BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó



                                                                  AB 880
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          ASSEMBLY THIRD READING
          AB 880 (Gomez) 
          As Amended June 6, 2013
          2/3 vote.  Urgency 

           HEALTH              13-5        APPROPRIATIONS      12-5        
           
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
          |Ayes:|Pan, Ammiano, Atkins,     |Ayes:|Gatto, Bocanegra,         |
          |     |Bonilla, Bonta, Chesbro,  |     |Bradford,                 |
          |     |Gomez,                    |     |Ian Calderon, Campos,     |
          |     |Roger Hernández,          |     |Eggman, Gomez, Hall,      |
          |     |Lowenthal, Mitchell,      |     |Ammiano, Pan, Quirk,      |
          |     |Nazarian, V. Manuel       |     |Weber                     |
          |     |Pérez, Wieckowski         |     |                          |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
          |Nays:|Maienschein, Mansoor,     |Nays:|Harkey, Bigelow,          |
          |     |Nestande, Wagner, Wilk    |     |Donnelly, Linder, Wagner  |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 
           SUMMARY  :  Creates the Employer Responsibility for Medi-Cal Cost  
          of Employees Act of 2013 (Act).  Contains an urgency clause in  
          order to become effective immediately.  Specifically,  this bill  :  


          1)Requires large employers, employing 500 or more employees, to  
            pay a penalty, as specified, if their employees who work more  
            than eight hours per week are enrolled in Medi-Cal based on  
            the Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) eligibility  
            standard.  Excludes clients of a regional center who are  
            persons with disabilities from being counted in the  
            calculation of 500 employees. 

          2)Specifies a formula for calculating the penalty based on the  
            average cost of employee-only   health care coverage provided to  
            employees of large employers.  

          3)Requires the Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) to  
            determine the penalty, based on the calculation and requires  
            the Employment Development Department (EDD) to provide notice  
            to employers of the amount and to collect the penalty. 

          4)Defines employer as an employing unit, as defined in current  
            law regarding unemployment insurance, including all members of  








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            a controlled group of corporations, as defined in the Internal  
            Revenue Code, except that "more than 50%" is substituted for  
            "at least 80%" in regard to combined voting power and the  
            total value of shares.

          5)Establishes the basis of the penalty as 110% of the average  
            cost of health care coverage provided by large employers to  
            their employees, provides that the specific amount of the  
            employer responsibility penalty is to be determined by  
            multiplying the employer's total annual wage payments to all  
            covered employees by a fraction to arrive at an amount that is  
            intended to represent the amount of time the share of time the  
            employee covered by Medi-Cal works, as specified. 

          6)Requires DHCS and EDD to obtain specified information and data  
            and to share wage, enrollment and other data as specified in  
            order to make the required calculations and identify  
            low-income individuals covered by the Medi-Cal program.

          7)Provides for the confidentiality of all documents and records  
            that result from DHCS and EDD matching records and that  
            nothing in this bill is to be construed to supersede  
            requirements and protections in the California Right to  
            Financial Privacy Act. 

          8)Requires DHCS to provide notice to EDD of the amount of the  
            employer responsibility penalty in a time and manner that  
            permits EDD to provide notice to all large employers of the  
            estimated penalty for the budget year, as specified, and  
            requires EDD to notify the employer annually.  Provides for  
            10% interest if a penalty is more than 60 days overdue. 

          9)Requires a large employer to pay into the Employer  
            Responsibility for Medi-Cal Trust Fund, any employer  
            responsibility penalties imposed, in the same manner as  
            employer contributions for unemployment compensation  
            insurance. 

          10)Requires employers to provide information to all newly hired  
            and existing employees of the availability of Medi-Cal  
            coverage for individuals or families under the MAGI threshold  
            established for the Medi-Cal program pursuant to the Patent  
            Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA).  Requires EDD, in  
            consultation with DHCS, to develop a simple, uniform notice  
            containing the information. 








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          11)Prohibits an employer from requiring, as a condition of  
            employment, an employee to not enroll in or disenroll from a  
            public health benefit program, including, but not limited to,  
            the Medi-Cal program, or Advance Premium Tax Credit (APTC)  
            through the California Health Benefit Exchange (Exchange).   
            Prohibits a large employer from encouraging or discouraging  
            enrollment in a public health benefit program for which an  
            employee is otherwise eligible, but may provide information on  
            the programs as otherwise provided by state or federal law.

          12)Creates the Employer Responsibility for Medi-Cal Trust Fund  
            (Fund) and requires monies collected from the penalties to be  
            deposited in the Fund and used in the Medi-Cal program.   
            Provides that the Fund is continuously appropriated to DHCS  
            for the following purposes:

             a)   To provide payment for the nonfederal share of Medi-Cal  
               costs for covered employees;

             b)   To increase reimbursement of providers with due  
               consideration for the needs of rural areas;

             c)   To provide reimbursement to county health systems,  
               community clinics, safety net providers, and other entities  
               that provide care, without expectation of compensation, to  
               those Californians who do not have minimum essential  
               coverage as defined by the ACA; and,

             d)   Costs of implementation, including costs to EDD,  
               Franchise Tax Board (FTB), and any other governmental  
               agency.

          13)Defines safety net provider as any provider of comprehensive  
            primary care or acute hospital inpatient services that  
            provides these services to a significant total number of  
            Medi-Cal and charity and/or medically indigent patients in  
            relation to the total number of patients served by the  
            provider

          14)Provides that it is unlawful for a large employer, as defined  
            by this bill, to designate an employee as an independent  
            contractor or temporary employee, reduce an employee's hours  
            of work, or terminate an employee if the purpose of the action  
            is to avoid the employer's obligation under the Act. 








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          15)Prohibits a large employer from requesting or otherwise  
            seeking to obtain information concerning income, family  
            income, or other eligibility requirements for public health  
            benefit programs about an employee, other than that  
            information about the employee's employment status otherwise  
            known to the employer consistent with state and federal law  
            and regulation. 

          16)Prohibits a large employer from discharging or in any manner  
            discriminating or retaliating against an employee who enrolls  
            in a public health benefit program, including, but not limited  
            to, the Medi-Cal program, or the APTC.  Clarifies that the  
            employer may remedy the violation. 

          17)Provides that any employee who is discharged, threatened with  
            discharge, demoted, suspended, or in any other manner  
            discriminated, or retaliated, against in the terms and  
            conditions of employment by his or her employer because the  
            employee has enrolled in a public health benefit program or  
            the APTC through the Exchange to be entitled to reinstatement  
            and reimbursement for lost wages and work benefits caused by  
            the acts of the employer. 

          18)Provides that a large employer, who willfully refuses to  
            rehire, promote, or otherwise restore an employee or former  
            employee described in this section who has been determined to  
            be eligible for rehiring or promotion by a grievance procedure  
            or hearing authorized by law, is guilty of a misdemeanor. 

          19)Provides that an employer who violates the provisions related  
            to protections of employees who enroll in a public health  
            benefit program or the APTC through the Exchange may be  
            charged a penalty of 200% of the amount of any penalty that  
            would have otherwise been paid by the employer for the period  
            for covered employees, and authorizes the employee to file a  
            complaint with the Department of Industrial Relations. 

          20)Requires employers to report information regarding wages,  
            payroll taxes, personal income tax (PIT) deposits, and state  
            disability insurance (SDI), to EDD and provides for the  
            deposits of payroll taxes, SDI, PIT, and Unemployment  
            Insurance.

          21)Permits the EDD and the FTB to share information and develop  








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            data interfaces with the Exchange for purposes of enabling the  
            Exchange to make eligibility determinations and comply with  
            certain federal requirements.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Assembly Appropriations  
          Committee:

          1)One-time costs to EDD of approximately $1 million to develop  
            collection capabilities; including mailing information to  
            employers, computer programming changes, development of a new  
            interface with DHCS for data transmission.  Ongoing costs of  
            $420,000.

          2)One-time and ongoing costs of more than $200,000 to DHCS for  
            its part of the EDD interface.

          3)Costs are likely to be more than offset by revenues generated  
            by the penalties in this bill. Revenues are difficult to  
            predict because this bill could lead employers to change their  
            behavior in order to avoid the penalty.  For example, if  
            250,000 people meet this bill's definition of covered  
            employees, the penalties would be in the tens of millions of  
            dollars.  If some of the affected employers provide  
            appropriate health coverage, the penalty revenue to the state  
            would be lower, but state costs for Medi-Cal would also be  
            lower.

           COMMENTS  :  According to the author, the purpose of this bill is  
          to extend the employer responsibility requirement in the ACA to  
          employers with employees who enroll in Medi-Cal to discourage  
          these employers from shifting the cost of providing health  
          coverage for their employees onto the state.  The author states  
          that this bill closes a loophole in the employer penalty  
          provisions of the ACA.  Specifically, the ACA requires  
          individuals, employers, and government to share responsibility  
          for health coverage.  Individuals must have health coverage or  
          pay a penalty.  Employers with an average of at least 50 full  
          time employees must either provide affordable health coverage or  
          pay a penalty for each employee who accesses subsidized coverage  
          in the state Exchange.  However, an employer whose employees  
          become eligible for Medi-Cal because their wages and hours cause  
          the family income to fall below the MAGI standard will be  
          eligible for Medi-Cal with no cost to the employer.  The author  
          states that the penalty proposed in this bill is intended to  
          help offset that cost of the public subsidy.  The federal  








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          government provides subsidies for premiums and cost-sharing  
          through state exchanges and allows states to expand their  
          Medicaid programs with 100% federal funding for the first three  
          years.  The author points out that legislation pending in the  
          First Extraordinary Session proposes to expand the Medi-Cal  
          program to provide coverage to childless adults up to 138% of  
          the federal poverty level (currently set at $15,415 annually for  
          an individual), based on the individual or family MAGI and will  
          streamline eligibility and enrollment for anyone who is eligible  
          under the MAGI standard, including families and children.  

          The author further states that the ACA does not extend the  
          employer responsibility penalty to employers who have workers  
          enrolled in Medi-Cal, even though it is a public subsidy for  
          their employees' health coverage.  Citing a forthcoming study  
          from the University of California, Berkeley Center for Labor  
          Research and Education, the author estimates that 250,000  
          parents working for firms with 500 or more employees are  
          currently enrolled in Medi-Cal, and the study estimates that an  
          additional 290,000 non-disabled adults, ages 19-64 working for  
          firms with 500 or more employees will be enrolled in Medi-Cal.   
          Furthermore, the author argues, the ACA penalty does not apply  
          to part-time workers, defined as working fewer than, on average,  
          30 hours a week.  The author asserts that this creates an  
          incentive for some employers to cut hours and eliminate benefits  
          for part-timers in order to evade the ACA penalty.  In addition,  
          this creates downward pressure on wages and strips workers of  
          employer-sponsored coverage.  According to the author, several  
          large employers have announced that they are already starting to  
          cut hours and benefits in preparation for the implementation. 

          The ACA requires U.S. citizens and legal residents to have  
          qualifying health coverage.  In 2016 and beyond, those without  
          coverage pay a tax penalty up to a maximum of $2,085 per family  
          or 2.5% of household income.  The penalty will be phased-in  
          according to the following schedule: $95 per adult in 2014, $325  
          per adult in 2015, and $695 per adult in 2016 or the flat fee or  
          1% of taxable income in 2014, 2% of taxable income in 2015, and  
          2.5% of taxable income in 2016.  Beginning after 2016, the  
          penalty will be increased annually by the cost-of-living  
          adjustment.  Exemptions will be granted for financial hardship,  
          religious objections, American Indians, those without coverage  
          for less than three months, undocumented immigrants,  
          incarcerated individuals, those for whom the lowest cost plan  
          option exceeds 8% of their income, and those with incomes below  








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          the tax filing threshold (in 2009 the threshold for taxpayers  
          under age 65 was $9,350 for singles and $18,700 for couples).  

          The ACA assesses employers with an average of 50 or more  
          full-time employees who do not offer coverage and have at least  
          one full-time employee who receives an APTC through the  
          Exchange, a fee of $2,000 per full-time employee, excluding the  
          first 30 employees from the assessment.  Employers with 50 or  
          more full-time employees that offer coverage but have at least  
          one full-time employee receiving an APTC, will pay the lesser of  
          $3,000 for each employee receiving a premium credit or $2,000  
          for each full-time employee, excluding the first 30 employees  
          from the assessment, effective January 1, 2014.  Employers with  
          up to 50 full-time employees are exempt from the penalties.  The  
          ACA requires employers with more than 200 employees to  
          automatically enroll employees into health insurance plans  
          offered by the employer.  Employees may opt out of coverage.

          This bill includes employee protections that are intended to  
          prevent employers from retaliating against an employee who  
          enrolls in Medi-Cal and to prevent employers from asking for  
          information regarding whether the employee has enrolled in  
          Medi-Cal.  This is to ensure that this bill is not in conflict  
          with a primary goal of the ACA, which is to reduce the numbers  
          of uninsured by expanding Medi-Cal coverage.  The anti-  
          retaliation and other protections are modeled after existing law  
          that prohibits an employer from discharging, discriminating, or  
          retaliating against an employee who is a victim of domestic  
          violence or sexual assault for taking time off from work to  
          attend judicial proceedings or to attend specified medical,  
          domestic violence prevention, or counseling services.  That law  
          also states that an employee who is discharged, threatened with  
          discharge, suspended, or in any other manner discriminated  
          against for taking time off for these purposes is entitled to  
          reinstatement and reimbursement for lost wages and work benefits  
          and may file a complaint with the Division of Labor Standards  
          Enforcement.  Additionally, an employer that willfully refuses  
          to rehire, promote, or otherwise restore an employee who has  
          been determined to be eligible for rehiring or promotion is  
          guilty of a misdemeanor.  The anti-retaliation protections, by  
          not constituting a "serious violations" allow employers to  
          remedy any violation.

          The California Chamber of Commerce (Chamber) writes in  
          opposition that this bill would impose a number of significant  








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          new penalties on private employers with 500 or more employees in  
          California and would dramatically increase the amount of  
          frivolous litigation under the Labor Code.  According to the  
          Chamber this bill goes well beyond the requirements of the ACA  
          in two ways.  First, under the ACA, the formula for assessing a  
          penalty on employers who do not offer affordable health care  
          coverage when their employee receives subsidized care is $2,000  
          annually times the number of full-time employees minus 30.  In  
          contrast, the Chamber points out, the formula for assessing a  
          penalty under this bill is based on the cost of health insurance  
          premiums for the employee and the employer which far exceeds  
          $2,000.  The Chamber also states that it is unclear whether this  
          bill sets the penalty level at the individual or family level of  
          healthcare coverage.  Second, according to this opposition, this  
          bill applies its provisions to part-time as well as full-time  
          employees.  The opposition states that it can understand the  
          goals of supporting employer coverage for full-time employees,  
          since this has been a common and expected practice for decades;  
          the "employer responsibility" provisions of the ACA reflected  
          that.  However, this bill would go far beyond common practice  
          and the ACA by applying the penalty to employers whose part-time  
          employees receive Medi-Cal benefits.  The Chamber further  
          opposes this bill because it creates a broad protected class of  
          employees and will significantly hamper an employer's ability to  
          manage its workforce.  


           Analysis Prepared by  :    Marjorie Swartz / HEALTH / (916)  
          319-2097 


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