//WebSights Header HTML Script Skip to Main Content
Blog

January 2024 | SSG Compliance Recap


January was a relatively quiet month on the employee benefits compliance front. The Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor (DOL) introduced a new rule laying out the guideline’s employers can follow to determine how to classify workers. The DOL also released Part 64 of its FAQs about Affordable Care Act (ACA) Implementation, to address coverage for preventive services and contraceptives and provide guidance on reasonable medical management techniques for contraception. 

New Employee Classification Rule

In January, the Department of Labor (DOL) Wage and Hour Division introduced a rule that changes the way workers are classified under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This Final Rule, effective March 11, 2024, offers a more comprehensive test to determine a worker's status, potentially making it more challenging to classify workers as independent contractors for FLSA purposes. The rule is limited to FLSA wage and hour requirements and does not impact rules related to retirement or health and welfare benefits, which are typically governed by ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code. However, this change could lead to confusion and possibly claims for benefits. Under the federal FLSA, employees are entitled to minimum wage, overtime pay and other benefits. Independent contractors are not entitled to such benefits, but generally have more flexibility.

The rule establishes a test examining six key factors:

  • Opportunity for profit or loss
  • Investments by the worker and employer
  • Permanence of the work relationship
  • Degree of control
  • Extent to which work is integral to the employer's business
  • Worker's skill and initiative

These factors guide the assessment but are not exhaustive and none carry greater weight. This broadened definition under the FLSA could lead to more independent contractors being classified as employees for FLSA purposes. The DOL has provided Fact Sheet 13 to assist in the proper classification of workers.

The reclassification of workers as employees under the FLSA could have significant implications, particularly regarding employee benefits. For retirement benefits, this could mean an increase in eligible retirement plan participants, affecting employer obligations under plans like 401(k). Changes in FLSA classification may also influence health benefits, potentially increasing employers’ obligations under the employer mandate rules. This highlights the importance of careful planning and potential adjustments to existing plans and policies. Moreover, the new rule might trigger additional reporting requirements for employers, especially if they surpass certain thresholds.

EMPLOYER CONSIDERATIONS

Employers and HR professionals should understand and adapt to these changes, particularly in the gig economy, where many workers are currently classified as independent contractors. The rule's emphasis on a totality-of-the-circumstances analysis for worker classification requires careful consideration of various economic factors. Given the potential for ongoing regulatory developments and challenges to the rule, it's essential for employers to stay informed and prepare for possible impact on their operations and worker classifications.



Guidance on Coverage for Contraceptives

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) Implementation FAQs Part 64, issued on January 22, 2024, provide guidance on preventive service coverage. Prepared by the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and the Treasury, they aim to enhance understanding and compliance with the law and specify that non-grandfathered health plans must cover certain preventive services without cost-sharing. These services include recommended immunizations, preventive care for infants to adolescents, and additional preventive care for women. The guidelines allow plans to use reasonable medical management techniques to determine coverage limitations for services not explicitly detailed in recommendations.

The FAQs also detail the coverage of contraceptives and contraceptive care and advocate for comprehensive contraceptive care for adolescent and adult women, including a wide range of FDA-approved contraceptives and family planning practices. Plans and issuers are required to cover contraceptive services and products deemed medically appropriate by a patient's provider. The guidelines also address the use of reasonable medical management techniques within contraception categories.

Despite these clarifications, the FAQs acknowledge ongoing barriers to accessing contraceptive coverage without cost-sharing. They outline examples of potentially unreasonable medical management techniques, such as excessive step therapy protocols, age-related restrictions, and burdensome administrative requirements in exceptions processes. The Departments emphasize the need for an expedient and transparent exceptions process to ensure coverage of medically necessary contraceptive services and products.

Finally, the FAQs introduce guidance on a therapeutic equivalence approach that plans and issuers may adopt. This approach, combined with an accessible and expedient exceptions process, aims to comply with the requirements regarding contraceptive coverage. This approach would support the coverage of contraceptive drugs and devices, facilitating better access to contraception without cost-sharing.

EMPLOYER CONSIDERATIONS

Individuals who have concerns about their plan’s or issuer’s compliance with the contraceptive coverage requirements may contact the Department of Labor (DOL) via its website or toll free at 1-866-444-3272.



Question of the Month

Q:  Should veterans be excluded from the full time equivalent (FTE) count for determining if an employer is considered an applicable large employer (ALE)?

A: If the veteran employees have Tricare or receive health insurance through the Department of Veterans Affairs, they do not count for purposes of determining whether an employer is an applicable large employer.

Answers to the Question of the Week are provided by Kutak Rock LLP. Kutak Rock provides general compliance guidance through the UBA Compliance Help Desk, which does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Please consult your legal advisor for specific legal advice.

SOURCE: United Benefit Advisors (UBA)