Top 5 employer regulations advancing in state and local government

With GOP Affordable Care Act replacement efforts stalled out at the federal level, many state and local governments are moving ahead with their own legislation, including community healthcare reform and paid leave laws.

Integrated human capital management firm Paychex lists the top five employer regulations advancing across the United States.

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Overview

With GOP Affordable Care Act replacement efforts stalled out at the federal level, many state and local governments are moving ahead with their own legislation, including community healthcare reform and paid leave laws.

Integrated human capital management firm Paychex lists the top five employer regulations advancing across the United States.
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Healthcare reform

The complexity of healthcare and the uncertainty of the Affordable Care Act’s future has spurred some legislative and regulatory action at the state level. Some states have already implemented or proposed laws to shore up their markets, others are looking for flexibility on specific ACA mandates and others still are looking for ways to maintain elements of the ACA in the event of a repeal.

Additionally, several states have introduced single-payer proposals in their current legislative session, but many have already hit roadblocks. Many of these initiatives make use of Section 1332 state innovation waivers, an ACA provision that became effective in 2017 and allows states to apply for waivers from certain ACA requirements to support a state system that ensures health coverage is as comprehensive, as affordable and covers as many residents as would have been covered under the ACA.

If approved, these waivers may give states access to pass-through funds — monies otherwise spent by the federal government — absent the waiver. Currently, Hawaii and Alaska have approved waivers, three states have pending waivers with the federal government, and 14 states have enacted healthcare laws addressing these waivers.
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State retirement plans

Amid growing concern of a retirement savings crisis in the U.S., due, in part, to lack of access to retirement savings plans, several states are implementing or passing legislation to create individual state retirement programs.

Additionally, the recent discontinuation of the federal myRA workplace savings program may prompt additional states to look at creating their own plans. To date, a total of nine states have passed legislation to create individual retirement plans.

Oregon, Illinois and California have all passed Roth IRA programs with specific contribution and enrollment criteria, set to take effect in the next two years. Vermont has passed legislation for the creation of the Green Mountain Secure Retirement Plan, the first multiple employer plan design among state plans, which will allow for employer participation as well as higher contribution limits than IRA programs allow.

Some municipalities are following suit, with Philadelphia and New York City working on legislation to establish retirement savings programs.
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Paid leave laws

Although some movement is occurring at the federal level, including Ivanka Trump’s work with Republican Senators to push forward President Trump’s proposal for federal paid parental leave and child care tax credits and the introduction of proposals for paid family leave by Democrats, federal legislation around paid sick leave and paid family leave has stalled.

As a result, legislators are making a push at the state and local level to address this gap in employee benefits. Currently, 45 different states and local jurisdictions have passed paid sick leave laws, varying in their provisions for employer coverage, employee eligibility, accrual rates, carryover, employee/employer notices, recordkeeping and enforcement.

Several other jurisdictions are considering similar legislation. Five states — California, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Washington — plus Washington, D.C., have passed paid family leave laws that either require or permit employee payroll deductions and in some cases require more complex coordination with FMLA or other paid time off.
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Payroll cards

Payroll cards, also known as paycards, are an increasingly popular method of pay for workers, especially those without access to a traditional banking system.

Last year, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau issued a final rule on prepaid accounts which requires, among other changes, new detailed disclosures for paying employees via paycards, effective April 1, 2018, pending potential delays and additional changes.

Meanwhile, states continue to introduce their own rules governing the use of payroll cards. Pennsylvania and Kentucky recently put payroll card laws into effect, and there are bills currently pending in Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York.
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Equal pay laws and salary history restrictions

On the federal level, covered employers must comply with the Equal Pay Act, enforced by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which requires men and women in the same workplace be given equal pay for equal work.

In addition, while nearly every state and Washington, D.C., have pay equity laws, gender-based pay discrimination continues to be an area of great concern for states. Several states, including Massachusetts, Maryland, California, New York and Oregon, are looking to more aggressively address the gender pay gap and ensure pay equity in the workplace, recently passed legislation to expand their existing equal pay laws to increase employer obligations and penalties, and change the way claims of pay discrimination are analyzed under the law.

There is also a trend at the state and local level to limit salary history inquiries until a certain stage of the recruiting process and prohibit the use of salary information in employment decisions. Delaware, Massachusetts, New York City, Oregon, Philadelphia and San Francisco have passed legislation in this space with many other jurisdictions, including California, New York, Illinois, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, having proposed similar bills.
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