 
Provision of New Health Care Law Postponed
One Year
July 3, 2013
by Jenna Reed, jreed@glass.com,
and Casey Neeley, cneeley@glass.com
Employers will no longer be required to provide health care coverage
to employees starting January 1, 2014, as part of the Affordable
Care Act (ACA) and Mark Liston, president of Glass Doctor, says
this is good news for the industry.
According to reports from the Chicago
Tribune, one of the key provisions of ACA has been delayed
by the Obama administration, pushing back the effective date for
employee coverage to 2015.
"This is great news for all small businesses-regardless if
they have 50 employees or not," Liston says. "What we
have seen in the franchising sector is that companies are 'afraid
to grow.' There is so much uncertainty with the Affordable Care
Act and the ramifications for small businesses, franchised or not,
that companies are hesitant to hire and hesitant to grow in case
it is more onerous than it seems on the surface.
"The other thing I know is true is that companies that have
more than 50 employees are looking at ways to cut back many of those
employees to less than 30 hours a week," he adds. "The
longer this can be delayed, the better it is for small business
in the U.S."
In a post published on the U.S. Department of Treasury's website
July 2, assistant secretary for tax policy Mark J. Mazur said that
after listening to feedback from businesses and consumers, "The
Administration is announcing that it will provide an additional
year before the ACA mandatory employer and insurer reporting requirements
begin. This is designed to meet two goals. First, it will allow
us to consider ways to simplify the new reporting requirements consistent
with the law. Second, it will provide time to adapt health coverage
and reporting systems while employers are moving toward making health
coverage affordable and accessible for their employees.
"We recognize that this transition relief will make it impractical
to determine which employers owe shared responsibility payments
(under section 4980H) for 2014. Accordingly, we are extending this
transition relief to the employer shared responsibility payments.
These payments will not apply for 2014. Any employer shared responsibility
payments will not apply until 2015," he added.
Mazur further noted that the Obama administration continues to
encourage employers to expand coverage options for employees during
the 2014 transition period. Read the full post here.
Prior to the announcement, businesses with 50 or more employees
were expected to offer health care coverage to employees as of January
1, 2014, or face a variety of penalties for non-compliance.
For more information about the impact of health care reform, read
our feature What's the Deal in the July/August issue of AGRR
magazine.
This story is an original story by AGRR™ magazine/glassBYTEs.com™. Subscribe to AGRR™ Magazine.
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