The bill creates the large employer health-care support enterprise (enterprise) to impose, assess, and collect the large employer health-care support fee (enterprise fee)
in the amount of $2,300
for each supported worker for the calendar year
in an amount determined by the enterprise board (enterprise board) that reflects the costs of the services provided by the enterprise
. A worker who is receiving medical assistance benefits under the state medical assistance program,
except for a worker eligible for medical assistance benefits based on disability,
is a supported
worker
(supported worker).
An employer is subject to the enterprise fee if the employer is a large employer, which is defined in the bill as an employer that has 500 or more supported workers (large employer). An employer is exempted from paying the enterprise fee if the employer:
Provides affordable health coverage to all workers working 20 or more hours per week or 80 or more hours per month;
Is a franchisee of the employer;
Is a nonprofit employer;
Is a public employer; or
Has a collective bargaining agreement with its employees that includes health-care coverage.
The business purpose
s
of the enterprise
are
to
use enterprise fee revenue to
help large employers retain supported workers who are not provided employer-sponsored affordable health coverage by using enterprise fee revenue to:
Help finance the costs for medical assistance benefits for large employers'
supported
workers
; and
Provide reimbursement grants to large employers for some or all of an employer's costs incurred for allowing a worker to buy into an employer-sponsored health benefit plan, should the employer choose to participate in the worker buy-in program created in the bill.
This
These business
service
s
reduce
s
lost productivity due to worker illness and training costs to replace workers who may otherwise seek employment that provides affordable health coverage.
Starting with a review of the 2027 calendar year,
the department of health care policy and financing (HCPF)
every employer that employed 500 or more workers in the state
shall prepare
an annual employer report on or before January 31, 2028, and on or before the same date each year thereafter, that includes information about the employer's employees, including the employee's name, date of birth, hours worked, and dates of employment for the preceding calendar year. An employer may seek an exemption from the requirement to file the annual employer report by demonstrating that
it provides affordable health coverage to all workers working 20 or more hours per week or 80 or more hours per month. Upon receipt of the annual employer report, the enterprise shall determine whether an employer is
a large employer
and shall issue a
report by March of the
following
same
calendar year that identifies large employers by their number of supported workers for the preceding calendar year
and impose the enterprise fee on each large employer
. An employer may contest the employer's identification as a large employer. Once identified, a large employer shall either pay the enterprise fee for each of the large employer's supported workers or demonstrate that it
provides
will offer
affordable health coverage to all workers working 20 or more hours per week or 80 or more hours per month. The enterprise may adjust the amount of the enterprise fee to reflect the cost of the services, for inflation, or for other reasons.
A large employer commits a petty offense and is subject to a civil penalty for
The enterprise shall contract with the department of revenue to collect and enforce the payment of the enterprise fee on behalf of the enterprise, including the
failure to provide information necessary to calculate the enterprise fee or to either timely pay the enterprise fee or demonstrate that the large employer offers affordable health coverage as specified in the bill.
The department of revenue may collect interest and penalties and institute collection actions on behalf of the enterprise.
Enterprise revenue is used to
support the
pay for
payment of
medical assistance benefits
for working-age adults
under the state medical assistance program,
and
to
increase reimbursement rates for
ensure access to
health-care providers providing medical assistance program services,
to ensure worker access to medical services
and to pay for large employer reimbursement grants under the worker buy-in program for large employers that pay the enterprise fee.
The enterprise is governed by the enterprise board, and the enterprise board shall report annually to the general assembly on the enterprise revenue and the enterprise's use of the enterprise revenue in support of large employers.
If the enterprise determines that the enterprise
to
would
receive more than $100 million dollars in its first 5 fiscal years, the
state treasurer shall credit the additional fee revenue to the large employer fee cash fund created in the state treasury for administration by HCPF, and that fee revenue is subject to the state fiscal year spending limit imposed by section 20 of article X of the state constitution and the excess revenues cap. The money in the large employer fee cash fund shall be used by HCPF to pay for costs for medical assistance benefits to support large employers' supported workers
enterprise shall reduce the amount of the enterprise fee.
(Note: Italicized words indicate new material added to the original summary; dashes through words indicate deletions from the original summary.)
(Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.)