Health Care Reform Upheld: Employers Must Plan to Comply
- Plans must provide dependent coverage for children up to age 26 (effective in 2011; until 2014, grandfathered plans need not provide coverage to dependents who are eligible for other employer-provided coverage).
- Plans must provide for preventive care without cost-sharing (effective in 2011; non-grandfathered plans only).
- Plans must provide an enhanced internal appeals process and an external independent review stage (effective in 2011; non-grandfathered plans only).
- Plans must not rescind coverage retroactively, except in situations involving fraud (effective in 2011).
- Plans must not impose pre-existing condition exclusions for participants under the age of 19 (effective in 2011) and for all participants (effective in 2014).
- Insured plans must not discriminate in favor of highly compensated participants, under rules similar to the nondiscrimination rules already applicable to self-insured plans (effective in 2011, but enforcement delayed until regulations are issued; non-grandfathered plans only).
- Plans must not place lifetime limits on essential health benefits (effective in 2011) and may only place annual dollar limits that are at or above specified levels (with no annual limit permitted from and after 2014).
- Plans must provide an eight-page Summary of Benefits and Coverage upon application, enrollment, and re-enrollment in the plan. Also, a notice of material modifications describing plan changes must be provided 60 days before modifications are effective (both effective in 2013).
- Flexible spending account contributions by an employee must be limited to $2,500 per year (effective in 2013).
- Plans must not have waiting periods for entry into a plan in excess of 90 days (effective in 2014).
- Employers with more than 200 employees must automatically enroll full-time employees (delayed until regulations are issued—will not be effective by the original 2014 effective date).
- The level of penalties/incentives for wellness plans may be as much as 30% of the cost of coverage—an increase from the current 20%; may rise up to 50% by regulation (effective in 2014).
Tax Reporting. Employers must report the annual cost of health coverage on each employee’s W-2, supplement information already reported on annual Form 5500 reports, and pay a per-plan-participant fee to the government for research purposes.
Based on the recent Supreme Court decision, all of the mandates set forth in the ACA that impact employer-provided group health plans will officially take effect as scheduled unless Congress takes further action.
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