By Susan Rupe InsuranceNewsNet
January 10, 2019
If there’s one bit
of advice for health and benefits brokers in the coming year, it’s look to the
states.
That’s the word
from Chase Cannon, vice president and deputy chief operating officer of NFP, an
insurance broker and consultant providing employee benefits through a network
of affiliates.
A December federal
court decision ruled the Affordable Care Act “invalid,” with a judge determining
that the 2017 tax cut bill knocked the constitutional foundation from under the
health care bill by eliminating the individual mandate penalty.
While the future of
the ACA is up in the air, states and even some cities are stepping in with
their own laws to keep people in coverage, Cannon said.
New York City Mayor
Bill de Blasio introduced an option called New York City Care with the goal of
getting everyone in the city enrolled in health coverage, even undocumented
immigrants, Cannon said.
“Other states are
enacting or contemplating their own individual mandate,” he said. “Some states
are thinking, if the ACA is struck down or the individual mandate is struck
down, why don’t we enact our own individual mandate? New Jersey did that and
other states are looking at it.”
If states are going
to enact their own laws regarding health coverage, “it’s really going to create
a challenge,” Cannon said.
“You’ll get this
patchwork of laws across different states. Maybe the idea is the same but the
details can create a lot of questions. What’s the level of coverage you will
require? Do all employer plans count? What about limited benefit plans, do they
count? How will your citizens verify they have coverage?”
This will creates
problems for employer groups and for anyone in the industry who needs to
understand what is required under a set of new laws, he said.
'Huge
Challenge'
More states also
are enacting their own laws regarding paid sick leave, which creates challenges
for the group health and benefits market.
“Particularly for
multistate employer groups, they have a huge challenge on educating themselves
on the new rules as well as implement changes to their leave policies. This
will impact their benefits as well,” Cannon said. “Being able to understand and
implement a leave program that that takes these laws into account can be a real
challenge.”
Wellness programs
represent another area in which employers and benefit brokers must look out for
in 2019, Cannon said.
Wellness programs
fall under the purview of several different laws such as federal privacy laws
or the Americans with Disabilities Act. Cannon said employers who implement
wellness programs will need advice from brokers on whether something like
putting a health insurance surcharge on an employee or testing workers’ blood
for biometric levels and tying that into the group health plan is legal.
“Brokers need to
understand how things coming down from regulatory agencies and from the
courts will impact how employers will offer benefits to their employees,”
he said.
Susan Rupe is
managing editor for InsuranceNewsNet. She formerly served as communications
director for an insurance agents' association and was an award-winning
newspaper reporter and editor. Contact her atSusan.Rupe@innfeedback.com. Follow her
on Twitter @INNsusan.
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