Self-Insured Multiemployer Health Plans Could Be
Exempt From ACA Reinsurance Fee In 2015 And 2016
The Department of Health and
Human Services issued a final rule March 5 on the reinsurance fee imposed
under the Affordable Care Act. The reinsurance fee is imposed on group health
plans. If the plan is insured, the insurer pays the fee, and if the plan is
self-insured, the plan itself pays the fee. The reinsurance fee applies in
2014, 2015 and 2016. It equals the yearly rate times the number of individuals
covered by the plan, with the yearly rate being $63 for 2014, $44 for 2015 and
to be announced for 2016.
Multiemployer health plans
are subject to the reinsurance fee. The final rule does not provide any relief
for these plans for 2014. However, for 2015 and 2016, the final rule exempts
from the fee any multiemployer plan which is both self-funded and
self-administered. It is easy to determine whether the plan is self-funded. The
key question is whether the plan is self-administered.
The final rule says the
following on whether the plan is self-administered:
To be self-administered, the
plan must retain responsibility for claims payment, claims adjudication
(including internal appeals), and enrollment (such functions being the
"core functions"). Thus, if the plan uses a third party for these
functions, it would not be treated as self-administered for these purposes.
As exceptions, the plan does
not fail to be treated as self-administered merely because it-
(1) Outsources
core functions to an unrelated third party, provided that the underlying
benefits are pharmacy benefits or ACA-excepted benefits.
(2) Outsources a
de minimis amount of its activity, even if core functions, for non-pharmacy or
non-ACA-excepted benefits to a third party administrator (a "de minimis
amount" means up to 5%, as measured generally by the number or cost of
enrollment or claims processing transactions for non-pharmacy and
non-ACA-excepted benefits which are outsourced).
(3) “Leases"
a network from an unrelated third party and also obtains provider network
development, claims repricing, and similar services.
(4) It uses a
service provider that is affiliated with the plan, other than with an employer
that contributes to the plan (admittedly this exception (4) is less than
clear).
Source: Employee
Benefit Adviser
No comments:
Post a Comment