in the employer’s
health plan; whose required contribution for employer
sponsored minimum essential coverage exceeds 8%, but does
not exceed 9.8% of household income; and whose total household
income does not exceed 400% of the poverty line for the
family. The value of the voucher would be equal to the
dollar value of the employer contribution to the employer
offered health plan. Employers providing free choice vouchers
will not be subject to penalties for employees that receive
a voucher.
If you would like more
details about aspect of the new healthcare law, please
do not hesitate to call
Mark Samila at 812.423.3183.
Not
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