Wayne Jacobsen
This is the latest in a series of columns by OMelveny & Myers attorneys, focusing on key legal issues specific to a variety of U.S. industries.
With the obligations and penalties of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (aka, Obamacare) set to take effect in 2014, many employers have begun evaluating the use of contingent workers as a strategy for containing healthcare costs. Contingent workerssuch as independent contractors, leased employees, and part-time employeestypically are not entitled to healthcare coverage, and their expanded use could offer businesses a way around some of the new laws costlier requirements.
But beware: The benefits of a contingent workforce also come with risks, including the potential for monetary penalties that may strike some employers as inordinate.
Under the PPACA, individuals will be required to have healthcare coverage as of January 1, 2014 (the so-called individual mandate). Individuals without employer-provided coverage will be able to satisfy the individual mandate by purchasing coverage through new health insurance exchanges. Individuals with incomes between 100 percent and 400 percent of the poverty level will be entitled to a premium assistance subsidy if they purchase coverage on an exchange. Millions of individuals are expected to do so.
Employers are not directly obligated to provide coverage to their employees. But if a large employerone with 50 or more full-time equivalent employeesdoes not offer healthcare coverage to at least 95 percent of its full-time employees, the employer faces a penalty under Internal Revenue Code Section 4980H(a). An employer that doesnt cover at least 95 percent of employees would be hit with a penalty if any of its full-time employees without employer-provided coverage purchases coverage from an exchange and receives premium assistance.
The annual penalty under Section 4980H(a) can be severe: $2,000, multiplied by every full-time employee, minus the first 30 full-time employees. Note that all full-time employees count toward calculating the penalty, even the employees with employer-provided coverage.
Strategy No. 1: Part-Time Employees
The 4980H(a) penalty applies only with respect to full-time employees. An employer seeking to reduce its exposure could limit the hours of certain workers or create more part-time positions. A part-time employee generally means an employee averaging fewer than 30 hours per week.
Although the failure to provide coverage to part-time employees will not subject an employer to PPACA penalties, part-time employees still count toward determining whether the employer meets the 50-employee threshold for a large employer.
How the Part-Time Strategy Could Go Awry
The Internal Revenue Service has issued detailed rules (Notices 2012-59 and 2012-17) for determining who is a part-time employee. An employer seeking to implement a part-time strategy will have to carefully consider these rules and closely monitor employees hours. A successful part-time strategy may require the employer to impose rigid restrictions on work scheduleswhich may, in turn, limit the employers ability to respond to changing business conditions and customer demands.
If an employer isnt careful about monitoring employees hours, it might become subject to the Section 4980H(a) penalty. To use an extreme example, lets say that an employer believes that it has:
- 100 full-time employees, all with employer-provided coverage, and
- 20 part-time employees, none with employer-provided coverage.
Because its entire full-time workforce appears to have employer-provided coverage, the employer believes that it has satisfied the 95 percent requirement and thus is not subject to the 4980H(a) penalty. But assume that six of the supposed part-time employees have amassed enough hours to be deemed full-time employees. The employer could then be subject to the penalty, because it actually has 106 full-time employees, and only 100 of them94 percenthave employer-provided coverage.
The annual penalty under Section 4980H(a) would be $152,000 (106 full-time employees, minus the first 30, multiplied by $2,000).
Strategy No. 2: Independent Contractors
Under the PPACA, an employee means a common-law employee. Employers may be tempted to substitute independent contractors for common-law employees for a couple of reasons:
- To stay under the 50-employee threshold.
- To avoid offering healthcare coverage to a portion of its full-time workforce.
Indeed, an employer might view a successful independent contractor strategy as a double win: the business avoids both the cost of healthcare coverage for the independent contractors and the penalty that would apply for failing to offer coverage to full-time employees.
How the Independent Contractor Strategy Could Go Awry
An employer that adopts the independent contractor strategy faces an inherent pitfall: worker misclassification. Determining whether a worker should be treated as an independent contractor, rather than an employee, can be complicated, if not impossible.
A highly publicized case of worker misclassification in the late 1990s resulted in a flurry of corrective activity by employers. In Vizcaino vs. Microsoft Corporation, a group of workers were initially denied benefits on the grounds that they were independent contractors, but the workers convinced the Ninth Circuit that they were actually employees and thus entitled to benefits. Businesses were generally able to head off similar claims by amending their benefit plans with a Microsoft fixthat is, to expressly state that misclassified workers are not entitled to benefits. Even with a Microsoft fix, however, a business faces PPACA penalties if workers excluded from healthcare coverage turn out to be common-law employees.
As was true for the part-time strategy gone awry, the penalty under Section 4980H(a) could be disproportionately steep. For example, assume an employer believes it has 100 full-time employees, all of whom have employer-provided coverage, and 10 workers without coverage who are classified as independent contractors. If six or more of the supposed independent contractors turn out to be employees, the annual penalty of $2,000 multiplied by all full-time workers could apply.
Our recent experience suggests that state and federal authorities are becoming more focused on worker misclassification issues for a variety of reasons other than healthcare reform. The PPACA penalties are yet another reason to expect continued scrutiny.
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