Chaz
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Everything posted by Chaz
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Dropping spouse coverage- not COBRA event?
Chaz replied to Flyboyjohn's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
It would not be a COBRA qualifying event but Peter's comment above is right on point. -
I agree with Flyboyjohn's conclusion but not the analysis. The Seller's plan is a group health plan not individual coverage so there is nothing in the ACA preventing Buyer from paying the premiums. What the parties need to be concerned about is whether this arrangement creates a Buyer-sponsored group health plan itself, which would require Buyer to offer COBRA upon the occurrence of a qualifying event. For instance, if the employee terminates employment with Buyer while covered under Seller's plan, Buyer may have to extend coverage under Seller's plan for 18 months after the loss of coverage as a result of the termination. (EBIA has a good summary of the issue and its uncertain application.) Better for Buyer to pay additional after-tax compensation in the amount of the COBRA premiums for a specified period. This amount can of course be grossed up to make the employee whole.
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Employee's COBRA coverage was terminated on April 1 retroactively to February 1 due to nonpayment of premiums. Is the employee precluded from obtaining Marketplace coverage now because his coverage was terminated outside the 60-day window Special Enrollment Period? I believe this is the case but am wondering if anyone has run across this situation.
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FSA admin error needing to refund from prior year
Chaz replied to pattyp's topic in Other Kinds of Welfare Benefit Plans
Depending on the circumstances and the terms of your cafeteria plan, you may be able to adjudicate the claim manually and, if the claim if for a qualifying expense and was timely submitted, reimburse this employee under the FSA without using the TPA. You and your HR department should speak with counsel as resolving these issues are highly dependent on the facts. -
Are you sure that the TPA is an ERISA fiduciary (at least for activities other than claims adjudication)? In my experience in the health plan area, that would rarely be the case. By contrast, the Information Letter you cite is with respect to a trustee of a multiemployer plan who clearly is a fiduciary. Virtually of the ASA agreements I review permit the TPA to delegate certain functions to its affiliates and there is no disclosure of how much of the fees go to the affiliates. That is even the case where the plan sponsor is a multiemployer health and welfare fund.
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Thanks Peter. I am coming at this from the Fund's side of the table, not the employer's. The trust documents are silent.
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Does a multiemployer health & welfare fund have to provide a requesting contributing employer with an actuarial report or financial statements? I believe this requirement exists for multiemployer pension funds but I am not sure if the same rules apply to H&W funds. Thanks!
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COBRA premium calculation - info to participant
Chaz replied to waid10's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
I was referring to the document production requirements under ERISA Section 502. Courts are all over the place with respect to which documents a plan has to produce pursuant to a participant's request. -
COBRA premium calculation - info to participant
Chaz replied to waid10's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
This is definitely something you should speak with counsel about and not go alone. There is case law all over the board regarding disclosure requirements and you need someone to carefully review the actual participant request. -
Medicare Premium Reimbursement program through 125 plan
Chaz replied to Belgarath's topic in Cafeteria Plans
The MSP rules make it generally impossible for a 20+ employee employer to reimburse Medicare premiums, with or without a QSEHRA. It may work for employers with fewer than 20 employees. -
There are a couple of groups of forums that I have generally have no need to see ("Retirement Plans" believe it or not and "User Groups"). Before the upgrade, I could hide those groups. After the upgrade, when I first go to the site, both those groups are unhidden and I manually have to hide them. It's not the biggest thing in the world, but is there a way to make them so I do not have to manually do hide them?
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Disabled Adult Child
Chaz replied to karen1027's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
Again, unless there is an applicable state law, the question is not "can" but "does." The only way you can tell for sure is to review the plan document/summary plan description. I will say that a plan design permitting an adult, nondependent child of an employee to be eligible for coverage would be HIGHLY unusual. There may be a way to require the ex-spouse employee to cover the child through a QMCSO process but that is outside the area of my expertise and you would have to consult with an attorney who practices family law. -
That sounds like a group health plan subject to an annual limit and one that is not integrated with the employer's major medical plan.
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Consumer directed H&W plan for new hires
Chaz replied to alexa's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
You have to consider the comparable contributions requirements (if not using a cafeteria plan for HSA contributions) or the cafeteria plan nondiscrimination tests (if using a cafeteria plan). Also, you must consider the self-insured plan nondiscrimination test if your PPO is self-insured. -
An employer has a large amount of heath FSA forfeitures on its books. Can it use these forfeitures to pay for TPA expenses for the health FSA that were incurred in years prior to the year in which the forfeiture relates. For instance, can it use 2016 forfeitures to pay (in effect, reimbursing itself) for administrative expenses incurred in, for example 2010?
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Disabled Adult Child
Chaz replied to karen1027's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
(1) If the plan is self-insured, the state will not matter as ERISA generally preempts state insurance law with respect to such plans. If it is a fully insured plan, the state may have a law requiring extended coverage so it does matter in that case. I should have mentioned that in my initial answer. (2) There are varying definitions of "disabled" but it generally will include something along the lines of the child being unable to work by reason of a physical or mental handicap and being chiefly dependent on the employee for support, etc. -
Calculating Affordability
Chaz replied to Sherwood8189's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
As an aside, this plan design might violate the cafeteria plan nondiscrimination tests. Hopefully, this is something that you have considered. -
Disabled Adult Child
Chaz replied to karen1027's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
This is a plan design issue. Many, but not all, employers permit disabled children (and other relatives) who meet the definition of tax dependent under the Code to continue coverage past age 26. It's not a question of "can"; it's a question of "does." The only way to determine that is to review the eligibility sections of the plan document and/or summary plan description for the parent's plan. -
Under the Affordable Care Act, a cafeteria plan cannot be used to pay premiums for individual policies providing major medical coverage. It is possible to permit payment of premiums for individual dental policies but it raises COBRA and ERISA issues for which you should speak to counsel or at least your insurance broker before doing so.
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Termination of a dependent care FSA
Chaz replied to Carol V. Calhoun's topic in Other Kinds of Welfare Benefit Plans
I responded on the cafeteria plan board but see this here and it looks like you have already at least considered some of my thoughts. Off the top of my head, though, I believe that the IRS specifically prohibits allocating forfeitures based on experience, which you would be doing with respect to the guy in your example if you give him a non-uniform distribution. -
Stop Paying Retiree Subsidy?
Chaz replied to Fielding Mellish's topic in Health Plans (Including ACA, COBRA, HIPAA)
My initial thought is that, depending on the language in the communication to participants explaining the arrangement (and also the plan document/SPD), an affected participant may have a contractual claim against Plan 1. Hopefully, the communication and plan documentation contains appropriate language regarding the ability of the trustees to change the subsidy for coverage under Plan 2. -
This is an interesting question. I would guess without researching that an employer can have more flexibility in terminating a DCAP than it would an ERISA benefit even though there are employee contributions involved but I have no authority for that. In any event, I would hesitate in having the employer keep the contributions. Other than that, in the absence of guidance, I would try to come up with an equitable solution such as having an extended run-out period, using the amounts to pay for plan administration, or providing for a reversion to participants in line with the IRS's guidance on forfeitures. Perhaps more than one of the above will do the trick. I would look at state fiduciary law as well as check to see if there are any applicable employment laws that might limit the employer's ability to do any of those things. Of course, the plan document should also be reviewed to see what it provides regarding termination.
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Employer A was misinformed. There is no requirement under the ACA regarding eligibility for FSAs. In fact, not permitting these part-timers to participate may implicate the Section 125 nondiscrimination tests depending on the demographics of the employee population.
