Insuring Resources Commentary:
A key talking point or sound bite from the effort to reform health care and insurance access for the last year has been, “ if you like your health plan, you can keep it.” Well, here are the details in the article below.
Essentially very few changes are required of “grandfathered plans” but I’ll detail here the key issues and or requirements that ARE required of these “grandfathered plans”.
Plans that are “granted” grandfather status will be able to maintain the benefits they have and their contracted providers. However these requirements do apply:
1) the mandatory requirement to include the value of coverage on each employee's Form W-2 (effective January 1, 2011),
2) the large-employer mandate to offer affordable coverage to full-time employees (effective January 1, 2014),
3) the high-cost health plan excise tax (effective January 1, 2018) and
4) the mandatory automatic enrollment requirement (effective once regulations are issued).
For more details see the italicized highlights below within the article
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Health Care Reform: Understanding the Grandfather Rules
June 04, 2010 | Mondaq Business Briefing
Copyright 2010 Gale Group, Inc.
The coverage mandates and insurance reforms in Subtitles A and C of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) will require significant changes to employer-sponsored health plans. Several of the mandates become effective in 2010 or 2011, requiring immediate attention, while others become effective over the next several years. Also, though PPACA generally applies to all group health plans and health insurance coverage going forward, certain existing plans and coverage are exempted, or "grandfathered," from a number of the new requirements. The grandfather provision delays the time a new rule will apply to a grandfathered plan in some cases and in other cases seems to provide a complete exemption from the rules.
The grandfather provision, found in section 1251 of PPACA1, is intended to provide plan sponsors and insurers with greater certainty regarding their current benefit arrangements. Grandfathered plans will be able to maintain many of their current coverage provisions and will require fewer changes to plan documents and administrative procedures in order to comply with the new law. However, with its caveats, ambiguities and exceptions, the grandfather provision has raised as many questions as it has answered, particularly for large employers with complex benefits arrangements.
This article addresses the ten most frequently asked questions regarding grandfather protection for large employer-sponsored group health plans. The article also includes a quick-reference chart with details on key provisions that are applicable to grandfathered plans, as well as a final section summarizing the rules that grandfathered plans are able to avoid - at least for the time being.
Q-1: What is a grandfathered group health plan? A-1: A grandfathered group health plan is a plan in which an individual was enrolled on March 23, 2010. A grandfathered plan can be a single employer plan, a multi-employer plan, or a multiple employer plan; it can also be an insured or a self-insured arrangement.
Q-2: My plan appears to be grandfathered. What does that mean?
A-2: Depending on the provision, grandfathered plans may benefit from either a delayed effective date for compliance with, or a total exception from, certain insurance market reforms and coverage mandates under Subtitles A and C of PPACA. However, it is important to note that grandfathering does not protect a plan from the reforms found in other parts of the statute, including, for example, the mandatory requirement to include the value of coverage on each employee's Form W-2 (effective January 1, 2011), the large-employer mandate to offer affordable coverage to full-time employees (effective January 1, 2014), the high-cost health plan excise tax (effective January 1, 2018) and the mandatory automatic enrollment requirement (effective once regulations are issued).
Q-3: Is grandfathering indefinite? In other words, for any rule that does not expressly include a delayed effective date, does the grandfather rule mean that we will never need to amend the plan for that provision? A-3: While the grandfather provision does not include a general sunset date for non-collectively bargained grandfathered plans, it is unlikely that these plans will have a permanent exception from compliance with any of the insurance market reforms and coverage mandates in the statute that do not expressly include a delayed effective date. Given the flexibility of the language of the grandfather rule, the federal agencies invested with regulatory authority over the new law (specifically, the Internal Revenue Service, the Department of Labor, and the Department of Health and Human Services) are likely to issue guidance that places certain parameters around grandfather protection. Q-4: If I add new employees (or new enrollees) to my currently grandfathered plan, does the plan lose its grandfathered status?
A-4: No. Section 1251(c) of PPACA specifically provides that a grandfathered plan may enroll new employees and their families in the plan without losing the plan's grandfather status. In addition, the statute also states that grandfathering continues to apply to the coverage of an individual covered by the plan on the date of enactment regardless of whether the individual renews coverage or adds family members after the date of enactment. Although the statute does not specifically state that a plan may add other new enrollees (i.e., current employees who have not previously enrolled in the plan), it is unlikely that enrollment of such employees in the ordinary course will cause the plan to lose its grandfathered status. Guidance is needed as to whether more significant changes in enrollment will cause a plan to lose grandfather status (e.g., the enrollment of a large group of employees following a corporate acquisition).
Q-5: Can I amend my grandfathered plan without losing the grandfathered status?
A-5: Presumably some amendments are permitted, but the complete answer to this question is still unclear. Unlike the grandfather provisions of other legislation, section 1251 of PPACA does not expressly prohibit amendments to a grandfathered plan, nor does it contain a mandate requiring plan sponsors to maintain benefits at current levels in order to preserve grandfather status. Arguably, this means that plan sponsors may freely amend their grandfathered plans without jeopardizing the plan's grandfathered status. However, it is unlikely that such a liberal reading of the provision accurately reflects legislative intent. Until further guidance is issued, plan sponsors must consider amendments to grandfathered plans on a case-by-case basis to determine (1) whether the amendment substantively alters the nature of the plan's coverage in a manner that may jeopardize the plan's grandfathered status, and (2) the true cost impact of losing grandfather status.
Q-6: How does the grandfather rule apply to collectively bargained plans?
A-6: Section 1251(d) of PPACA provides that health insurance coverage maintained pursuant to one or more collective bargaining agreements that were ratified before March 23, 2010, is not subject to the insurance market reforms and coverage mandates in Subtitles A and C of PPACA until the date on which the last collective bargaining agreement relating to coverage terminates. The provision also states that any coverage amendments made pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement that amends the coverage to conform with Subtitles A or C will not cause the plan to lose its grandfathered status. However, the application of the rule to collectively bargained plans remains unclear in several respects. For instance, the statute does not clarify whether the termination of the collective bargaining agreement subjects the collectively bargained plan to all provisions of Subtitles A and C, or whether "regular" grandfathering (as described above) will then apply. In addition, the language of the statute suggests that grandfathering may only apply to fully insured (not self-insured) collectively bargained plans. Finally, it is also unclear how the grandfather rule will apply to plans subject to "evergreen" bargaining agreements.
Q-7: Are all of my medical plans that covered employees as of March 23, 2010, grandfathered?
A-7: Grandfathering applies to all group health plans that are welfare benefit plans under ERISA section 3(1) and all health insurance coverage to the extent that the plan or coverage provides medical care to employees and their dependents through insurance, reimbursement, or otherwise, even if coverage is offered through a medical service policy or an HMO offered by a health insurance issuer.
Q-8: Will my grandfathered plan satisfy the minimum essential coverage requirement under Section 5000A and 4980H of PPACA?
A-8: PPACA creates a new section 5000A of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), which mandates that individuals maintain "minimum essential coverage." PPACA also creates new IRC section 4980H, which mandates that large employers offer the minimum essential coverage to their full-time employees. Each of these provisions becomes effective January 1, 2014. To the extent that an individual is covered under, or an employer offers, a grandfathered plan (that otherwise meets the provisions of the PPACA, as amended) the individual and the employer will be treated as satisfying the respective mandates as of the effective date.
Q-9: When will I need to make amendments to the plan to comply with the market reform provisions that are applicable to grandfathered plans? A-9: The effective date for each of the provisions applicable to grandfathered plans is outlined on the attached chart. Grandfathered plans should be amended to comply with these provisions before each applicable effective date. However, depending on individual circumstances, some employers that are in the process of drafting amendments for the 2011 plan year may consider making one set of amendments to comply with provisions that become effective as late as 2014. The last section of the chart lists provisions that it currently appears will never apply to grandfathered plans.
Q-10: Are the agencies planning to issue guidance on the grandfather provisions in PPACA in the near future?
A-10: While it is difficult to predict when any particular PPACA guidance will be issued, agency officials have informally indicated that clarifying the grandfather rules is an important issue that will likely receive priority as guidance is developed.
Sunday, June 6, 2010
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