Health Care Law: Next Steps for Employers

October 28, 2014

The OH&LA will be sharing with its members the most current information regarding the effect of the Affordable Care Act on employers. In early November, the NRA will release a special report on Health Care, and the OH&LA will be sure to share all of the updates and content. This updated information will also be available at http://www.restaurant.org/healthcare.
 
Health Care Law: Next Steps for Employers
 
The federal government has now published most of the regulations to explain how the Affordable Care Act affects employers. But the regulations are complex, and putting them into operation in a restaurant business will be challenging.
 
The pressure is on: Starting Jan. 1, 2015, many employers could face potential penalties for failing to offer health plans to full-time employees. Hundreds of thousands of employers will have to start tracking new data in 2015 as they prepare to file ACA-required reports with the Internal Revenue Service and employees in early 2016.
 
The National Restaurant Association, with other organizations representing millions of employers, continues to ramp up the heat on Congress to make changes in the law. But as the law continues to unfold in the meantime, here’s a look at some key questions for employers.
 
Q: Which employers will face penalties under the ACA? 


The ACA’s employer mandate begins to take effect in 2015. The mandate subjects “applicable large employers” to possible penalties if they don’t offer health plans to full-time employees and their dependents. Penalties are phased in:
 
Employers with more than one business entity may need to consider all their employees as one group to determine if they meet the 100- or 50-FTE employee thresholds. Consult your tax adviser for details.
 
To measure the size of their workforce, employers can use transition-relief provisions in the ACA regulations and look at any consecutive six-month period in 2014 to see if they meet the 100-FTE-employee threshold that triggers “applicable large employer” status for 2015. (Note: If your business intends to use the ACA’s “seasonal worker exception” to qualify for an exemption from large-employer status for 2015, you must look at employment over all 12 months of 2014.)
 
Q: To whom must health care coverage be offered?
To avoid penalties, applicable large employers must offer health care coverage to full-time employees and their dependents. The ACA defines full-time as a person with at least 130 hours of service in any given month, or averaging 30 hours of service a week.
 
Treasury Department regulations go into extensive detail about how employers should measure whether new employees, seasonal employees and employees whose hours vary from month to month are considered full-time. Restaurant.org/Healthcare offers links to the regulations.
 
(Note: For 2015, a large employer will generally not face penalties for failing to offer coverage to dependents of full-time employees if the employer can show he or she is taking steps toward providing such coverage.)
 
Q: What reports will employers be required to file?
The ACA sets massive new reporting requirements for all employers with 50 or more FTE employees. (Note: Employers with 50 to 99 FTE employees don’t have to offer coverage in 2015 but still must file the paperwork in early 2016, whether you offered coverage or not.)
 
Employers will be required to file their first information returns with the IRS and statements with employees in early 2016, based on data tracked in 2015.
 
Employers got a preview of the paperwork when the IRS released draft forms and instructions this summer. The forms aren’t likely to be finalized until later this year but covered employers should prepare now to begin tracking the information in January 2015. Employers who don’t could find that rebuilding the necessary data is costly and time-consuming.
 
The reporting requirements are part of the new Sections 6056 and 6055 of the federal tax code.
 

Q: What are the penalties for employers?
Large businesses will face two types of penalties starting in 2015 under the ACA’s employer mandate.