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A group of lawmakers has introduced legislation to roll back guidance from the Treasury Department that prohibits employers from using stand-alone health reimbursement arrangements to reimburse employees for health care-related expenses.
July 7 -
Commentary: The ACAs Cadillac tax is like a patient, powerful hurricane moving across the Atlantic. If it makes landfall, the impact will be dramatic.
July 7
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Plan sponsors can choose from three outside providers: Mesirow Financial, Morningstar Associates and Wilshire Associates.
July 1 -
Commentary: Questions plan sponsors should be asking of their insurance carrier, payroll vendor and benefits technology provider in advance of the ACAs information reporting requirements.
June 30
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Known as Explanation No 9, the document is to be used in conjunction with Form 8387, Worksheet 9 Determination of Qualification and Form 8399, Deficiency Checksheet 9.
June 29 -
Fridays landmark ruling on gay marriage poses both challenges and benefits to employers.
June 26 -
Eliminating subsidies would destabilize the individual insurance market in any state with a federal exchange, Chief Roberts says.
June 25 -
On June 10, 2015, the New York City Council approved a new law prohibiting public and private sector employers from inquiring about a job applicant's criminal record history before making a conditional offer of employment. The new law, dubbed the "Fair Chance Act," adds New York City to a growing list of state and local jurisdictions with bans against employers' inquiries into prospective employees' arrest and conviction records.
June 25
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Today, in a 6-3 decision written by Chief Justice Roberts, the Supreme Court ruled in King v. Burwell that subsidies used to purchase health insurance in the 36 states on the federally facilitated marketplace are legal, thus avoiding the death spiral so often referred to by Congress. What does this ruling mean for employers?
June 25
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The time of what-ifs for employers ended Thursday as the U.S. Supreme Court issued its ruling upholding the challenge to state subsidies in King v. Burwell, and employers should maintain business as usual going forward, according to most industry observers.
June 25


