Changes to collective bargaining agreement medical and premium share

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Mintz Law Firm

Patricia Moran, Employment, Attorney, Mintz Levin, Law firm

Email 617-348-3085 HB Ad Slot The Affordable Care Act’s Employer Mandate and the Collectively Bargained Workforce Friday, February 8, 2013

Patricia Moran, Labor & Employment Lawyer with Mintz Levin

Related Practices & Jurisdictions

As 2014 rapidly approaches, employers of all sizes and all industries are working hard to avoid the Affordable Care Act’s (the “Act”) Employer Mandate, now appearing in the Internal Revenue Code, Section 4980H. For employers who employ a stable, salaried workforce, and who already sponsor a robust health plan for that workforce, the transition to 2014 will be largely seamless. But step away from that model and the terrain begins to get rocky. The Act’s rules are less easy to apply for employers with large cohorts of variable hour employees (such as those in the staffing and restaurant industries); those with untraditional ways of counting service (such as educational institutions) and — the subject of this advisory — employers subject to collective bargaining agreements who provide medical benefits through Multiemployer Plans.

A Very Brief & Over-Simplified Overview of the Employer Mandate

Our client alert issued January 16, 2013 and accessible here discusses the Act’s Employer Mandate at length. Here are the highlights of the Employer Mandate:

Which Employers Must Comply?

4980H applies to “applicable large employers,” defined as employers with at least 50 “full time equivalent” employees.

What Must an Employer Do to Avoid a Penalty?

Offer health care coverage to all full time employees (defined as those employees who work at least 30 hours per week) which:

Note: if an employer does not meet these requirements, any employees below 400% of the Federal Poverty Line will be eligible for a subsidy on a state exchange.

Which Employees Are Considered “Full Time”?

“Full time” employees are those who work at least 30 hours per week.