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 In the News

Mass Health Care Reform Plan Overview

On April 12, 2006, Governor Mitt Romney signed into law legislation that would provide nearly universal health care coverage to state residents. Full implementation of the Massachusetts Health Care Reform Plan is expected by July 1, 2007, though certain provisions (such as the fair share premium contribution requirement described below) may take effect sooner. Physicians who have thought about the changes this law will generate may have looked at it primarily from the perspective of its affect on practices as health care providers, but the Health Care Reform Plan will also affect physician practices in their capacity as employers.

Businesses that have between ten and fifty full time employees are required to do certain things:
Implement Section 125 Plan
• You must adopt and maintain a Section 125 plan by July 1, 2007. On the plus side, this is a cost effective way for employers to offer their employees a way to buy health insurance using “pre-tax” money, with the added benefit of reducing the employer portion of your FICA taxes. A copy of the plan document must be filed with the Connector annually.

Fair Share Assessment
• Employers must make a “fair and reasonable” premium contribution. Failure to do so will subject you to the “Employer Fair Share Contribution” of up to $295 per employee per year. If you already provide coverage to as few as 25% of your full-time employees, or contribute at least 33% of the individual premium for full-time employees participating in the group health plan, you may be exempt from this requirement.

Free Rider Surcharge
• Employers will be considered a non-providing employer if they do not contribute to a health plan for employees or if they do not provide access to insurance and comply with HIRD reporting requirements (see below).
• Access is defined as allowing pre-tax deductions via a Section 125 plan for all employees and providing information on accessing insurance from the Connector (see below).

HIRD Form
• You must file an annual “Employer" Health Insurance Responsibility Disclosure (HIRD) form with the Division of Health Care Finance and Policy annually, and you must obtain from your employees who decline your offer of coverage, and retain for 3 years, an “Employee" HIRD form.

The Connector
One of the key features of the new Massachusetts health care law is the creation of a quasi-government agency – referred to as the “Connector" – to facilitate the purchase of health insurance. If you want to offer an employer sponsored health insurance plan via the Connector, you have the following options:
• The employer selects a “core” health insurance benefit level known as its “Benchmark” through the Connector. Health plans have been asked to develop three levels of plans, a “premier” level, a “value” level and a “minimum creditable” level.
• Your employees may select plans from different insurers as long as they stay within your “level”. Note: no employee, including owners, may select a plan in a higher or lower level or get the benefit of a higher employer contribution.

Non-Discrimination Rules
• Whether you secure group coverage through the Connector or elsewhere, you must offer a single level of benefits and premium contributions to all employees.
• For new group plans, two or more benefit levels can no longer be offered (PPO with an HMO, for example.)
• Groups can't pay a different percentage of the premium for different classes of employees. (can’t pay family premium for owners but single premium for others; can’t pay higher percentage of premium for “key employees” than for others.) It’s not clear, though, whether groups that had “dual choice” plans or different contributions in effect prior to January 1, 2007 will be able to keep them intact.
• Self-funded plans are exempt from non-discrimination provisions.

Note that many of the details of the new law are still being worked out and the information above may change.

PIAM Bulletin

Employee HIRD Form

Employer's Guide
Written by lawyers at the law firm of Mintz Levin, the guide provides helpful information for employers -- including physicians -- with 11 or more employees.

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