83_FR_618 83 FR 614 - Definition of “Employer” Under Section 3(5) of ERISA-Association Health Plans

83 FR 614 - Definition of “Employer” Under Section 3(5) of ERISA-Association Health Plans

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 4 (January 5, 2018)

Page Range614-636
FR Document2017-28103

This document contains a proposed regulation under Title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) that would broaden the criteria under ERISA section 3(5) for determining when employers may join together in an employer group or association that is treated as the ``employer'' sponsor of a single multiple-employer ``employee welfare benefit plan'' and ``group health plan'' as those terms are defined in Title I of ERISA. By treating the association itself as the employer sponsor of a single plan, the regulation would facilitate the adoption and administration of such arrangements. The regulation would modify the definition of ``employer,'' in part, by creating a more flexible ``commonality of interest'' test for the employer members than the Department of Labor (DOL or Department) had adopted in sub- regulatory interpretive rulings under ERISA section 3(5). At the same time, the regulation would continue to distinguish employment-based plans, the focal point of Title I of ERISA, from mere commercial insurance programs and administrative service arrangements marketed to employers. For purposes of Title I of ERISA, the proposal would also permit working owners of an incorporated or unincorporated trade or business, including partners in a partnership, to elect to act as employers for purposes of participating in an employer group or association sponsoring a health plan and also to be treated as employees with respect to a trade, business or partnership for purposes of being covered by the employer group's or association's health plan. The goal of the rulemaking is to expand access to affordable health coverage, especially among small employers and self-employed individuals, by removing undue restrictions on the establishment and maintenance of association health plans under ERISA. The proposed regulation would affect such association health plans, health coverage under these health plans, groups and associations of employers sponsoring such plans, participants and beneficiaries with health coverage under these plans, health insurance issuers, and purchasers of health insurance not purchased through association health plans.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 4 (Friday, January 5, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 4 (Friday, January 5, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 614-636]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-28103]


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Proposed Rules
                                                Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________

This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of 
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these 
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in 
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.

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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 614]]



DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Employee Benefits Security Administration

29 CFR Part 2510

RIN 1210-AB85


Definition of ``Employer'' Under Section 3(5) of ERISA--
Association Health Plans

AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of Labor.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

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SUMMARY: This document contains a proposed regulation under Title I of 
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) that would broaden 
the criteria under ERISA section 3(5) for determining when employers 
may join together in an employer group or association that is treated 
as the ``employer'' sponsor of a single multiple-employer ``employee 
welfare benefit plan'' and ``group health plan'' as those terms are 
defined in Title I of ERISA. By treating the association itself as the 
employer sponsor of a single plan, the regulation would facilitate the 
adoption and administration of such arrangements. The regulation would 
modify the definition of ``employer,'' in part, by creating a more 
flexible ``commonality of interest'' test for the employer members than 
the Department of Labor (DOL or Department) had adopted in sub-
regulatory interpretive rulings under ERISA section 3(5). At the same 
time, the regulation would continue to distinguish employment-based 
plans, the focal point of Title I of ERISA, from mere commercial 
insurance programs and administrative service arrangements marketed to 
employers. For purposes of Title I of ERISA, the proposal would also 
permit working owners of an incorporated or unincorporated trade or 
business, including partners in a partnership, to elect to act as 
employers for purposes of participating in an employer group or 
association sponsoring a health plan and also to be treated as 
employees with respect to a trade, business or partnership for purposes 
of being covered by the employer group's or association's health plan. 
The goal of the rulemaking is to expand access to affordable health 
coverage, especially among small employers and self-employed 
individuals, by removing undue restrictions on the establishment and 
maintenance of association health plans under ERISA. The proposed 
regulation would affect such association health plans, health coverage 
under these health plans, groups and associations of employers 
sponsoring such plans, participants and beneficiaries with health 
coverage under these plans, health insurance issuers, and purchasers of 
health insurance not purchased through association health plans.

DATES: Comments are due on or before March 6, 2018.

ADDRESSES: You may submit written comments, identified by RIN 1210-
AB85, by one of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
     Mail: Office of Regulations and Interpretations, Employee 
Benefits Security Administration, Room N-5655, U.S. Department of 
Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210, Attention: 
Definition of Employer--Small Business Health Plans RIN 1210-AB85.
    Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name 
and Regulatory Identifier Number (RIN) for this rulemaking. Persons 
submitting comments electronically are encouraged to submit only by one 
electronic method and not to submit paper copies. Comments will be 
available to the public, without charge, online at http://www.regulations.gov and http://www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa and at the 
Public Disclosure Room, Employee Benefits Security Administration, 
Suite N-1513, 200 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210.
    Warning: Do not include any personally identifiable or confidential 
business information that you do not want publicly disclosed. Comments 
are public records and are posted on the internet as received, and can 
be retrieved by most internet search engines.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elizabeth Schumacher, Office of Health 
Plan Standards and Compliance Assistance, Employee Benefits Security 
Administration, (202) 693-8335 or Janet K. Song, Office of Regulations 
and Interpretations, Employee Benefits Security Administration, (202) 
693-8500. These are not toll free numbers.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

A. Overview

    Since the Affordable Care Act \1\ (or ACA) was enacted, many 
consumers have continued to face rising costs of coverage and a lack of 
quality affordable healthcare options. On October 12, 2017, President 
Trump issued Executive Order 13813, ``Promoting Healthcare Choice and 
Competition Across the United States,'' stating that ``[i]t shall be 
the policy of the executive branch, to the extent consistent with law, 
to facilitate the purchase of insurance across State lines and the 
development and operation of a healthcare system that provides high-
quality care at affordable prices for the American people.'' The 
Executive Order states that the Administration will prioritize three 
areas for improvement in the near term: association health plans 
(AHPs), short-term, limited-duration insurance, and health 
reimbursement arrangements (HRAs). With regard to AHPs, the Executive 
Order directs the Secretary of Labor, within 60 days of the date of the 
Executive Order, to consider proposing regulations or revising 
guidance, consistent with law, to expand access to health coverage by 
allowing more employers to form AHPs. The Executive Order further notes 
that ``[l]arge employers often are able to obtain better terms on 
health insurance for their employees than small employers

[[Page 615]]

because of their larger pools of insurable individuals across which 
they can spread risk and administrative costs. Expanding access to AHPs 
can help small businesses overcome this competitive disadvantage by 
allowing them to group together to self-insure or purchase large group 
health insurance. Expanding access to AHPs will also allow more small 
businesses to avoid many of the PPACA's costly requirements. Expanding 
access to AHPs would provide more affordable health insurance options 
to many Americans, including hourly wage earners, farmers, and the 
employees of small businesses and entrepreneurs that fuel economic 
growth.''
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    \1\ The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-
148), enacted on March 23, 2010, and the Health Care and Education 
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152), enacted on March 30, 
2010, collectively are known as the Affordable Care Act or ACA. The 
Affordable Care Act reorganizes, amends, and adds to the provisions 
in part A of title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act) 
relating to group health plans and health insurance issuers in the 
group and individual markets. In addition, the Affordable Care Act 
adds section 715(a)(1) to ERISA and section 9815(a)(1) to the 
Internal Revenue Code (Code) to incorporate the provisions of part A 
of title XXVII of the PHS Act (PHS Act sections 2701 through 2728) 
into ERISA and the Code, and make them applicable to group health 
plans, and health insurance issuers providing health insurance 
coverage in connection with group health plans.
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    The Executive Order directs the Secretary, to the extent permitted 
by law and as supported by sound policy, to consider expanding the 
conditions that satisfy the commonality-of-interest requirements under 
existing DOL advisory opinions interpreting the definition of an 
``employer'' under section 3(5) of ERISA. The Executive Order also 
directs the Department to consider ways to promote AHP formation on the 
basis of common geography or industry.
    AHPs are an innovative option for expanding access to employer-
sponsored coverage (especially for small businesses). AHPs permit 
employers to band together to purchase health coverage. Supporters 
contend that AHPs can help reduce the cost of health coverage by giving 
groups of employers increased bargaining power vis-[agrave]-vis 
hospitals, doctors, and pharmacy benefit providers, and creating new 
economies of scale, administrative efficiencies, and a more efficient 
allocation of plan responsibilities (as the AHP effectively transfers 
the obligation to provide and administer benefit programs from 
participating employers, who may have little expertise in these 
matters, to the AHP sponsor).
    Under current federal law and regulations, health insurance 
coverage offered or provided through an employer trade association, 
chamber of commerce, or similar organization, to individuals and small 
employers is generally regulated under the same federal standards that 
apply to insurance coverage sold by health insurance issuers directly 
to these individuals and small employers, unless the coverage sponsored 
by the association constitutes a single ERISA-covered plan. As a 
practical matter, however, under existing sub-regulatory guidance, the 
Department treats few associations as sponsoring single ERISA-covered 
plans. Instead the associations' arrangements for health coverage are 
generally treated as a collection of plans, separately sponsored by 
each of the individual employers.
    Whether, and the extent to which, various regulatory requirements 
apply to association health coverage, like other coverage, depends on 
whether the coverage is treated as individual or group coverage and, in 
turn, whether the group coverage is small or large group coverage. 
Generally, unless the arrangement sponsored by the association 
constitutes a single ERISA-covered plan, the current regulatory 
framework disregards the association in determining whether the 
coverage obtained by any particular participating individual or 
employer is treated as individual, small group, or large group market 
coverage. Instead, the test for determining the type of coverage 
focuses on whether the coverage is offered to individuals or employers. 
And, if the coverage is offered to employers, whether the group 
coverage is large group or small group coverage depends on the number 
of people employed by the particular employer obtaining the coverage. 
Thus, unless the association plan is treated as a single ERISA-covered 
plan, the size of each individual employer participating in the 
association determines whether that employer's coverage is subject to 
the small group or large group market rules (or the individual market 
rules, if the participant is an individual and not an employer that can 
establish and maintain a group health plan), and it is possible that 
different association members will have coverage that is subject to the 
individual market, small group market, and/or large group market rules, 
as determined by each member's circumstances.
    There are circumstances, however, even under the Department's 
existing sub-regulatory guidance, when employer association health 
coverage is treated as being provided through a plan, fund, or program 
that is a single ERISA-covered employee welfare benefit plan. In 
general, this occurs when the employer association, rather than the 
individual employer member, is considered the sponsoring ``employer'' 
that establishes and maintains the plan. In such cases, the health 
coverage program is, accordingly, treated as a single multiple employer 
plan for purposes of Title I of ERISA.\2\ Since these AHPs tend to 
cover many employees, the coverage, in such cases, tends to be 
regulated as large group coverage for ACA purposes.
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    \2\ The Department's prior guidance under ERISA section 3(5) 
addressed health benefits and other benefits under section 3(1) of 
ERISA. However, these proposed rules are limited to health benefits. 
Accordingly, for simplicity, these proposed regulations often refer 
only to health benefits, including when discussing the application 
of prior Departmental guidance.
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    The current criteria that an employer association must satisfy to 
sponsor a single multiple employer plan, however, are narrow. Thus, the 
Department often has found that the association is not the sponsor of a 
multiple employer plan; instead, each employer that gets its health 
coverage through the association is considered to have established a 
separate, single-employer health benefit plan covering its own 
employees. In such cases, the association, much like an insurance 
company, is simply the mechanism by which each individual employer 
obtains benefits and administrative services for its own separate plan. 
Therefore, to the extent the separate employers are small employers, 
each of their plans are subject to regulation as small group coverage 
for ACA purposes. Similarly, in the case of sole proprietors and other 
business owners that do not employ other individuals, the coverage they 
obtain for themselves through an association is treated as individual 
coverage. As a result of this regulatory structure today, AHPs 
currently face a complex and costly compliance environment that may 
simultaneously subject the AHP to large group, small group, and 
individual market regulation, which undermines one of the core purposes 
and advantages of forming or joining an AHP. Accordingly, the 
Department is proposing to amend the definition of employer in section 
3(5) of ERISA to change this state of affairs.

B. Purpose of Regulatory Action

    Executive Order 13813 directs the Secretary to consider issuing 
regulations that will expand access to more affordable health coverage 
by permitting more employers to form AHPs, and the Secretary has been 
specifically directed to consider expanding the conditions that a group 
of employers must satisfy to act as an ``employer'' under ERISA for 
purposes of sponsoring a group health plan by reconsidering the 
``commonality-of-interest'' requirements under current Departmental 
guidance. This proposed regulation would define the term ``group or 
association of employers'' under ERISA section 3(5) more broadly, in a 
way that would allow more freedom for businesses to join together in 
organizations that could offer group health coverage regulated under 
the ACA as large group coverage.

[[Page 616]]

A principal objective of the proposed rule is to expand employer and 
employee access to more affordable, high-quality coverage. The 
Department proposes changes in its approach to the ERISA section 3(5) 
definition of employer under ERISA. The ACA has caused individual and 
small group insurance premiums to increase significantly. In part as a 
result of this increase, health insurance available in the large group 
market is now typically less expensive, all else equal, than coverage 
in the small group or individual market. In addition, treating health 
coverage sponsored by an employer association as a single group health 
plan may promote economies of scale, administrative efficiencies, and 
transfer plan maintenance responsibilities from participating employers 
to the association. The proposed definition includes conditions, 
including nondiscrimination provisions, designed to continue to draw a 
line between the sorts of employer-sponsored arrangements that are 
regulated by ERISA on the one hand, and commercial insurance-type 
arrangements that lack the requisite connection to the employment 
relationship on the other, as well as to prevent potential adverse 
impacts on the individual and small group markets.
    It is important to note that the proposed regulation would not 
preclude associations that do not meet the conditions of the proposal 
from offering health coverage in accordance with existing ACA 
requirements and applicable State insurance regulation. See, e.g., CMS 
Insurance Standards Bulletin, Application of Individual and Group 
Market Requirements Under Title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act 
when Insurance Coverage is Sold to, or through, Associations (September 
1, 2011) and Department of Labor Publication, Multiple Employer Welfare 
Arrangements Under ERISA, A Guide to Federal and State Regulation 
(available at www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/publications/mewa-under-erisa-a-guide-to-federal-and-state-regulation.pdf). In particular, health insurance 
coverage sold to, or through, associations that do not sponsor their 
own separate ERISA-covered employee benefit plans would not need to 
alter their operations if the proposed rule becomes final. Rather than 
constricting the offering of such non-plan multiple employer welfare 
arrangements (MEWAs), the proposed rule would simply make more widely 
available another vehicle --the AHP-- for the employer associations to 
provide group health coverage to their employer-members, thus making 
available advantages distinct from non-plan MEWAs, including, often, 
access to the large group market.

C. Background

1. Section 3(5) of ERISA and the Current Standards for an Association 
To Be Treated as the ``Employer'' Sponsor of an Employee Welfare 
Benefit Plan That Is a Group Health Plan.

    The term ``employee welfare benefit plan'' is defined in section 
3(1) of ERISA to include, among other arrangements, ``any plan, fund, 
or program . . . established or maintained by an employer or by an 
employee organization, or by both, to the extent that such plan, fund, 
or program was established or is maintained for the purpose of 
providing for its participants or their beneficiaries, through the 
purchase of insurance or otherwise . . . medical, surgical, or hospital 
care or benefits, or benefits in the event of sickness, accident, 
disability, death or unemployment . . . .'' Thus, in order to be an 
employee welfare benefit plan, a plan must, among other criteria, be 
established or maintained by an employer, an employee organization, or 
both. The term ``employer'' is defined in section 3(5) of ERISA as ``. 
. . any person acting directly as an employer, or indirectly in the 
interest of an employer, in relation to an employee benefit plan; and 
includes a group or association of employers acting for an employer in 
such capacity.'' Thus, ERISA defines the term ``employer'' to include 
the ``direct'' (or common law) employer of the covered employees or 
``any other person acting indirectly in the interest of'' the common 
law employer.\3\ Although there are various ways in which groups of 
employers can participate in a single plan, for example because they 
share substantial common ownership (e.g., a controlled group of 
corporations), the Department has taken the view, on the basis of the 
definitional provisions of ERISA, as well as the overall structure of 
Title I of ERISA, that, in the absence of the involvement of an 
employee organization, a single ``multiple employer'' plan may also 
exist where a cognizable group or association of employers, acting in 
the interest of its employer members, establishes a benefit program for 
the employees of member employers and exercises control over the 
amendment process, plan termination, and other similar functions on 
behalf of these members with respect to the plan and any trust 
established under the program. DOL guidance generally refers to these 
entities as ``bona fide'' employer groups or associations. See, e.g., 
Advisory Opinions 2008-07A, 2003-17A and 2001-04A. See also Advisory 
Opinion 96-25A (if an employer adopts for its employees a program of 
benefits sponsored by an employer group or association that does not 
itself constitute an ``employer,'' such an adopting employer may have 
established a separate, single-employer benefit plan covered by Title I 
of ERISA).
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    \3\ For more information on common law employment relationships, 
see Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. v. Darden, 503 U.S. 318 (1992).
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    In distinguishing employer groups or associations that can act as 
an ERISA section 3(5) employer in sponsoring a multiple employer plan 
from those that cannot, the touchstone has long been whether the group 
or association has a sufficiently close economic or representational 
nexus to the employers and employees that participate in the plan. This 
``commonality of interest'' requirement distinguishes bona fide groups 
or associations of employers who provide coverage to their employees 
and the families of their employees from arrangements that more closely 
resemble State-regulated private insurance offered to the market at 
large. See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 94-07A; Advisory Opinion 2001-04A. 
Courts have also held that there must be some cohesive relationship 
between the provider of benefits and the recipient of benefits under 
the plan so that the entity that maintains the plan and the individuals 
who benefit from the plan are tied by a common economic or 
representational interest. Wisconsin Educ. Assn. Ins. Trust v. Iowa 
State Bd. of Public Instruction, 804 F.2d 1059, 1064 (8th Cir. 1986). 
See also MD Physicians & Associates, Inc. v. State Bd. of Ins., 957 
F.2d 178 (5th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 506 U.S. 861 (1992); National 
Business Assn. Trust v. Morgan, 770 F. Supp. 1169 (W.D. Ky. 1991).
    DOL advisory opinions and court decisions have applied a facts-and-
circumstances approach to determining whether there is a sufficient 
common economic or representational interest or genuine organizational 
relationship for there to be a bona fide employer group or association 
capable of sponsoring an ERISA plan on behalf of its employer members. 
This analysis has focused on three broad sets of issues, in particular: 
(1) Whether the group or association is a bona fide organization with 
business/organizational purposes and functions unrelated to the 
provision of benefits; (2) whether the employers share some

[[Page 617]]

commonality and genuine organizational relationship unrelated to the 
provision of benefits; and (3) whether the employers that participate 
in a benefit program, either directly or indirectly, exercise control 
over the program, both in form and substance. The first two issues have 
tended to merge, depending on the facts of a particular case. When an 
entity meets each of these requirements, the Department has concluded 
that it is appropriate to treat the entity as an ``employer'' within 
the meaning of section 3(5) of ERISA, rather than merely as a 
commercial insurance-type arrangement that lacks the requisite 
connection to the employment relationship.
    This approach has ensured that the Department's regulation of 
employee benefit plans is focused on employment-based arrangements, as 
contemplated by ERISA's text, but neither the Department's previous 
advisory opinions, nor relevant court cases, have ever held that the 
Department is foreclosed from adopting a more flexible test in a 
regulation, or from departing from the three particular factors set 
forth above in determining whether a group or association can be 
treated as acting as an ``employer'' or ``indirectly in the interest of 
an employer,'' for purposes of the statutory definition. These 
definitional terms are ambiguous as applied to a group or association 
in the context of ERISA section 3(5), and the statute does not 
specifically refer to or impose the particular historical elements of 
the ``commonality'' test on the determination of whether a group or 
association acts as the ``employer'' sponsor of an ERISA-covered plan 
within the scope of ERISA section 3(5). Accordingly, that determination 
may be more broadly guided by ERISA's purposes and appropriate policy 
considerations, including the need to expand access to healthcare and 
to respond to statutory changes and changing market dynamics.

2. Federal and State Regulation of Multiple Employer Welfare 
Arrangements

    For many years, promoters of health coverage arrangements and 
others have established and operated MEWAs, also described as 
``multiple employer trusts'' or ``METs,'' as vehicles for marketing 
health and welfare benefits to employers for their employees.\4\ Some 
MEWAs have provided quality health coverage to their members' employees 
with less administrative overhead. But others have failed to pay 
promised health benefits to sick and injured workers while diverting, 
to the pockets of fraudsters, employer and employee contributions from 
their intended purpose of funding benefits.
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    \4\ The term MEWA or ``multiple employer welfare arrangement'' 
is defined in ERISA section 3(40). The term includes an employee 
welfare benefit plan, or any other arrangement (other than an 
employee welfare benefit plan) which is established or maintained 
for the purpose of offering or providing any ERISA welfare benefit 
to the employees of two or more employers (including one or more 
self-employed individuals), or to their beneficiaries. Section 3(40) 
expressly excludes from the MEWA definition any such plan or 
arrangement that is established or maintained under or pursuant to 
one or more agreements which the Secretary finds to be collective 
bargaining agreements, by a rural electric cooperative, or by a 
rural telephone cooperative association. The definition of MEWA thus 
includes both ERISA-covered employee welfare benefit plans and other 
arrangements which offer or provide medical, surgical, hospital care 
or benefits, or benefits in the event of sickness, accident, 
disability, or any other benefit described in ERISA Section 3(1). 
AHPs as described in this proposal are one type of MEWA.
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    Congress has enacted reforms to curb MEWA abuse. Prior to 1983, a 
number of States attempted to subject MEWAs to State insurance law 
requirements but were frustrated in their regulatory and enforcement 
efforts by MEWA-promoter claims of ERISA-plan status and federal 
preemption. Recognizing that it was both appropriate and necessary for 
States to be able to establish, apply, and enforce State insurance laws 
with respect to MEWAs, Congress amended ERISA in 1983 to provide an 
exception to ERISA's broad preemption provisions for the regulation of 
MEWAs under State insurance laws. In general, under the 1983 
amendments, if a MEWA that is also an employee welfare benefit plan (an 
uncommon situation under prior guidance, as explained elsewhere) is not 
fully insured, then under section 514(b)(6)(A)(ii) of ERISA, any State 
law that regulates insurance may apply to the MEWA to the extent that 
such State law is not inconsistent with ERISA. For example, a State law 
could regulate solvency, benefit levels, or rating. Similarly, States 
could require registration and claims data reporting of MEWA operators. 
If, on the other hand, a MEWA is also an employee welfare benefit plan 
and is fully insured, ERISA section 514(b)(6)(A)(i) of ERISA provides 
that State laws that regulate the maintenance of specified contribution 
and reserve levels (and that enforce those standards) may apply to the 
MEWA, but other State non-insurance laws are preempted. ERISA section 
514(b)(6)(D) provides, in turn, that a MEWA will be considered fully 
insured for purposes of section 514(b)(6) only if all of the benefits 
offered or provided under the MEWA are guaranteed under a contract or 
policy of insurance issued by an insurance company that is ``qualified 
to conduct business in a State.'' With respect to other non-insurance 
State laws, AHPs under the proposal would be subject to the same 
general ERISA preemption standards that apply to other ERISA-covered 
employee benefit plans.
    The Affordable Care Act established a multipronged approach to MEWA 
abuses. Improvements in reporting requirements, together with stronger 
enforcement tools, are designed to reduce MEWA fraud and abuse. These 
include expanded reporting and required registration for MEWAs with the 
Department prior to operating in a State. The additional information 
facilitates joint State and Federal efforts to prevent harm and take 
enforcement action. The Affordable Care Act also strengthened 
enforcement by giving the Secretary of Labor authority to issue a cease 
and desist order when a MEWA engages in fraudulent or other abusive 
conduct and issue a summary seizure order when a MEWA is in a 
financially hazardous condition.\5\
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    \5\ Section 6605 of the Affordable Care Act added section 521 to 
ERISA to give the Secretary of Labor additional enforcement 
authority to protect plan participants, beneficiaries, employees or 
employee organizations, or other members of the public against 
fraudulent, abusive, or financially hazardous MEWAs. ERISA section 
521(a) authorizes the Secretary of Labor to issue an ex parte cease 
and desist order if it appears to the Secretary that the alleged 
conduct of a MEWA under section 3(40) of ERISA is fraudulent, or 
creates an immediate danger to the public safety or welfare, or is 
causing or can be reasonably expected to cause significant, 
imminent, and irreparable public injury. Section 521(e) of ERISA 
authorizes the Secretary to issue a summary seizure order if it 
appears that a MEWA is in a financially hazardous condition.
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3. Impact of ERISA Definition of Employer on Health Insurance Markets

    Federal and State healthcare laws, including the Affordable Care 
Act, include a variety of requirements that sometimes differ based on 
whether health coverage is insured or self-insured, and if the coverage 
is insured, whether it is offered in the individual, small group, or 
large group health insurance market. Whether coverage is offered in the 
individual or group health insurance market is determined by reference 
to ERISA. Specifically, ``individual market coverage'' is health 
insurance coverage that is offered other than in connection with a 
group health plan. PHS Act section 2791(e)(1)(A). See also 26 CFR 
54.9801-2; 29 CFR 2590.701-2; 45 CFR 144.103. A ``group health plan'' 
is generally defined as an employee welfare benefit plan under ERISA 
section 3(1), to the extent the plan provides medical care. ERISA

[[Page 618]]

section 733(a); PHS Act section 2791. See also 26 CFR 54.9831-1(a); 29 
CFR 2590.732(a); 45 CFR 146.145(a). ``Group health insurance coverage'' 
means, in connection with a group health plan, health insurance 
coverage offered in connection with such plan. ERISA section 733(b)(4); 
PHS Act section 2791(b)(4). See also 26 CFR 54.9801-2; 29 CFR 2590.701-
2; 45 CFR 144.103.
    The group health insurance market is divided into the small group 
market and the large group market, depending on the number of employees 
employed by the employer. PHS Act section 2791(e)(2)-(7). See also 45 
CFR 144.103. Generally, group health insurance offered by an employer 
with at least one and not more than 50 employees is in the small group 
market, while group health insurance offered by an employer with at 
least 51 employees is in the large group market. Id.\6\
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    \6\ Under the ACA, the upper bound for the definition of a small 
employer for purposes of title XXVII of the PHS Act was to change 
from 50 (as originally enacted) to 100 employees as of 2016. 
However, the Protecting Affordable Coverage for Employees Act (PACE 
Act, Pub. L. 114-60) amended the definition so that the upper bound 
would remain at 50. The PACE Act also permits States to elect an 
upper bound of 100 employees. CMS guidance indicates that States may 
elect to extend this upper bound to 100 employees by any means that 
is legally binding under State law, provided the definition applies 
to all insurers. States that elect to extend the upper bound were 
requested to notify CMS. See https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/FAQ-on-the-Impact-of-the-PACE-Act-on-State-Small-Group-Expansion.pdf. CMS has informed DOL that, to date, 
no States have elected to change the upper bound to 100.
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    With respect to insured coverage, whether coverage is offered in 
the individual, small group, or large group market affects compliance 
obligations under the Affordable Care Act and other State and Federal 
insurance laws. For example, only individual and small group market 
health insurance coverage is subject to the requirement to cover 
essential health benefits as defined under section 1302 of the 
Affordable Care Act.\7\ Moreover, the risk adjustment program, which 
transfers funds from plans with lower-risk enrollees to plans with 
higher-risk enrollees, applies only to health insurance issuers 
offering coverage in the individual and small group markets, not the 
large group market.\8\ The single risk pool requirement, which requires 
each health insurance issuer to consider the claims experience of all 
individuals enrolled in plans offered by the issuer in the individual 
market to be in a single risk pool, and all its individuals in the 
small group market to be members of a single risk pool, also applies 
only in the individual and small group markets, not the large group 
market.\9\ In addition, the health insurance premium rules that 
prohibit issuers from varying premiums except with respect to location, 
age (within certain limits), family size, and tobacco-use (within 
certain limits) apply only in the individual and small group 
markets.\10\ Finally, the Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) provisions, which 
limit the portion of premium dollars health insurance issuers may spend 
on administration, marketing, and profits establish different 
thresholds for the small group market and the large group market.\11\ 
Self-insured group health plans are exempt from each of these 
obligations regardless of the size of the employer that establishes or 
maintains the plan. These differences in obligations result in a 
complex and costly compliance environment for coverages provided 
through associations, particularly if the coverages are simultaneously 
subject to individual, small group, and large group market regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ See PHS Act section 2707, as added by the Affordable Care 
Act.
    \8\ See section 1343 of the Affordable Care Act.
    \9\ See section 1312(c) of the Affordable Care Act. States may 
require issuers to merge their individual and small group risk 
pools.
    \10\ See PHS Act section 2701, as added by the Affordable Care 
Act.
    \11\ The MLR provision of the Affordable Care Act requires most 
health insurance issuers that cover individuals or small employers 
to spend at least 80% of their premium dollars on healthcare claims 
and quality improvement, leaving the remaining 20% for overhead 
expenses, such as administrative costs, marketing, and profit. The 
MLR threshold is higher for large group plans, which must spend at 
least 85% of premium dollars on healthcare claims and quality 
improvement. 45 CFR part 158.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Guidance issued by the HHS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services 
(CMS) in 2011 (CMS 2011 guidance) clarifies that the test for 
determining whether association coverage is individual, small group, or 
large group market coverage for purposes of Title XXVII of the PHS Act 
is the same test as that applied to health insurance offered directly 
to individuals or employers.\12\ Association coverage does not exist as 
a distinct meaningful category of health insurance coverage under Title 
XXVII of the PHS Act.\13\ Instead, when applying the individual and 
group market requirements of the PHS Act to insurance coverage offered 
or provided through associations, CMS will ignore the association and 
look directly to each association member to determine the status of 
each member's coverage. As a result, association coverage may be 
treated as comprised of individual market coverage, small group market 
coverage, large group market coverage, and mixed associations of more 
than one coverage type.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ See CMS Insurance Standards Bulletin Series--(September 1, 
2011) available at: https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/association_coverage_9_1_2011.pdf. See also CMS Insurance 
Standards Bulletin Transmittal No. 02-02 (August 2002) available at: 
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/dwnlds/hipaa_02_02_508.pdf.
    \13\ Title XXVII of the PHS Act does recognize coverage offered 
through ``bona fide associations,'' but only for purposes of 
providing limited exceptions from its guaranteed issue (in limited 
cases) and guaranteed renewability requirements. PHS Act secs. 
2741(e)(1); 2742(b)(5) and (e); 2703(b)(6), as added by the ACA; and 
2791(d)(3). Bona fide groups or associations of employers under the 
definition proposed in this rulemaking would not necessarily qualify 
as ``bona fide associations'' under the PHS Act definition for 
purposes of these PHS Act provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The CMS 2011 guidance further states that, ``in most situations 
involving employment-based association coverage, the group health plan 
exists at the individual employer level and not at the association-of-
employers level. In these situations, the size of each individual 
employer participating in the association determines whether that 
employer's coverage is subject to the small group market or the large 
group market rules. In the rare instances where the association of 
employers is, in fact, sponsoring the group health plan and the 
association itself is deemed the `employer,' the association coverage 
is considered a single group health plan. In that case, the number of 
employees employed by all of the employers participating in the 
association determines whether the coverage is subject to the small 
group market or the large group market rules.''
    Since the enactment of the Affordable Care Act, DOL and HHS have 
heard a number of concerns from stakeholders--especially working owners 
of businesses that do not employ other individuals, and independent 
contractors--regarding challenges that small businesses face in 
securing affordable health coverage options.
    Some stakeholders have suggested to the Department that allowing 
businesses, especially small businesses, more flexibility to form AHPs 
would facilitate more choice and potentially make health coverage more 
affordable. These stakeholders opined that the AHP structure would give 
them increased negotiating power to bargain for lower premiums for 
their employees, as well as the ability to purchase coverage that would 
be less expensive because it would not be subject to some of the 
regulatory requirements applicable to the small group market but not 
the large group market. Proponents also contend that AHPs can help 
reduce the cost of health coverage because of increased bargaining 
power, economies of scale,

[[Page 619]]

administrative efficiencies, and transfer of plan maintenance 
responsibilities from participating employers to the AHP sponsor. AHPs 
may also help contain costs by creating a stable risk pool that may 
enable AHPs to self-insure rather than purchase insurance from 
commercial insurers.
    Legislative proposals designed to foster the formation of AHPs have 
repeatedly been introduced in Congress.\14\ These legislative efforts 
generally would make it easier for employers to form AHPs and set a 
uniform federal framework for regulation. In the absence of 
legislation, however, Executive Order 13813 directs the Department to 
consider proposing regulations or revising guidance, consistent with 
law, to expand access to health coverage by allowing more employers to 
form AHPs by expanding the conditions that satisfy the commonality-of-
interest requirements under existing Department advisory opinions 
interpreting the definition of an ``employer'' under section 3(5) of 
ERISA in the context of AHPs in a manner that would focus on the 
association rather than the individual members of the association when 
evaluating association coverage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ See, e.g., Small Business Health Fairness Act of 2017, H.R. 
1101, 115th Cong. sec. 1 (2017); see also, the Better Care 
Reconciliation Act of 2017, discussion draft of an amendment in the 
form of a substitute to the American Healthcare Act, H.R. 1628, 
115th Cong. sec. 1 (2017) (available at www.budget.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/ERN17500.pdf.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Upon due consideration as directed by the Executive Order, the 
Department is proposing for public comment a revision to its long-
standing interpretation of what constitutes an ``employer'' capable of 
sponsoring an ``employee benefit plan'' under ERISA in the context of 
group health coverage. Under the proposal, AHPs that meet the 
regulation's conditions would have a ready means of offering their 
employer-members, and their employer members' employees, a single group 
health plan subject to the same State and Federal regulatory structure 
as other ERISA-covered employee welfare benefit plans. This proposed 
rule has been developed in consultation with HHS, CMS, the Department 
of the Treasury, and the Internal Revenue Service, with which the 
Department is working to implement the Affordable Care Act, Executive 
Order 13813, and Executive Order 13765.\15\ However, these proposed 
rules would apply solely for purposes of Title I of ERISA and for 
determining whether health insurance coverage is regulated by PHS Act 
provisions that apply in the individual, small group, or large group 
market, and not, for example, for purposes of taxation under the Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ The Departments of Labor, HHS, and the Treasury operate 
under a Memorandum of Understanding that implements section 104 of 
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 
(HIPAA) and subsequent amendments, including certain sections of the 
Affordable Care Act, and provides for coordination and consultation. 
See 64 FR 70164 (December 15, 1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. Overview of Proposed Regulation

    The Department believes providing additional opportunities for 
employer groups or associations to offer health coverage to their 
members' employees under a single plan may, under the conditions 
proposed here, offer many small businesses more affordable alternatives 
than are currently available to them in the individual or small group 
markets. Consequently, the proposed rule may prompt some working owners 
who were previously uninsured and some small businesses that did not 
previously offer insurance to their employees, to enroll in AHPs, and 
similarly prompt some small businesses with insured health plans to 
switch from their existing individual or small group policies to AHPs. 
In addition, the option for small employers to join AHPs could offer 
better financial protection to employers (and their employees) than if 
they self-insured and purchased stop-loss insurance \16\ that may not 
adequately protect them from financial risk. Under the proposed rule, 
AHPs that buy insurance \17\ would not be subject to the insurance 
``look-through'' doctrine as set forth in the CMS 2011 guidance; 
instead, because an AHP under the proposed rule would constitute a 
single plan, whether the plan would be buying insurance as a large or 
small group plan would be determined by reference to the number of 
employees in the entire AHP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ Stop-loss insurance (sometimes also known as excess 
insurance) is generally an insurance product that provides 
protection for self-insured employers or plans by serving as a 
reimbursement mechanism for catastrophic claims exceeding pre-
determined levels. See https://www.siia.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageID=4549.
    \17\ The CMS 2011 guidance ``Application of Individual and Group 
Market Requirements under Title XXVII of the Public Health Service 
Act when Insurance Coverage Is Sold to, or Through, Associations'' 
apples only to insured arrangements, and not to self-insured 
arrangements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed regulation would redefine the criteria in the 
Department's existing sub-regulatory guidance for a bona fide group or 
association of employers capable of establishing a multiple employer 
group health plan that is an employee welfare benefit plan and a group 
health plan as those terms are defined in ERISA. The Department notes 
that this preamble and the proposed rule do not address the application 
of the ERISA section 3(5) statutory phrase, ``acting. . .indirectly in 
the interest'' or ``group or association of employers,'', in any 
context other than as applied to an employer group or association 
sponsoring an AHP.
a. Employers Could Band Together for the Single Purpose of Obtaining 
Health Coverage
    The proposed regulation would remove existing restrictions in the 
Department's sub-regulatory guidance on ERISA section 3(5) to allow 
employers to more easily join together in organizations that offer 
group health coverage to member employers and their employees under one 
group health plan. Specifically, the regulation would allow employers 
to band together for the express purpose of offering health coverage if 
they either are: (1) in the same trade, industry, line of business, or 
profession; or (2) have a principal place of business within a region 
that does not exceed the boundaries of the same State or the same 
metropolitan area (even if the metropolitan area includes more than one 
State). As discussed elsewhere in this document, the restrictions in 
the Department's existing advisory opinions were intended to help 
distinguish healthcare arrangements sponsored by an entity acting as an 
``employer'' within the meaning of section 3(5) of ERISA from 
commercial-insurance-type arrangements that lack the requisite 
connection to the employment relationship. The Department has concluded 
that other conditions in this proposal can adequately serve that 
purpose while removing the condition that the employer association must 
have a purpose other than offering health coverage as a potential undue 
restriction on the establishment and maintenance of AHPs under ERISA. 
The proposal also would allow associations to rely on other 
characteristics upon which they previously relied to satisfy the 
commonality provision of paragraph (c) of the proposed rules, because 
the Department's existing sub-regulatory guidance applies the 
commonality requirement as a facts and circumstances test, and the 
Department intends that any employer group or association that meets 
the commonality requirement in the Department's existing sub-regulatory 
requirement should also be treated as meeting the commonality 
requirement in the proposed regulation. The Department seeks comment on 
whether the final rule, if adopted, should also recognize other bases 
for finding a commonality of interest.

[[Page 620]]

    The latter part of the second prong of this proposal's definition 
relating to States and metropolitan areas will allow an AHP to satisfy 
the commonality requirement if its members have a principal place of 
business within a region that does not exceed the boundaries of the 
same State or metropolitan area (even if the metropolitan area includes 
more than one State).
    Examples of such metropolitan areas include the Greater New York 
City Area/Tri-State Region covering portions of New York, New Jersey 
and Connecticut; the Washington Metropolitan Area of the District of 
Columbia and portions of Maryland and Virginia; and the Kansas City 
Metropolitan Area covering portions of Missouri and Kansas. AHPs could 
also satisfy the commonality requirement by limiting themselves to a 
smaller geographic region, such as a city or county. The Department 
invites comments specifically on whether more clarification would be 
helpful regarding the definition of a metropolitan area. For example, 
the Department is interested in whether a federal designation by the 
U.S. Census or the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which 
delineates metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas according to 
published standards (see www.census.gov/programs-surveys/metro-micro.html), or another definition, should be used and, if so, how, for 
purposes of establishing eligibility for continued or new employer 
membership (e.g., at the beginning of each plan year). The Department 
is also interested, for example, in comments on whether there is any 
reason for concern that associations could manipulate geographic 
classifications to avoid offering coverage to employers expected to 
incur more costly health claims. The Department also seeks comments on 
whether there are other examples that would be helpful to clarify the 
provision and also on whether there should be a special process 
established to obtain a determination from the Department that all an 
association's members have a principal place of business in a 
metropolitan area.
    By expressly allowing the group or association to exist for the 
purpose, in whole or in part, of offering or providing health coverage 
to its members, the regulation would depart from previous sub-
regulatory guidance providing that the group or association must exist 
for a bona fide purpose other than offering health coverage to be an 
employer for purposes of section 3(5) of ERISA. The proposal also would 
not include any requirement that the group or association be a pre-
existing organization. Rather, employers could band together in new 
organizations whose sole purpose is to provide group health coverage to 
member employers and their employees. And by allowing formation of such 
an organization based on either common industry or geography, the 
Department expects that the regulation could greatly increase 
association coverage options available to American workers.
    One of the primary aims of this proposal is to give small employers 
(as well as sole proprietors and other working-owners) the opportunity 
to join together to provide more affordable healthcare to their 
employees; however, the proposed regulation would not restrict the size 
of the employers that are able to participate in a bona fide group or 
association of employers. The Department expects minimal interest among 
large employers in establishing or joining an AHP as envisioned in this 
proposal because large employers already enjoy many of the large group 
market advantages that this proposal would afford small employers. 
However, the Department anticipates that there may be some large 
employers that may see cost savings and/or administrative efficiencies 
in using an AHP as the vehicle for providing health coverage to their 
employees.

b. The Group or Association Must Have an Organizational Structure and 
Be Functionally Controlled by Its Employer Members

    Paragraph (b) of the proposed regulation defines certain criteria 
for a bona fide group or association of employers to be capable of 
establishing a group health plan under ERISA. The proposal would 
require that the group or association have a formal organizational 
structure with a governing body and have by-laws or other similar 
indications of formality appropriate for the legal form in which the 
group or association operates, and that the group or association's 
member employers control its functions and activities, including the 
establishment and maintenance of the group health plan, either directly 
or through the regular election of directors, officers, or other 
similar representatives. These requirements largely duplicate 
conditions in the Department's existing sub-regulatory guidance under 
ERISA section 3(5), and ensure that the organizations are genuine 
organizations with the organizational structure necessary to act ``in 
the interest'' of participating employers with respect to employee 
benefit plans as the statute requires. The proposed regulation would 
also retain the requirement in the Department's existing sub-regulatory 
guidance under section 3(5) of ERISA that an AHP's employer-members 
control the AHP. This requirement is necessary to satisfy the statutory 
requirement in ERISA section 3(5) that the group or association must 
act ``in the interest of'' the direct employers in relation to the 
employee benefit plan, and to prevent formation of commercial 
enterprises that claim to be AHPs but, in reality, merely operate 
similar to traditional insurers selling insurance in the group market. 
In the latter circumstance, the association lacks the requisite 
connection to the employment relationship, inasmuch as it neither acts 
directly as an employer, nor ``in the interest'' of employers, within 
the meaning of section 3(5) of ERISA. The Department intends that any 
employer group or association that meets the control requirement in the 
Department's existing sub-regulatory requirement should also be treated 
as meeting the control requirement in the proposed regulation.

c. Group or Association Plan Coverage Must Be Limited to Employees of 
Employer Members and Treatment of Working Owners

    In addition, paragraph (b)(6) of the proposed regulations would 
require that only employees and former employees of employer members 
(and family/beneficiaries of those employees and former employees) may 
participate in a group health plan sponsored by the association and 
that the group or association does not make health coverage offered 
through the association available to anybody other than to employees 
and former employees of employer members and their families or other 
beneficiaries. Together, these criteria are intended to ensure that, 
for purposes of Title I of ERISA, the groups or associations sponsoring 
the covered AHPs are bona fide employment-based associations, as 
clarified by this proposal, and not more general membership 
organizations essentially operating as unlicensed health insurance 
providers selling commercial group health coverage to individuals and 
employers without the type of connection to the employment relationship 
envisioned by ERISA's section 3(1) definition of employee welfare 
benefit plan. See, e.g., Wisconsin Educ. Assn. Ins. Trust v. Iowa State 
Bd. of Public Instruction, 804 F.2d 1059, 1064 (8th Cir. 1986) (``The 
only relationship between the sponsoring labor union and these non-
member recipients stems from the benefit plan

[[Page 621]]

itself. Such a relationship is similar to the relationship between a 
private insurance company, which is subject to myriad State insurance 
regulations, and the beneficiaries of a group insurance plan.''). 
Accord Mandala v. California Law Enforcement Ass'n, 561 F. Supp.2d 
1130, 1135 (C.D. Cal. 2008)).
    The text of ERISA relevant here specifies that only employees and 
former employees of the member employers, and their families or other 
beneficiaries, may receive coverage through an AHP as an ERISA-covered 
benefit plan. ERISA is an acronym for the ``Employee Retirement Income 
Security Act of 1974.'' Consistent with the Act's title and 
understandings about the workplace, the touchstone of ERISA is the 
provision of benefits through the employment relationship. That 
understanding appears in the definition of ``employee welfare benefit 
plan,'' which defines which benefit arrangements are subject to ERISA. 
An ``employee welfare benefit plan'' is defined as ``any plan, fund, or 
program . . . established or maintained by an employer or by an 
employee organization, or by both, to the extent that such plan, fund, 
or program was established or is maintained for the purpose of 
providing for its participants or their beneficiaries [benefits such as 
health insurance].'' ERISA section 3(1). The term ``participant'' is in 
turn defined as ``any employee or former employee of an employer . . . 
who is or may become eligible to receive a benefit . . . from an 
employee benefit plan which covers employees of such employer.'' Id. 
section 3(7) (emphasis added). In other words, a participant is an 
employee of an employer who may receive benefits from that employer's 
own benefits plan. Individuals who are not ``participants'' within the 
meaning of ERISA section 3(7), e.g., individuals who are not employees 
or former employees of employers sponsoring a particular plan, are 
ineligible to be covered (or have their families or other beneficiaries 
covered) by an ERISA plan. See, e.g., Wisconsin Educ. Assn. Ins. Trust, 
804 F.2d at 1064.
    Significantly, in paragraph (e) of the regulation, the proposal 
would expressly provide that working owners, such as sole proprietors 
and other self-employed individuals, may elect to act as employers for 
purposes of participating in an employer group or association and also 
be treated as employees of their businesses for purposes of being 
covered by the group or association's health plan. This approach is 
consistent with advisory opinions in which the Department has concluded 
that working owners may be ``participants'' in ERISA plans. For 
example, Advisory Opinion 99-04A reviews various provisions of ERISA 
and the Code that specifically address working owner issues in ERISA 
plans, and concludes that, taken as a whole, they ``reveal a clear 
Congressional design to include 'working owners' within the definition 
of 'participant' for purposes of Title I of ERISA.'' \18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ The Advisory Opinion cites Code section 401(c), which for 
purposes of certain provisions relating to qualified retirement 
plans, and also for certain other Code provisions related to 
employee benefits that cross-reference section 401(c), generally 
treats a sole proprietor as both an employer and an employee and 
treats partners (including owners of entities taxed as partnerships, 
such as limited liability companies) as employees of the 
partnership.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This proposed rule would also serve to confirm that the 
Department's regulation at 29 CFR 2510.3-3 does not limit the ability 
of working owners to participate in AHPs alongside other employer 
members. Section 2510.3-3(b) excludes ``plans without employees'' from 
the definition of employee benefit plans covered by Title I of ERISA, 
thereby ensuring that a health insurance arrangement that covers, for 
example, only the working owner and his or her spouse, is not generally 
subject to ERISA's reporting and disclosure, fiduciary, and enforcement 
provisions. Thus, Section (c) of 29 CFR 2510.3-3 is titled 
``Employees'' and states: ``For purposes of this section [i.e., for 
purposes of the regulation defining a covered plan]: (1) An individual 
and his or her spouse shall not be deemed to be employees with respect 
to a trade or business, whether incorporated or unincorporated, which 
is wholly owned by the individual or by the individual and his or her 
spouse, and (2) A partner in a partnership and his or her spouse shall 
not be deemed to be employees with respect to the partnership.'' 
Accordingly, if the sole participants in a benefit arrangement are the 
individual owner of a business and his or her spouse or partners in the 
same partnership and their spouses, the regulation treats the 
arrangement as a plan without employees and excludes it from the 
definition of ERISA-covered plans.
    However, that same regulation expressly limits this language to 29 
CFR 2510.3-3, and sole owners or partners are not excluded from being 
participants in a plan that also covers one or more common law 
employees in addition to the sole owner or partners of the same 
partnership and their spouses. Rather, plans covering working owners 
and their non-owner employees clearly fall within ERISA's scope. Thus, 
the U.S. Supreme Court in Yates v. Hendon, 541 U.S. 1 (2004), concluded 
in a case involving section 2510.3-3, that ``[u]nder ERISA, a working 
owner may have dual status, i.e., he can be an employee entitled to 
participate in a plan and, at the same time, the employer (or owner or 
member of the employer) who established the plan.'' The definition of 
``plans without employees'' in 29 CFR 2510.3-3(b) simply defines a 
limited circumstance in which the only parties participating in the 
benefit arrangement are an individual owner/partner and spouse, and 
declines to deem the individuals, in that limited circumstance, as 
employees of the trade or business for purposes of the regulation. In 
that narrow circumstance, the regulation concludes that ERISA's 
reporting and disclosure, fiduciary, and enforcement provisions are 
unnecessary.
    The regulatory definition does not apply, however, outside that 
limited context and, accordingly, does not prevent sole proprietors or 
other working owners from being participants in broader plan 
arrangements, such as the AHPs that are the subject of this proposal. 
As proposed here, AHPs are a far cry from such individual arrangements 
``administered'' by a single individual on behalf of himself or herself 
and a spouse. Instead, the association and the AHP are responsible for 
the provision of employment-based benefits payable to numerous workers 
employed by multiple employers. Many or most of the affected employers 
and employees will not be directly involved in the administration of 
benefits, and all of the employers and employees should benefit from 
prudence and loyalty requirements for those running the AHP, as well as 
such other protections as reporting and disclosure obligations and 
claims procedure requirements, and enforcement, in the same manner and 
to the same extent as participants in other ERISA plan arrangements.
    Accordingly, this proposal would extend by regulation the 
availability of the dual status of working owners to AHPs as a type of 
multiple employer plan, and make it clear that 29 CFR 2510.3-3 does not 
broadly preclude working owners of trades or businesses and other self-
employed individuals without common law employees from joining a group 
health plan sponsored by an employer group or association. The 
Department set forth above its view regarding the permissible 
interpretation of the 29 CFR 2510.3-3 regulation as it relates to 
working owners participating in AHPs. Notwithstanding those views, to 
the extent the regulation could result in working owners not being able 
to participate as employees even in some

[[Page 622]]

circumstances, the Department believes the policies and objectives 
underlying this proposal support an amendment of the 29 CFR 2510.3-3 
regulation so that it clearly does not interfere with working owners 
participating in AHPs as envisioned in this proposal. Accordingly, and 
to eliminate any potential ambiguity regarding the interaction of this 
proposal with the regulation at 29 CFR 2510-3-3, this proposal also 
includes a technical amendment of paragraph (c) of 2510.3-3 to include 
an express cross-reference to the working owner provision in this 
proposal.
    Specifically, the proposed regulation includes a provision that 
expressly states that a working owner of a trade or business without 
common law employees, regardless of the legal form in which the 
business is operated (e.g., sole proprietors or other working owners of 
businesses, whether incorporated or unincorporated), may elect to act 
as an employer for purposes of participating in an employer group or 
association and be treated as an employee of the trade or business for 
purposes of being covered by the employer group's or association's 
health plan, if the individual is earning income from the trade or 
business for providing personal services to the trade or business; and 
either provides on average at least 30 hours of personal services to 
the trade or business per week or 120 hours of such service per month, 
or has earned income derived from such trade or business that at least 
equals the cost of coverage under the group or association's health 
plan. In addition, the individual must not be eligible for other 
subsidized group health plan coverage under a group health plan 
sponsored by any other employer of the individual or by a spouse's 
employer.\19\ The proposal also includes an express provision that 
would allow the group or association sponsoring the AHP to rely, absent 
knowledge to the contrary, on written representations from the 
individual seeking to participate as a working owner as a basis for 
concluding that these conditions are satisfied. Comments are invited on 
this provision, including whether an individual must not be eligible 
for other subsidized group health plan coverage under another employer 
or a spouse's employer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ The earned income standard and other group health plan 
eligibility provision are informed by Federal tax standards, 
including section 162(l) of the Code that describe conditions for 
self-employed individuals to deduct the cost of health insurance. 
However, federal tax treatment, including tax administration of Code 
section 162(l) and any potential IRS reporting requirements, of 
working owners is not affected by the proposed regulation's 
characterization of a working owner as an employer for purposes of 
participating in a sponsoring employer group or association and an 
employee for purposes of being covered by the group health plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Department included the proposed working owner criteria to 
ensure that a legitimate trade or business exists. ERISA governs 
benefits provided in the context of an employment relationship. The 
Department is concerned, therefore, that without such criteria, the 
regulation could effectively eliminate the statutory distinction 
between offering and maintaining employment-based ERISA-covered plans, 
on the one hand, and the mere marketing of insurance to individuals 
outside the employment context, on the other. Thus, for example, an 
association would fall outside the purview of this rule if it offered 
coverage to persons who are not genuinely engaged in a trade or 
business (e.g., a vendor marketing AHP coverage could not make 
eligibility turn on such de minimis ``commercial activities'' as giving 
a ``customer'' a single on-demand ride for a fee, or knitting a single 
scarf to be offered for sale on the internet, with no requirement that 
the individual ever engage in the supposed ``trade or business'' ever 
again). The rule is intended to cover genuine employment-based 
relationships, not to provide cover for the marketing of individual 
insurance masquerading as employment-based coverage.
    The Department recognizes that it could be possible to draw the 
line between employment-based arrangements, as covered by ERISA, and 
non-ERISA arrangements in other ways. For example, the Department also 
recognizes that some legitimate start-up trades or businesses may take 
time to become profitable, and ongoing genuine trades or businesses may 
experience bad years financially. Alternative approaches could focus on 
other measures of the trade or business as a source of earnings or 
other measures of time spent on the work activity. Accordingly, the 
Department solicits comments on whether the proposed standard is 
workable and, if so, whether any additional clarifications would be 
helpful to address issues relating to how working owners could 
reasonably predict whether they will meet the earned income and hours 
worked requirements, and whether AHPs should be required to obtain any 
evidence in support of such a prediction beyond a representation from 
the working owner. Thus, the Department generally invites comment on 
whether different criteria would be more appropriate to ensure that so-
called ``working owners'' who join an AHP are genuinely engaged in a 
trade or business and are performing services for the trade or business 
in a manner that is in the nature of an employment relationship.
    Under the proposal, an AHP thus could be comprised of participants 
who are common law employees, common law employees and working owners, 
or comprised of only working owners. In all cases, the working owner 
would be treated as an employee and the business as the individual's 
employer for purposes of being an employer member of the association 
and an employee participant in the AHP. In the Department's view, 
allowing sole proprietors and other working owners without common law 
employees to participate in AHPs covered by ERISA on an equal basis 
with other employers and employees furthers ERISA's purposes of 
promoting employee benefit plans and protecting the interests of plan 
participants and their beneficiaries. This approach acknowledges that 
an AHP may include as employer-members working owners with common law 
employees and also addresses the operational impracticability of having 
an AHP switch in and out of its status as a single multiple employer 
plan during periods in which the AHP sometimes has and sometimes does 
not have employees other than sole proprietors.
    Finally, as noted above, AHPs that already meet the Department's 
current commonality of interest and employer-member control standards 
will continue to be treated as meeting those requirements under the 
proposal for sponsoring a single multiple employer plan under ERISA. 
However, if the proposal is adopted as a final rule, upon effectiveness 
of the final rule, such an existing AHP would need to meet all the 
conditions in the final rule to continue to act as an ERISA section 
3(5) employer going forward.
    To the extent a final rule consistent with this proposal would be 
inconsistent with any prior sub-regulatory guidance, the final rule 
would supersede that guidance. For example, the regulation would 
supersede the statement in Advisory Opinion 2003-13A that ERISA section 
3(5) does not cover groups with memberships that include persons who 
are not employers of common-law employees. In the case of statutory and 
regulatory provisions like those involved here, the Department has the 
authority to supersede its previous interpretations, as articulated in 
non-binding advisory opinions, to address marketplace developments and 
new policy and regulatory issues, see generally Perez v. Mortgage 
Bankers

[[Page 623]]

Assn, 135 S. Ct. 1199 (2015), and the authority to supersede a prior 
interpretation by a federal court, see National Cable & 
Telecommunications Ass'n v. Brand X internet Services (Brand X), 545 
U.S. 967, 125 S. Ct. 2688 (2005) (``A court's prior judicial 
construction of a statute trumps an agency construction otherwise 
entitled to Chevron deference only if the prior court decision holds 
that its construction follows from the unambiguous terms of the statute 
and thus leaves no room for agency discretion.''). The ERISA statutory 
definition of the term ``employer,'' which includes direct employers 
and any other person acting indirectly in the interest of the employer 
in relation to an employee benefit plan, including a group or 
association of employers, is not an unambiguous term that leaves no 
room for agency discretion. Moreover, by proceeding through notice and 
comment rulemaking, the Department has exercised its authority in a way 
that ensures all interested stakeholders will have an opportunity to 
present their views on the implications and significance of the 
proposal in light of past guidance, judicial decisions, and sound 
public policy.
d. Health Nondiscrimination Protections
    Two distinct potential issues prompt the nondiscrimination 
protections in the proposed rule. First, some stakeholders and experts 
have expressed concerns that legislative proposals that would have 
permitted employer groups or associations to sponsor group health plans 
for the purpose of promoting and expanding association health coverage 
could have resulted in risk selection. For example, in a letter to the 
Chairwoman and Ranking Member of the House Committee on Education & the 
Workforce, the American Academy of Actuaries argued that AHPs could 
create adverse selection if legislation \20\ being considered by the 
committee allowed them to operate under different rules than other 
group health plans. They wrote: ``If one set of plans operates under 
rules that are more advantageous to healthy individuals, then those 
individuals will migrate to those plans; less healthy individuals will 
migrate to the plans more advantageous to them.'' \21\ Similarly, the 
National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) also wrote a 
letter to the Chairwoman and Ranking Member stating that the 
legislation would encourage AHPs to select healthy groups by designing 
benefit packages and setting rates to the detriment of unhealthy 
groups.\22\
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    \20\ Small Business Health Fairness Act of 2017, H.R. 1101, 
115th Cong. (2017).
    \21\ Letter from the American Academy of Actuaries to Virginia 
Foxx, Chairwoman, Committee on Education and the Workforce, U.S. 
House of Representatives, and Robert C. Scott, Ranking Member, 
Committee on Education and the Workforce, U.S. House of 
Representatives (March 8, 2017) (available at https://www.actuary.org/files/publications/AHPs_HR1101_030817.pdf).
    \22\ Letter from the NAIC to Virginia Foxx, Chairwoman, 
Committee on Education and the Workforce, U.S. House of 
Representatives, and Robert C. Scott, Ranking Member, Committee on 
Education and the Workforce, U.S. House of Representatives (Feb. 28, 
2017) (available at http://www.naic.org/documents/health_archive_naic_opposes_small_business_fairness_act.pdf).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Alternatively, some have argued that more actuarially appropriate 
pricing where premiums match risk tends to lead people to buy the 
efficient amount of coverage, rather than underinsuring or 
overinsuring, and that such pricing also reduces the likelihood that 
insurance markets deteriorate into adverse selection spirals. In the 
case of associations, some stakeholders have argued that the presence 
of nondiscrimination rules may create instability in the AHP market, as 
employers with disproportionately unhealthy employees seek to join AHPs 
to lower their rates while AHPs with disproportionately healthy 
employees constantly modify their rules of admission to avoid this 
outcome. And stakeholders have argued that allowing employers to join 
together voluntarily on their own terms to offer health coverage to 
their members would reflect those employers' interests and maximize the 
potential for the market, while the converse would deter AHP formation 
and lead to fewer insured people.
    Second, the nondiscrimination provisions distinguish genuine 
employment-based plans from commercial enterprises that claim to be 
AHPs but that are more akin to traditional insurers selling insurance 
in the employer marketplace. ERISA sections 3(1) and (5) require a bona 
fide employment nexus and a level of cohesion and commonality among 
entities acting on behalf of common law employers, the common law 
employers, and the covered employees, as distinguished from commercial 
insurance arrangements that sell insurance coverage to unrelated common 
law employers. The nondiscrimination provisions maintain that nexus and 
cohesion--embodied in the longstanding ERISA section 3(5) ``commonality 
of interests'' requirement--in the new circumstance permitted under the 
proposal under which an employer group or association sponsoring an 
ERISA employee benefit plan may exist solely for the purpose of 
providing group health coverage. In the Department's view, AHPs that 
discriminate among employer-members in ways that would violate the 
nondiscrimination provisions in the proposal may not reflect the common 
employer interests that characterize an employee benefit plan as 
compared to the sort of commercial insurance enterprise that ERISA 
intended to leave to state, rather than federal, regulation. The 
nondiscrimination provisions are also based on the Department's broad 
rulemaking authority under ERISA section 505 (authorizing ``such 
regulations as [the Secretary] finds necessary or appropriate to carry 
out the provisions of this title'') and ERISA section 734. ERISA 
section 734 authorizes the Secretary to promulgate such regulations as 
may be necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of Part 7 
of ERISA, including ERISA section 715(a)(1), which incorporates the 
provisions of part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act (generally, sections 
2701 through 2728 of the PHS Act) into ERISA and makes those provisions 
applicable to plans and issuers.
    The nondiscrimination provisions in paragraph (d) of the proposed 
regulation build on the existing health nondiscrimination provisions 
applicable to group health plans under HIPAA, as amended by the 
Affordable Care Act (HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules), with an 
additional clarification addressing how to apply those rules to 
association coverage.
    Specifically, paragraph (d)(1) of the proposed regulation would 
ensure the group or association does not restrict membership in the 
association itself based on any health factor, as defined in the HIPAA/
ACA health nondiscrimination rules. The HIPAA/ACA health 
nondiscrimination rules define a health factor as: health status, 
medical condition (including both physical and mental illnesses), 
claims experience, receipt of healthcare, medical history, genetic 
information, evidence of insurability, and disability. Code section 
9802(a)(1), ERISA section 702(a)(1), and PHS Act section 2705(a)(1). 
See also 26 CFR 54.9802-1(a), 29 CFR 2590.702(a), and 45 CFR 
146.121(a).
    Paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of the proposed rules provide that the 
group health plan sponsored by the group or association must comply 
with the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules, which govern 
eligibility for

[[Page 624]]

benefits \23\ and premiums for group health plan coverage. In 
determining what is a group of similarly situated individuals for 
purposes of applying those rules, this proposed regulation provides in 
paragraph (d)(4) how to apply these HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination 
rules in the context of a group or association of employers sponsoring 
a single group health plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ A rule for eligibility for benefits is defined by reference 
to the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules and includes rules 
relating to enrollment, the effective date of coverage, waiting (or 
affiliation) periods, late or special enrollment, eligibility for 
benefit packages, benefits (including covered benefits, benefit 
restrictions, and cost-sharing), continued eligibility, and 
terminating coverage. 26 CFR 54.9802-1(b)(1)(ii); 29 CFR 
2590.702(b)(1)(ii); 45 CFR 146.121(b)(1)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Specifically, the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules 
generally prohibit health discrimination within groups of similarly 
situated individuals, but they do not prohibit discrimination across 
different groups of similarly situated individuals. In determining what 
counts as a group of similarly situated individuals, for these 
purposes, paragraph (d) of the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules 
generally provides that plans may, subject to an anti-abuse provision 
for discrimination directed at individuals, treat participants as 
distinct groups if the groups are defined by reference to a bona fide 
employment-based classification consistent with the employer's usual 
business practice. As stated in the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination 
rules, whether an employment-based classification is bona fide is 
determined based on all the relevant facts and circumstances, including 
whether the employer uses the classification for purposes independent 
of qualification for health coverage (for example, determining 
eligibility for other employee benefits or determining other terms of 
employment). Examples in the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules 
of classifications that may be bona fide, based on all the relevant 
facts and circumstances, include full-time versus part-time status, 
different geographic location, membership in a collective bargaining 
unit, date of hire, length of service, current employee versus former 
employee status, and different occupations. Under an anti-abuse 
provision contained in paragraph (d)(3) of the HIPAA/ACA health 
nondiscrimination rules, however, a distinction between groups of 
individuals is not permitted if the creation or modification of an 
employment or coverage classification is directed at individual 
participants or beneficiaries based on any health factor of the 
participants or beneficiaries.
    In addition, under the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules, a 
plan may, generally, subject to certain anti-abuse provisions for 
discrimination directed at individuals, treat beneficiaries as distinct 
groups based on the bona fide employment-based classification of the 
participant through whom the beneficiary is receiving coverage, the 
relationship to the participant, marital status, age or student status 
(subject to PHS Act section 2714, as incorporated in ERISA section 715, 
as well as ERISA section 714) and other factors if the factor is not a 
health factor. Finally, the HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules 
generally allow group health plans to treat participants and 
beneficiaries as distinct groups.
    The proposed regulations propose that, in applying the HIPAA/ACA 
health nondiscrimination rules for defining similarly-situated 
individuals, the group or association may not treat member employers as 
distinct groups of similarly-situated individuals. As noted above, the 
HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination rules apply within groups of 
similarly-situated individuals. If an association could treat different 
employer-members as different bona fide employment classifications, the 
nondiscrimination protections in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3) could 
be ineffective, as AHPs could offer membership to all employers meeting 
the association's membership criteria, but then charge specific 
employer members higher premiums, based on the health status of those 
employers' employees and dependents. Accordingly, under the proposed 
regulation a group or association which seeks treatment as an 
``employer'' under ERISA section 3(5) for purposes of sponsoring a 
single group health plan under ERISA section 3(1) cannot simultaneously 
undermine that status by treating different employers as different 
groups based on a health factor of an individual or individuals within 
an employer member. DOL seeks comment on whether this structure, which 
could potentially represent an expansion of current regulations, would 
create involuntary cross-subsidization across firms that would 
discourage formation and use of AHPs.
    Moreover, the Department views such employer-by-employer risk-
rating as undermining the statutory aim of limiting plan sponsors to 
``employers'' and to entities acting ``in the interest'' of employers, 
and instead extending ERISA coverage to entities that seek to 
underwrite risk and are nearly--or entirely--indistinguishable from 
such commercial-insurance-type entities. The extension of ERISA 
coverage to such commercial entities would not be consistent with 
Congress' deliberate decision to limit ERISA's coverage to employment-
based relationships. Coupled with the control requirement, also 
requiring AHPs to accept all employers who fit their geographic, 
industry, or any other non-health-based selection criteria that each 
AHP chooses, the nondiscrimination provisions ensure a level of 
cohesion and commonality among entities acting on behalf of common law 
employers, the common law employers themselves, and the covered 
employees, as distinguished from commercial insurance arrangements that 
sell insurance coverage to unrelated common law employers.
    Paragraph (d)(5) contains examples that illustrate the rules of 
paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(4).
    The Department specifically solicits comments on the above 
described nondiscrimination requirements, including how they balance 
risk selection issues with the stability of the AHP market and the 
ability of employers to innovate and enter voluntary coverage 
arrangements. The Department also solicits comments on the effect of 
additional or different nondiscrimination protections, such as further 
limitations on price flexibility. Specifically, the Department invites 
comments on whether paragraph (d)(4) is an appropriate or sufficient 
response to the need to distinguish AHPs from commercial insurance (and 
on any alternative provisions that might achieve the same goal, as well 
as on whether paragraph (d)(4) could destabilize the AHP market or 
hamper employers' ability to create flexible and affordable coverage 
options for their employees.

5. Request for Public Comments

    The Department invites comments on the specific issues identified 
in the discussion above, as well as on all aspects of the proposed rule 
as a potential alternative approach to the Department's existing sub-
regulatory guidance criteria. Comments are invited on the interaction 
with and consequences under other State and Federal laws, including the 
interaction with the Code section 501(c)(9) provisions for voluntary 
employees' beneficiary associations (VEBAs), should an AHP want to use 
a VEBA. The Department also invites comments on whether any notice 
requirements are needed to ensure that employer members of 
associations, and

[[Page 625]]

participants and beneficiaries of group health plans, are adequately 
informed of their rights or responsibilities with respect to AHP 
coverage. Comments are also solicited on the impact of these proposals 
on the risk pools of the individual and small group health insurance 
markets, and for data, studies or other information that would help 
estimate the benefits, costs, and transfers of the rule.

6. Request for Information

    In addition to the proposal set forth in this document, pursuant to 
Executive Order 13813, the Department is considering other actions it 
could take to promote healthcare consumer choice and competition across 
the United States. The proposed rules would not alter existing ERISA 
statutory provisions governing MEWAs. The proposed rules also would not 
modify the States' authority to regulate health insurance issuers or 
the insurance policies they sell to AHPs. As described above, some 
MEWAs have historically been unable to pay claims due to fraud, 
insufficient funding, or inadequate reserves.\24\ ERISA section 
514(b)(6) gives the Department \25\ and State insurance regulators 
joint authority over MEWAs (including AHPs described in this proposed 
rule), to ensure appropriate consumer protections for employers and 
employees relying on an AHP for healthcare coverage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ See U.S. Gov't Accountability Office, GAO-92-40, States 
Need Labor's Help Regulating Multiple Employer Welfare Arrangements, 
(1992) (available at http://www.gao.gov/products/HRD-92-40); See 
also U.S. Gov't Accountability Office, GAO-04-312, Employers and 
Individuals Are Vulnerable to Unauthorized or Bogus Entities Selling 
Coverage (2004) (available at http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-312).
    \25\ Because small employer group health plans typically are 
fully-insured or pay benefits out of the employer's general assets, 
they are generally exempt under current DOL regulations from most, 
if not all, of ERISA's annual reporting requirements. See 29 CFR 
2520.104-20. However, as a MEWA, an AHP MEWA would not be eligible 
for this filing exemption, even if it covered fewer than 100 
participants. Further, ERISA-covered group health plans that have 
100 participants or more generally are required to file a Form 5500, 
whether insured or self-insured. Thus, AHPs established as a result 
of the proposal would be required to file Forms 5500. See ERISA 
section 101(b). In addition, because, as noted above, these AHPs are 
also MEWAs, they would be required to file a Form M-1. See ERISA 
section 101(g) and 29 CFR 2520.101-2. Both Form 5500 and Form M-1 
information is accessible by DOL, as well as the States, to fulfill 
traditional oversight functions to help ensure that plans meet their 
obligations to pay benefits as promised under the plan and the law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Some stakeholders have identified the Department's authority under 
ERISA section 514(b)(6)(B) to exempt self-insured MEWA plans from State 
insurance regulation as a way of promoting consumer choice across State 
lines. Specifically, ERISA section 514(b)(6)(B) provides that the 
Department may prescribe regulations under which non-fully insured 
MEWAs that are employee benefit plans may be granted exemptions, 
individually or class by class, from certain State insurance 
regulation. Section 514(b)(6)(B) does not, however, give the Department 
unlimited exemption authority. The text limiting the Department's 
authority is in ERISA section 514(b)(6)(A). That section provides that 
the Department cannot exempt an employee benefit plan that is a non-
fully insured MEWA from state insurance laws that can apply to a fully 
insured MEWA plan under ERISA section 514(b)(6)(A), i.e., state 
insurance laws that establish reserves and contribution requirements 
that must be met in order for the non-fully insured MEWA plan to be 
considered able to pay benefits in full when due, and provisions to 
enforce such standards.
    Thus, self-insured MEWAs, even if covered by an exemption, would 
remain subject to State insurance laws that provide standards requiring 
the maintenance of specified levels of reserves and contributions as 
means of ensuring the payment of promised benefits. While beyond the 
scope of this proposed rulemaking, the Department is interested in 
receiving additional input from the public about the relative merits of 
possible exemption approaches under ERISA section 514(b)(6)(B). The 
Department is interested both in the potential for such exemptions to 
promote healthcare consumer choice and competition across the United 
States, as well as in the risk such exemptions might present to 
appropriate regulation and oversight of AHPs, including State insurance 
regulation oversight functions.
    The Department is also interested in comments on how best to ensure 
compliance with the ERISA and ACA standards that would govern AHPs and 
on any need for additional guidance on the application of these 
standards or other needed consumer protections. In this connection, the 
Department emphasizes that AHPs would be subject to existing generally 
applicable federal regulatory standards governing ERISA plans and 
additional requirements governing MEWAs specifically, and sponsors of 
AHPs would need to exercise care to ensure compliance with those 
standards.
    The Department requests comments on how it can best use the 
provisions of ERISA Title I to require and promote actuarial soundness, 
proper maintenance of reserves, adequate underwriting and other 
standards relating to AHP solvency. The Department also invites 
comments on whether additional provisions should be added to the final 
rule to assist existing employer associations--including MEWAs that do 
not now constitute AHPs--in making adjustments to their business 
structures, governing documents, or group health coverage to become 
AHPs under the final rule.
    The Department likewise encourages commenters to identify any 
aspect of the foregoing rules and obligations that would benefit from 
additional guidance as applied to AHPs, as well as any perceived 
deficiencies in existing guidance or regulatory safeguards.

Regulatory Impact Analysis

1.1. Executive Orders

    Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all 
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if 
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public 
health and safety effects; distributive impacts; and equity). Executive 
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and 
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting 
flexibility.
    Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735), ``significant'' 
regulatory actions are subject to review by the Office of Management 
and Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of the Executive Order defines a 
``significant regulatory action'' as an action that is likely to result 
in a rule (1) having an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or 
more in any one year, or adversely and materially affecting a sector of 
the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
health or safety, or State, local or tribal governments or communities 
(also referred to as ``economically significant''); (2) creating a 
serious inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an action taken or 
planned by another agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary 
impacts of entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs or the 
rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel 
legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's 
priorities, or the principles set forth in the Executive Order. It has 
been determined that this rule is economically significant within the 
meaning of section 3(f)(1) of the Executive Order. Therefore, OMB has 
reviewed these proposed rules pursuant to the Executive Order.

[[Page 626]]

    In accordance with the direction of Executive Order 13813, DOL is 
proposing a rule to broaden the circumstances under which an AHP will 
be treated as a single multiple employer-plan under ERISA. The proposal 
is intended to extend advantages typically enjoyed by large employer-
sponsored health benefit plans to more working owners and small 
employers (collectively hereafter, small businesses) that under the 
proposal would be eligible to participate in AHPs. AHPs generally can 
offer these small businesses more health benefit options, and options 
that are more affordable, than typically are available in today's 
individual and small group health insurance markets. This document 
assesses the proposal's potential impacts.

1.2. Introduction and Need for Regulation

    U.S. families obtain health benefits from a number of different 
private and public sources. Essentially all individuals age 65 or older 
are covered by Medicare. Most individuals under age 65 are covered by 
employer-sponsored insurance. Nearly all large employers offer health 
insurance to their employees, but only about one-half of employers with 
fewer than 50 employees do. Altogether, 61 percent of individuals under 
age 65 have employer-sponsored coverage. Thirty-eight percent of 
individuals under age 65 obtain coverage from private employers with 50 
or more employees, 9 percent from smaller private employers, and 14 
percent from public-sector employers.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ DOL calculations based on the Abstract of Auxiliary Data 
for the March 2016 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the 
Current Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Large employers have a long history of providing their employees 
with affordable health insurance options. This regulation is needed to 
lower some barriers that can prevent many small businesses from 
accessing such options.
    Today, businesses generally access insurance in one of three market 
segments, depending on their size. These segments are the individual 
market, which includes working owners among other individuals and their 
families, if they do not employ employees and therefore cannot 
establish a group health plan; the small group market, which generally 
includes small businesses with at least one and not more than 50 
employees; and the large group market, which includes larger employers 
and some groups of employers. (Many large employers self-insure rather 
than purchase group insurance in the large group market segment.) 
Historically, relative to large employers, small businesses accessing 
health insurance in the individual and small group markets have faced 
at least two disadvantages. First, owing to their small size, working 
owners and other small businesses generally lack large employers' 
potential for administrative efficiencies and negotiating power. 
Second, unlike large employers, individual small businesses do not 
constitute naturally cohesive large risk pools. Any single small 
business's claims can spike abruptly due to one serious illness. 
Historically, individual and small group issuers often responded to 
such spikes by sharply increasing premiums, and/or by refusing to issue 
or renew policies or to cover pre-existing conditions. More recently, 
State and Federal legal changes including the ACA generally have 
outlawed these practices. Current rules generally regulate the 
individual and small group markets in which small businesses obtain 
insurance more stringently than the large group markets and self-
insured employer plans. Unfortunately such rules can themselves limit 
choice, increase premiums, or even destabilize small group and 
individual markets. They, in effect, force issuers to raise premiums 
broadly, particularly for healthier small groups and individuals, which 
can prompt such groups and individuals to seek more affordable coverage 
elsewhere if available, or drop insurance altogether. In contrast, 
large employers' natural ability to provide comprehensive coverage at 
relatively stable cost is mirrored by the regulatory framework that 
applies to large group markets and self-insured ERISA plans.
    Given the natural advantages enjoyed by large employer groups, it 
may be advantageous to allow more small businesses to combine into 
large groups for purposes of obtaining or providing health insurance. 
While some AHPs exist today, their reach currently is limited by the 
Department's existing interpretation of the conditions under which an 
AHP is an employer-sponsored plan under ERISA. Under that 
interpretation, eligible association members must share a common 
interest (generally, operate in the same industry), must join together 
for purposes other than providing health insurance, must exercise 
control over the AHP, and must have one or more employees in addition 
to the business owner. Accordingly, this proposed rule aims to 
encourage the establishment and growth of AHPs comprising otherwise 
unrelated small businesses, including working owners, and to clarify 
that nationwide industry organizations such as trade associations can 
sponsor nationwide AHPs.
    This proposal would broaden the conditions under which associations 
can sponsor AHPs, thereby increasing the number of small businesses 
potentially eligible to participate in AHPs and providing new, 
affordable health insurance options for many Americans. It generally 
would do this in four important ways. First, it would relax the 
existing requirement that associations sponsoring AHPs must exist for a 
reason other than offering health insurance. Second, it would relax the 
requirement that association members share a common interest, as long 
as they operate in a common geographic area. Third, it would make clear 
that associations whose members operate in the same industry can 
sponsor AHPs, regardless of geographic distribution. Fourth, it would 
clarify that working owners and their dependents are eligible to 
participate in AHPs. Consequently, for example, the proposal would 
newly allow a local chamber of commerce that meets the other conditions 
in the proposal to offer AHP coverage to its small-business members, 
including working owners.
    As large groups, AHPs might offer small businesses some of the 
scale and efficiency advantages typically enjoyed by large employer 
plans. They additionally could offer small businesses relief from ACA 
and State rules that restrict issuers' product offerings and pricing in 
individual and small group markets.

1.3. AHPs' Potential Impacts

    By facilitating the establishment and operation of more AHPs, this 
proposed rule aims to make more, and more affordable, health insurance 
options available to more employees of small businesses and the 
families of such employees. Insuring more American workers, and 
offering premiums and benefits that faithfully match employees' 
preferences, are the most important benefits of this rule. The proposed 
rule contains provisions designed to prevent potentially adverse 
impacts on individual or small group risk pools that might otherwise 
carry social costs. AHPs will also affect tax subsidies and revenue and 
the Medicaid program.While the impacts of this proposed rule, and of 
AHPs themselves, are intended to be positive on net, the incidence, 
nature and magnitude of both positive and negative effects are 
uncertain. Predictions of these impacts are confounded by numerous 
factors including:

[[Page 627]]

     The dynamic and in some cases unstable conditions 
currently prevailing in local individual and small group insurance 
markets under existing ACA and State rules;
     A lack of data on the risk profiles of existing and 
potential associations and the individual and small group markets with 
which they intersect;
     A lack of data on the relative availabilities and sizes of 
subsidies and tax preferences for prospective AHP enrollees in 
Exchanges or Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) Exchanges 
versus in AHPs;
     Legislative proposals to amend or repeal and replace the 
ACA;
     States' broad discretion to regulate AHPs, and variations 
in State practices; and
     Interactions with related initiatives per Executive Order 
13813, including HRAs and short-term limited duration insurance 
policies.
    In light of these uncertainties, what follows is a mostly 
qualitative assessment of this proposal's potential impacts, rather 
than a quantitative prediction. The Department is seeking comments and 
data that will allow the impacts of the rule to be quantified, and that 
will enable it to more fully assess the proposed rule's effects.

1.4. Potential Advantages of Scale

    Owing to their potentially large scale, under the right conditions, 
AHPs result in lower insurance premiums compared to existing small 
group and individual insurance market arrangements. Consequently, AHPs 
may offer small businesses comparable coverage at lower prices, thereby 
delivering economic benefits to many working owners and employees of 
small businesses.
    Large employers often enjoy some advantages of scale in the 
provision of health benefits for their employees, and AHPs may realize 
some of these same advantages. Scale may yield savings via one or more 
of three mechanisms: administrative efficiencies from economies of 
scale, self-insurance, and market power.
    Administrative savings generally can be understood to constitute a 
social benefit, as resources are freed for other uses without reducing 
consumption. With respect to administrative efficiency from economies 
of scale, large employers generally avoid the potentially high cost 
associated with health insurance issuers' efforts to market to, enroll, 
and underwrite and set premiums for large numbers of individual 
families or small employer groups.\27\ AHPs may, under favorable 
circumstances, achieve some savings in the same way. On the other hand, 
rather than avoiding these costs, some AHPs sometimes may merely 
internalize them, in the form of employers' cost to form associations 
and AHPs' own efforts to recruit and enroll association members, and to 
sign members up for insurance. AHPs sponsored by pre-existing 
associations that exist for reasons other than offering health 
insurance might have more potential to deliver administrative savings 
than those set up to offer health insurance. Organizations that already 
exist for reasons other than offering health insurance (such as 
chambers of commerce or trade associations) may already have extensive 
memberships and thus may have fewer setup, recruitment, and enrollment 
costs than organizations newly formed to offer insurance. Under this 
proposal, such existing associations that have been prohibited from 
offering AHPs to some or all of their existing members by the 
Department's current interpretations could newly extend AHP eligibility 
to existing members. Some other AHPs, however, might thrive by 
delivering savings to members by other means, such as by offering less 
comprehensive benefits, even if their administrative costs are higher.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \27\ ACA and State rules that limit underwriting and set floors 
for insurers' loss ratios may make some of these savings available 
even within the existing individual and small group markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Some other efficiency gains might arise from AHPs' scale in 
purchasing not insurance but healthcare services. Healthcare payers and 
providers sometimes realize administrative efficiencies in their 
interactions if a large proportion of each provider's patients are 
covered by a common payer. For example, streamlining of billing and 
payment processes and procedures for preauthorization for covered 
services may facilitate volume discounts. A self-insured AHP with a 
sufficiently large presence in a local market might capture some such 
efficiency. On the other hand, in some cases AHPs' entry into markets 
alongside other payers might erode such efficiency by reducing such 
issuer's scale in purchasing healthcare services. That is, an increase 
in the number of payers may sometimes increase the administrative 
burden associated with the payer-provider interface for some or all 
payers and providers. Consequently, the net impact of this proposal on 
efficiency in this interface (and on associated social welfare) could 
be positive or negative.
    As large groups, AHPs also may achieve some savings by offering 
self-insured coverage. Because large group plans in and of themselves 
constitute large and potentially stable risk pools, it often is 
feasible for them to self-insure rather than to purchase fully-insured 
large group insurance policies from licensed health insurance issuers. 
Large risk pools' claims experience generally varies only modestly from 
year to year, so well-run large group plans can set premiums and 
operate with little risk of financial shortfalls. By self-insuring, 
some large AHPs may avoid some of the overhead cost otherwise 
associated with fully-insured large group health insurance policies. 
However State revenue may also decline in States that tax insurance 
premiums.
    Also, as large groups, in addition to potential administrative and 
overhead savings, AHPs sometimes may be able to achieve savings through 
market power, negotiating discounts that come at suppliers' expense. In 
otherwise competitive markets, the exercise of market power sometimes 
can result in economic inefficiency. The opposite might be true, 
however, where an AHP's market power acts to counterbalance market 
power otherwise exercised by issuers or providers. If large group 
premiums are not already at competitive levels, sufficiently large AHPs 
may be able to negotiate with issuers for premium discounts. More 
frequently, issuers and other large payers, potentially including 
large, self-insured AHPs, may be able to negotiate discounts and other 
savings measures with hospitals, providers, and third party 
administrators (TPAs). Because markets for healthcare services are 
inherently local, payers' market power generally requires not merely 
scale, but a large geographic market share. Consequently, self-insured 
AHPs with geographically concentrated membership are more likely to 
realize such savings than are AHPs whose membership is spread thinly 
across States.
    On the other hand, AHPs might sometimes dilute other payers' market 
power to command provider discounts,\28\ thereby increasing costs for 
such payers' enrollees. AHP's net effect on payers' market power with 
respect to providers and consequent effect on enrollee costs 
consequently could be positive or negative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ For a discussion of insurers' market power see Sheffler, 
Richard M. and Daniel R.Arnold. ``Insurer Market Power Lowers Prices 
in Numerous Concentrated Provider Markets.'' Health Affairs 36, no. 
9 (2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    It should be noted that diluting others' market power can increase 
social

[[Page 628]]

welfare if it produces more healthy competition. If local individual 
and small group market premiums are not already at competitive levels, 
increasing competitive pressure from AHPs might force some individual 
and small group issuers to lower their own premiums. There is some 
evidence that competition among issuers has this effect,\29\ although 
the likelihood of this effect occurring in this case is unclear, as 
market rules and claims experience may already have eliminated excess 
profit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ Frank, Richard G. and Thomas G. McGuire. ``Regulated 
Medicare Advantage and Marketplace Individual Health Insurance 
Markets Rely on Insurer Competition.'' Health Affairs 36 no. 9 
(2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Given all of these variables, the net transfer and social welfare 
effects related to AHPs' exercise of, or impact on others' exercise of, 
market power are ambiguous.
    In summary, AHPs' potential to reap advantages from scale may vary. 
Under favorable conditions they may realize some administrative 
savings, and/or negotiate discounts from insurers, providers, or TPAs. 
Market forces may favor AHPs that reap such advantages, but may also 
sustain AHPs that deliver savings to members by other means.

1.5. Increased Choice

    Because they would not be subject to individual and small group 
market rules, AHPs in the large group market (which the Department 
expects would include all or almost all AHPs) would enjoy greater 
flexibility with respect to the products and prices they could offer to 
small businesses. AHPs consequently could offer many small businesses 
more affordable insurance options than would be available to them in 
individual and small group markets. Under the ACA and State rules, non-
grandfathered individual and small group insurance policies generally 
must cover certain benefits. These rules limit the policies that 
issuers can offer to small businesses. Under this proposal, as noted 
earlier in this section, AHPs would generally be treated as large 
employers and accordingly granted access to the large group market (or, 
alternatively, could self-insure). The large group market is not 
subject to the same restrictions that apply in the individual and small 
group markets.\30\ AHPs consequently could offer many small businesses 
more options than could individual and small group insurance issuers. 
For instance, AHPs could offer less comprehensive--and hence more 
affordable--coverage that some employees may prefer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ Some States do set some minimum standards for benefits 
covered by large group policies, however. Such mandates would apply 
to fully insured AHPs. Because AHPs are MEWAs under ERISA, States 
also may have flexibility under ERISA's MEWA provisions to extend 
benefit standards to self-insured AHPs. ERISA generally precludes 
States from applying such standards to self-insured ERISA plans that 
are not MEWAs. For lists of ``essential health benefits'' that must 
be covered by non-grandfathered coverage in States' individual and 
small group markets under the ACA, and for lists of benefit 
standards that States apply to large group plans, see https://www.cms.gov/cciio/resources/data-resources/ehb.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Some stakeholders have expressed concern that AHPs, by offering 
less comprehensive benefits, could attract healthier individuals, 
leaving less healthy individuals in the individual and small group 
markets and thus driving up the premiums in those markets and 
potentially destabilizing them. This risk may be small, however, 
relative to the benefits realized by small businesses and their 
employees that gain access to more affordable insurance that more 
closely matches their preferences. AHPs' benefits to their members can 
be substantial, as discussed above. For example, a small businesses 
electing less comprehensive AHP coverage can deliver benefits that are 
more closely tailored to their employees' actual health needs at a 
price their employees prefer. In addition, to the extent that AHPs 
deliver administrative savings or market power they may offer less 
expensive but equally comprehensive benefit options as compared to 
plans available in the individual or small group markets. This feature 
of AHPs would appeal to their less healthy members, prompting less 
healthy individuals to leave the individual and small group markets and 
potentially balancing out any exodus of healthy individuals from these 
markets. Moreover, this proposal addresses the risk of adverse effects 
on the individual and small group markets by including 
nondiscrimination provisions under which AHPs could not condition 
eligibility for membership or benefits or vary members' premiums based 
on their health status. The Department invites comments as to the 
benefits of AHPs offering wider choice including less comprehensive 
policies as well as any risk of adverse effects on individual or small 
group markets.

1.6. Risk Pooling

    The proposal seeks to enable AHPs to assemble large, stable risk 
pools. The ACA and State rules tightly regulate how individual and 
small group issuers pool risk, for example by limiting the degree to 
which premiums can be adjusted based on age. These rules can threaten 
market stability. The ACA and State rules attempt to address this 
threat with additional, potentially inefficient rules, including the 
requirement that all individuals acquire coverage and mandatory 
transfers of ``risk adjustment payments'' from some issuers to others. 
AHPs would not be subject to these ACA and State rules, but will be 
subject to the nondiscrimination rules that bar all group health plans 
from conditioning eligibility, benefits, or premiums on health status. 
Properly designed, these rules should help AHPs to assemble large, 
stable risk pools, while at the same time limiting the risk that AHPs 
might tend to enroll healthier small businesses and thereby adversely 
affect individual and small group markets.
    Some stakeholders have raised concerns that AHPs will be more 
likely to form in industries with younger, healthier employees, as 
employers and their employees receive greater access to more affordable 
coverage than is available in the individual and small group markets. 
The Department believes such concerns at this juncture are speculative. 
While AHPs may have larger incentives to form in industries with 
younger, healthier workers, they will also have incentives to form in 
industries with older or less healthy workers when, for example, they 
deliver sufficient administrative savings to offset any additional cost 
of insuring an older or less healthy population. The Department 
requests comments that would help further address this issue.
    Likewise, some stakeholders have raised concerns that, because AHPs 
will enjoy greater pricing flexibility to set premiums, some might 
offer lower prices to healthier groups and higher prices to less 
healthy groups than individual and small group issuers are allowed to 
offer to those same groups. Of course, the nondiscrimination provisions 
in this proposal would prohibit any such discrimination based on health 
factors, but some non-health factors (such as age) correlate to a large 
degree with healthcare expenditures, and AHPs under this proposal could 
vary premiums to reflect actuarial risk based on such non-health 
factors. Some stakeholders argue that pursuit of lower prices based on 
non-health factors would lead, for example, younger association members 
to join AHPs but might lead older members to remain in individual and 
small group markets.
    This argument, however, depends on the assumption that pricing 
flexibility is the principal or only advantage available to AHPs. In 
fact, as outlined above, AHPs have the potential to create significant 
efficiencies that could lower premiums across the board. An AHP that 
realizes sufficient efficiencies may offer attractive prices even to 
less

[[Page 629]]

healthy groups. In that scenario, less healthy people would also have 
an incentive to leave the individual and small group markets, 
potentially balancing out any exodus of healthy people from these 
markets. The Department requests comments that would help further 
address this issue.
    As noted earlier, the Department intends that this proposal would 
help AHPs to assemble large, stable risk pools, while at the same time 
limiting any risk of adverse effects on individual and small group 
markets. In calibrating the proposal to advance those goals, the 
Department considered a range of evidence on the dynamics of health 
insurance markets under various conditions and rules. The Department 
believes available evidence is consistent with the balanced approach 
adopted in the proposal, and that the proposal would advance the 
intended goals, and invites comments responsive to this evidence and 
viewpoint.
    Some of the evidence the Department reviewed appears to suggest 
this proposal would have little impact on the composition of individual 
and small group market risk pools. Other potential avenues for 
segmentation that exist today do not appear to have produced major 
effects. For example, a small employer currently can segregate itself 
into a separate risk pool by self-insuring and relying on stop-loss 
insurance to backstop particularly large losses. Yet the proportion of 
small-firm establishments reporting that they use self-insurance has 
increased only modestly, from 12.7 percent in 2010 to 17.4 percent in 
2016 and the percent of policy holders in self-insured plans at small-
firm establishments has increased from 12.5 percent to 15.7 percent 
over the same time period.\31\ In addition, price inelasticity and 
inertia in individuals' and small businesses' health insurance 
purchases \32\ may help to limit and/or slow any potential impacts. If, 
as this evidence suggests, small businesses might not vigorously shop 
for better prices and products, there may be little potential for risk 
selection, but also limited demand for AHPs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \31\ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), 2016 
Medical Expenditure Survey-Insurance Component (MEPS-IC).
    \32\ See M. Kate Bundorf, Joanthan Levin, and Neal Mahoney, 
``Pricing and Welfare in Health Plan Choice,'' American Economic 
Review 2012, 107(7), 3214-3248, pointing to price inelasticity; and 
Benjamin R. Handel, ``Adverse Selection and Inertia in Health 
Insurance Markets: When Nudging Hurts,'' American Economic Review 
2013, 103(7), 2643-2682, finding that inertia restrains adverse 
selection and associated welfare losses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Various studies of past State and Federal individual and small 
group market reforms, cited below in connection with AHPs' potential 
impact on the uninsured population, mostly find that reforms tightening 
market rules result in only limited adverse selection. This might 
suggest that this proposal, by in effect loosening such rules, may 
produce only limited risk selection effects.
    Some other evidence illustrates how under some conditions changes 
in product and price offerings can affect the composition of risk 
pools. One employer found that older and less healthy employees 
sometimes declined to join younger and healthier counterparts in 
switching to new, less comprehensive options, despite incentives 
provided to encourage such switches, perhaps due to concerns about 
reduced coverage.\33\ A review of experience with consumer-directed 
health plans suggests some potential for similar effects.\34\ Some 
prior experiences with different AHP and group purchasing arrangements 
reportedly did not achieve sufficient efficiencies to fully prevent or 
offset all potential risk segmentation effects.\35\ The Congressional 
Budget Office once predicted modest risk segmentation from an AHP-like 
proposal, with small premium increases for small employers retaining 
traditional insurance, and increased coverage among healthier small 
groups partly offset by a small loss of coverage among less healthy 
ones.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \33\ Fronstin, Paul, and M. Christopher Roebuck. ``Health Plan 
Switching: A Case Study-Implications for Private- and Public-Health-
Insurance Exchanges and Increased Health Plan Choice.'' EBRI Issue 
Brief 432, March 23, 2017. https://www.ebri.org/pdf/briefspdf/EBRI_IB_432_PlnSwtch.23Mar17.pdf.
    \34\ Bundorf, M. Kate, ``Consumer-Directed Health Plans: A 
Review of the Evidence.'' The Journal of Risk and Insurance. January 
2016.
    \35\ Historically, some efforts to assemble large purchasing 
coalitions to negotiate such discounts have met with limited 
success. In one major example, the California Health Insurance 
Purchasing Cooperative, or HIPC, established by the State and later 
operated by a business coalition, was eventually disbanded after 
failing to deliver its intended savings. See, for example, National 
Conference of State Legislatures, ``Health Insurance Purchasing 
Cooperatives: State and Federal Roles.'' September 1, 2016. Last 
accessed September 25, 2017. http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/purchasing-coops-and-alliances-for-health.aspx#Other_Approaches. See 
also Bender, Karen, and Beth Fritchen. ``Government-Sponsored Health 
Insurance Purchasing Arrangements: Do they Reduce Costs or Expand 
Coverage for Individuals and Small Employers?'' 2008. Report finds 
that purchasing arrangements increase premiums by as much as six 
percent. http://www.oliverwyman.com/content/dam/oliver-wyman/global/en/files/archive/2011/health_ins_purchasing_arrangements(1).pdf.
    \36\ CBO Paper, ``Increasing Small-Firm Health Insurance 
Coverage Through Association Health Plans and HealthMarts,'' January 
2000. https://www.cbo.gov/publication/12066; CBO cost estimate, H.R. 
525 Small Business Health Fairness Act of 2005. April 8, 2005. 
https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/109th-congress-2005-2006/costestimate/hr52500.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The foregoing evidence may be consistent with some key 
stakeholders' concerns that AHPs, if regulated too loosely relative to 
issuers, might adversely impact some risk pools.\37\ On the other hand, 
severely restricting AHPs would hinder them from providing additional, 
affordable coverage options. The Department believes that this 
proposal, under which AHPs could not condition eligibility, benefits, 
or premiums on health status, strikes the right balance to enable AHPs 
to assemble large stable risk pools and offer new affordable options to 
small businesses without posing substantial risk of adverse effects on 
other risk pools. AHPs' potential to deliver administrative savings 
further mitigates any such risk
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ See for example: (1) NAIC letter to Reps. Foxx and Scott, 
February 28, 2017, http://www.naic.org/documents/health_archive_naic_opposes_small_business_fairness_act.pdf; (2) 
American Academy of Actuaries. ``Issue Brief: Association Health 
Plans,'' February 2017; .and (3) America's Health Insurance Plans 
(AHIP), ``Association-Sponsored Health Plans and Reform of the 
Individual Healthcare Market'' February 10, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.7. Individual and Small Group Markets

    The Department separately considered AHPs' potential impacts on 
both individual and small group markets. In both cases, AHPs could 
offer many small businesses more, and more affordable, coverage options 
than otherwise available.
    With respect to individual markets, many of those insured there now 
might become eligible for AHPs. AHPs could enroll both working owners 
and employees of small business that do not currently offer insurance 
but might elect to join AHPs. The latter group may be growing as small 
firms' propensity to offer health insurance for employees has declined 
substantially from 47 percent of establishments in 2000 to 29 percent 
in 2016.\38\ Of the 25 million U.S. individuals under age 65 who were

[[Page 630]]

insured in individual markets in 2015, approximately 3 million were 
working owners or dependents thereof, and an additional 6 million were 
employees of small businesses that did not offer insurance or 
dependents thereof. With respect to small group markets, essentially 
all insured businesses might become eligible for AHPs. In 2015, firms 
with fewer than 50 employees insured 24 million workers and 
dependents.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Center for 
Financing, Access and Cost Trends. Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-
Insurance Component, 2012-2016. Medical Expenditure Panel Survey 
Private Sector Insurance Component, Table II.A.2. In 2016, among 
employees of firms with fewer than 50 employees, just one in four 
were enrolled in insurance on the job. Nearly one-half worked at 
firms that did not offer insurance. Agency for Healthcare Research 
and Quality (AHRQ), 2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Insurance 
Component (MEPS-IC) Tables. Nonetheless, just 18 percent of small 
firm employees were uninsured. Many obtained insurance from a 
spouse's or parent's employer. DOL calculations based on the 
Abstract of Auxiliary Data for the March 2016 Annual Social and 
Economic Supplement to the Current Population Survey, U.S. 
Department of Labor.
    \39\ DOL calculations based on the Abstract of Auxiliary Data 
for the March 2016 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the 
Current Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In an effort to facilitate the availability of individual 
insurance, the ACA established federal and State-based ``Exchanges,'' 
or centralized, regulated marketplaces. The ACA envisioned that a 
number of health insurance issuers would offer a set of comparable 
policies in each Exchange, making it possible for individuals to shop 
(and necessary for issuers to compete) for the best price and quality, 
while means-tested subsidies would ensure that coverage was affordable. 
This vision has not been realized fully in much of the country, 
however.
    In 2016, 11 million individuals were enrolled via Exchanges. A 
large majority qualified for means-tested assistance with premiums (9 
million) and/or cost sharing (6 million).\40\ However, for 2018, only 
one issuer offered coverage in the Exchange in each of approximately 
one-half of US counties. Just two issuers participated in Exchanges in 
many additional counties.\41\ Moreover, many Exchange enrollees have 
faced large premium increases.\42\ The Administration already has taken 
some steps to stabilize the Exchanges, but their success is uncertain 
given that the ACA creates significant incentives for some people to 
wait to purchase insurance until an enrollment period that occurs after 
they have experienced a medical need. By expanding AHPs, this proposed 
rule aims to provide many more individuals access to the potentially 
more stable and affordable large group market. However, to the extent 
that AHPs prove particularly attractive to younger or lower cost 
individuals, they may contribute to some Exchanges' instability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and 
Evaluation (ASPE), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 
Compilation of State Date on the Affordable Care Act, December 2016.
    \41\ See U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, ``County 
by County Analysis of Plan Year 2018 Insurer Participation in Health 
Insurance Exchanges,'' available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Programs-and-Initiatives/Health-Insurance-Marketplaces/Downloads/2017-10-20-Issuer-County-Map.pdf.
    \42\ The places with the largest 2017 increases in the 
unsubsidized second-lowest silver plan included Phoenix, AZ (up 145% 
from $207 to $507 per month for a 40-year-old non-smoker). See 
Cynthia Cox, Michelle Long, Ashley Semanskee, Rabah Kamal, Gary 
Claxton, and Larry Levitt, ``2017 Premium Changes and Insurer 
Participation in the Affordable Care Act's Health Insurance 
Marketplaces,'' Kaiser Family Foundation, October 24, 2016 (updated 
November 1, 2016), available at https://www.kff.org/health-reform/issue-brief/2017-premium-changes-and-insurer-participation-in-the-affordable-care-acts-health-insurance-marketplaces/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Issuers may elect to offer individual market policies in Exchanges 
or outside them, or both. Non-grandfathered individual market policies 
must satisfy various ACA requirements including minimum benefit 
packages, minimum actuarial value(s), and minimum loss ratios. They 
must be offered to any individual who applies, and premiums must not 
vary depending on enrollees' health status, instead varying only based 
on location, age, tobacco use, and family size, and within certain 
limits. Issuers offering individual policies in a given location both 
through the local Exchange and outside it must treat the two as a 
single risk pool when setting premiums. The issuers offering individual 
policies, the policies offered, and the premiums charged can vary from 
place to place and locally between Exchanges and outside markets.
    To facilitate access to health insurance for small employers, the 
ACA established the Small Business Health Options Program, or ``SHOP''. 
Small employers may purchase insurance from an issuer, agent, or broker 
via the SHOP, or directly from issuers or through agents or brokers not 
via a SHOP, or they may self-insure. Employers purchasing group 
policies via a SHOP may qualify for tax credits to help cover premium 
costs. If available, small employers also may obtain coverage from an 
AHP, and thereby pool together with other employers and gain access to 
the large group market. Small employers whose employees are represented 
by a union may participate in a (usually large) multiemployer health 
benefit plan, established pursuant to collective bargaining agreements 
between the union and two or more employers.
    Issuers may offer small group policies to small employers via 
SHOPs, directly through issuers, agents or brokers, or both. Either 
way, as with non-grandfathered individual market policies, non-
grandfathered small group policies must satisfy various ACA 
requirements including minimum benefit packages, minimum actuarial 
value(s), and minimum loss ratios. They must be offered to any small 
employer who applies, and premiums may vary only based on location, 
age, and tobacco use, and within certain limits; they may not vary 
based on health. Issuers offering small group policies in a given 
location both through the local SHOP and directly must treat the two as 
a single risk pool when setting premiums. However, the issuers offering 
small group policies, the policies they offer, and the premiums charged 
can vary from place to place and locally between SHOPs and outside 
markets. In some locations the availability of policies may be limited, 
and/or the premiums charged may be rising rapidly, although in most 
locations small group markets continue to offer some choice of issuers 
and policies and moderate premium growth.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ Between 1996 and 2016 small (fewer than 50 employees) and 
large private-sector employer premium increases followed similar 
trajectories. Both averaged 6 percent annually. Agency for 
Healthcare Research and Quality. Average total single premium (in 
dollars) per enrolled employee at private-sector establishments that 
offer health insurance by firm size and selected characteristics 
(Table I.C.1). Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Insurance Component 
Tables.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Few small employers have elected to acquire health insurance via 
SHOPs. As of January 2017, just 27,205 small employers purchased small 
group policies via SHOPs, covering 233,000 employees and 
dependents.\44\ (Much larger numbers obtained coverage directly from 
small group issuers via agents and brokers outside of SHOPs: In 2016, 
1.6 million small-firm establishments offered health benefits for 
employees.) \45\ Sixteen States and the District of Columbia operated 
SHOPs, while federally-facilitated SHOPs operated in 33 States. 
(Beginning in 2017, a special waiver allowed Hawaii to operate its 
existing small group market within the relevant ACA framework without 
establishing a SHOP.) At this point, SHOPs cover far fewer employees 
than existing plan-MEWAs/AHPs, which reportedly cover 1.8 million 
participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ SHOP numbers reported by SB-SHOPs to CCIIO State 
Marketplace Insurance Programs Group and FF-SHOP Enrollment 
Database, May 15, 2017.
    \45\ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), 2016 
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Insurance Component (MEPS-IC). 
Small firms include those with fewer than 50 employees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Department considered the potential susceptibilities of 
individual and small group markets to adverse selection under this 
proposal. All else equal, individual markets may be more susceptible to 
risk selection than small group markets, as individuals' costs 
generally vary more widely than small groups'. The ACA's requirement 
that essentially all individuals acquire coverage and the provision of 
subsidies in Exchanges may reduce that

[[Page 631]]

susceptibility, however.\46\ The Department believes that under this 
proposal AHPs' adherence to applicable nondiscrimination rules and 
potential for administrative savings would mitigate any risk of adverse 
selection against individual and small group markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ H.R. 1 of the 115th Congress, enacted December 22, 2017 
will eliminate the shared responsibility payment for failure to 
maintain health insurance coverage effective beginning in 2019. 
AHPs, by offering eligible individuals more affordable options than 
are available in individual markets, might reduce somewhat any 
potential increase in the uninsured population that could result 
from elimination of the tax payment. At the same time, however, such 
elimination might prompt some individuals who would have joined AHPs 
to remain uninsured instead.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.8. Medicaid

    Under the ACA, Medicaid eligibility was expanded in many States. 
Some Medicaid-eligible workers may become eligible to enroll in AHPs 
under this proposal. Among 42 million individuals under age 65 enrolled 
in Medicaid or CHIP in 2015, 2 million were working owners or 
dependents thereof, and 6 million were employees of small businesses 
that did not offer insurance or dependents thereof.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ DOL calculations based on the Abstract of Auxiliary Data 
for the March 2016 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the 
Current Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.9. The Uninsured

    Twenty-eight million individuals in the U.S. lacked health 
insurance coverage in 2015.\48\ Because AHPs often can offer more 
affordable alternatives to individual and small group insurance 
policies, it is possible that this proposed rule will extend insurance 
coverage to some otherwise uninsured individual families and small 
groups. Of the 28 million uninsured, approximately 3 million are 
working owners or dependents thereof and an additional 8 million are 
employees of small businesses that do not offer insurance or dependents 
thereof.\49\ It is likely that some of these uninsured will become 
eligible for an AHP under this proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ Id.
    \49\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Past State and Federal reforms that tightened or loosened 
individual and small group market rules may, according to various 
studies, have changed the prices paid and policies selected by 
different businesses, somewhat improved access for targeted groups 
(potentially at others' expense), and/or prompted some individuals or 
small businesses to acquire or drop insurance, but had little net 
effect on coverage.\50\ AHPs' potential to expand coverage may be 
greater than this experience suggests, however. Market conditions and 
the size and composition of the uninsured population are different 
today, and as noted earlier, small firms' propensity to offer insurance 
to their employees has fallen, suggesting potential opportunities for 
AHPs to expand coverage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ See for example: (1) Thomas Buchmueller and John DiNardo, 
``Did Community Rating Induce an Adverse Selection Death Spiral? 
Evidence from New York, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut, ``American 
Economic Review 2002, 92(1), 280-294, finding little net effect.'''' 
(2) Mark A. Hall, ``HIPPA's Small-Group Access Laws: Win, Loss, or 
Draw,'' Cato Journal 2002 22(1), 71-83, generally calling the 
results a ``draw.'' (3) Susan M. Gates, Kanika Kapur, and Pinar 
Karaca-Mandic, ``State Health Insurance Mandates, Consumer Directed 
Health Plans, and Health Savings Account: Are They a Panacea for 
Small Businesses,'' Chapter 3 in In the Name of Entrepreneurship: 
The Logic and Effects of Special Treatment for Small Businesses, 
Susan M. Gates and Kristin J Leuschner, eds., Rand Corporation, 
2007, finding little effect. (4) Sudha Xirasagar, Carleen H. 
Stoskopf, James R. Hussey, Michael E. Samuels, William R. Shrader, 
and Ruth P. Saunders, ``The Impact of State' Small Group Health 
Insurance Reforms on Uninsurance Rates,'' Journal of Health and 
Social Policy 2005, 20(3), finding little effect. (5) James R. 
Baumgardner and Stuart A Hagen, ``Predicting Response to Regulatory 
Change in the Small Group Health Insurance Market: The Case of 
Association Health Plans and Healthmarts,'' Inquiry 2001/2002, 
38(4), 351-364, predicting small effects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.10. Operational Risks

    ERISA generally classifies AHPs as MEWAs. Historically, a number of 
MEWAs have suffered from financial mismanagement or abuse, often 
leaving participants and providers with unpaid benefits and bills.\51\ 
Both DOL and State insurance regulators have devoted substantial 
resources to detecting and correcting these problems, and in some 
cases, prosecuting wrongdoers. Some of these entities attempt to evade 
oversight and enforcement actions by claiming to be something other 
than MEWAs, such as collectively-bargained multiemployer ERISA plans. 
To address this continuing risk, the ACA gave DOL expanded authority to 
monitor MEWAs and intervene when MEWAs are headed for trouble, and both 
DOL and State enforcement efforts are ongoing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ For discussions of this history, see: (1) U.S. Gov't 
Accountability Office, GAO-92-40, ``State Need Labor's Help 
Regulating Multiple Employer Welfare Arrangements.'', March 1992, 
available at http://www.gao.gov/assets/220/215647.pdf; (2) U.S. 
Gov't Accountability Office, GAO-04-312, ``Employers and Individuals 
Are Vulnerable to Unauthorized or Bogus Entities Selling Coverage.'' 
February 2004, available at http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d04312.pdf; 
and Mila Kofman and Jennifer Libster, ``Turbulent Past, Uncertain 
Future: Is It Time to Re-evaluate Regulation of Self-Insured 
Multiple Employer Arrangements?'', Journal of Insurance Regulation, 
2005, Vol. 23, Issue 3, p. 17-33.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ERISA requires MEWAs to report certain information annually to the 
Department, using a form known as Form M1.\52\ The Department last 
examined the universe of these reports in September of 2014.\53\ That 
examination included reports for MEWAs (including AHPs) operating in 
each year from 2010 through 2013. According to this examination, in 
2013, 392 MEWAs covered approximately 1.6 million employees. The vast 
majority of these MEWAs reported themselves as ERISA plans that covered 
employees of two or more employers. Nearly all of these covered more 
than 50 employees and therefore constituted large-group employer plans 
for purposes of the ACA. A few reported as so-called ``non-plan'' 
MEWAs, that provided or purchased health or other welfare benefits for 
two or more ERISA plans sponsored by individual employers (most of 
which probably were small-group plans for ACA purposes). Some of these 
might qualify to begin operating as ``plan-MEWAs'' (or AHPs) under this 
proposed rule. This proposed rule is intended to facilitate the 
establishment of more new plan-MEWAs/AHPs, all of which would be 
required to report annually to the Department.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ ERISA requires any plan MEWA/AHP (a MEWA that is also an 
ERISA plan) to file an additional report annually with the 
Department. This is the same annual report filed by all ERISA plans 
that include 100 or more participants or hold plan assets, filed 
using Form 5500. However, while more than 90 percent of 2012 Form M1 
filers reported that they were plan MEWAs, only a bit more than one-
half of these entities also filed Form 5500 for that year. Among 
those that did, frequently some of the information reported across 
the two forms was inconsistent. These reporting inconsistencies 
raise questions about the reliability of MEWAs' compliance with 
ERISA's reporting requirements and the reliability of the 
information recounted here.
    \53\ ``Analysis of Form M-1 Data for Filing Years 2010-2013,'' 
September 23, 2014. https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/researchers/analysis/health-and-welfare/summit2014.pdf. A small 
number of new multiemployer welfare plans that have been in 
operation for less than three years also are required to submit such 
reports. Such multiemployer plans, which exist pursuant to 
collective bargaining agreements between one or more employee 
organizations and two or more employers, are not subject to ERISA's 
MEWA provisions (other than the reporting requirement), and are not 
affected by this regulation. These multiemployer plans made up just 
2 percent of all reporting entities in 2013. Because of their 
inclusion among the reports, the statistics presented here somewhat 
overstate the size of the true MEWA universe.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Most reporting MEWAs operate in more than one State, and a handful 
operate in more than 20 States. In 2013, 46 MEWAs reported expanding 
operations into one or more new States. States with the most plan-
MEWAs/AHPs in 2012 included California (147), Texas (106), and New York 
(100). Only one had fewer than 20 (South Dakota had 18). MEWAs were 
most likely to be

[[Page 632]]

self-insured in certain western States including Wyoming (37 percent), 
Oklahoma (31 percent), Montana (30 percent), and North Dakota (28 
percent).
    About one-fourth of reporting MEWAs are self-insured in all the 
States in which they operate, and another 9 percent are self-insured in 
some States. (The remaining majority does not self-insure and instead 
purchases insurance from issuers in all States in which they operate.) 
For MEWAs for which the type of benefits offered could be determined, 
nearly all offered health insurance, and many offered other, additional 
welfare benefits, such as dental or vision benefits, or life or 
disability insurance.
    MEWAs' annual reports filed with the Department must indicate 
whether they are in compliance with a number of ERISA's minimum health 
plan standards, and with ERISA's general requirement that plans hold 
assets in trust. Nearly none reported lack of compliance with the 
former, but 13 percent reported that they did not comply with the trust 
requirement.
    This proposed rule includes provisions intended to protect AHPs 
against mismanagement and abuse. It requires that the group or 
association has a formal organizational structure with a governing body 
and has by-laws or other similar indications of formality appropriate 
for the legal form in which the group or association is operated, and 
that the functions and activities of the group or association, 
including the establishment and maintenance of the group health plan, 
are controlled by its employer members. These requirements are intended 
to ensure that the organizations are bona fide organizations with the 
organizational structure necessary to act ``in the interests'' of 
participating employers with respect to employee benefit plans as ERISA 
requires. The proposed rule also requires that the AHP's member 
companies control the AHP. This requirement is necessary both to 
satisfy ERISA's requirement that the group or association must act for 
the direct employers in relation to the employee benefit plan, and to 
prevent formation of commercial enterprises that claim to be AHPs but 
that operate like traditional issuers selling insurance in the employer 
marketplace and may be vulnerable to abuse. In addition, the proposal 
would require that only employer members may participate in the AHP and 
health coverage is not made available other than to or in connection 
with a member of the association. Together, these criteria are intended 
to ensure that associations sponsoring AHPs are bona fide employment-
based associations and likely to be resistant to abuse. Nevertheless, 
the flexibility afforded AHPs under this proposal could introduce more 
opportunities for mismanagement or abuse, increasing potential 
oversight demands on the Department and State regulators.

1.11. Federal Budget Impacts

    The proposal is likely to have offsetting effects on the budget, 
with some increasing the deficit and others reducing the deficit. On 
balance, deficit-increasing effects are likely to dominate, making the 
proposal's net impact on the federal budget negative.
    Approximately 906,000 individuals who are insured on the Exchanges 
and eligible for subsidies, and approximately 2 million Medicaid 
enrollees, are working owners or dependents thereof. An additional 2 
million and 6 million, respectively, are employees of small businesses 
that do not offer insurance or dependents thereof.\54\ As of February 
2017, 10.3 million individuals were enrolled, and paid their premiums, 
on a Federal or State-based Exchange. Of these individuals, 8.7 million 
received tax credits, and 5.9 million were receiving cost-sharing 
reduction subsidies. The average advanced premium tax credit for these 
individuals was $371 per month.\55\ Forty-two million individuals under 
age 65 were covered by Medicaid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ DOL calculations based on the Abstract of Auxiliary Data 
for the March 2016 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the 
Current Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.
    \55\ CMS, ``2017 Effectuated Enrollment Snapshot,'' June 12, 
2017. https://downloads.cms.gov/files/effectuated-enrollment-snapshot-report-06-12-17.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In 2005, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated the 
potential budget impacts of a 2005 legislative proposal to expand AHPs. 
Under the 2005 legislation and contemporaneous law, many individuals 
joining AHPs previously would have been uninsured or purchased 
individual policies without benefit of any subsidies; by joining AHPs 
they stood to gain potentially large subsidies in the form of tax 
exclusions. CBO predicted that the legislation, by increasing spending 
on employer-provided insurance, would reduce federal tax revenue by 
$261 million over 10 years, including a $76 million reduction in Social 
Security payroll taxes. CBO also predicted that AHPs would displace 
some Medicaid coverage and thereby reduce federal spending by $80 
million over 10 years. Finally, according to CBO, the legislation would 
have required DOL to hire 150 additional employees and spend an 
additional $136 million over 10 years to properly oversee AHPs.\56\ 
Together these budget impacts would have increased the federal deficit 
by $317 million over 10 years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ CBO cost estimate, H.R. 525 Small Business Health Fairness 
Act of 2005. April 8, 2005. https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/109th-congress-2005-2006/costestimate/hr52500.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Today, consequent to the ACA, many individuals who in 2005 might 
have been uninsured instead are enrolled in Medicaid or are insured and 
receive subsidies on individual Exchanges, and therefore would trade 
existing subsidies for potential new tax subsidies when joining AHPs. 
Market forces generally favor individuals capturing the larger 
available subsidy, so it is likely that AHPs will mostly enroll higher 
income individuals, whose net subsidies will increase, adding to the 
federal deficit. Resources allocated to support the Departments' 
efforts to prevent and correct potential mismanagement and abuse could 
add more to it. If, however, AHPs do enroll some Medicaid enrollees or 
individuals receiving large subsidies on individual Exchanges, savings 
from these impacts might offset a portion of these deficit increases.

1.12. Regulatory Alternatives

    In developing this proposal DOL considered various alternative 
approaches.
     Retaining existing rules and interpretations. DOL elected 
to propose relaxing existing rules and interpretations because they 
have proven to impede the establishment and growth of potentially 
beneficial AHPs. Existing interpretations generally block working 
owners who lack employees from joining AHPs. Instead these individuals 
and their families are limited to options available in individual 
markets where premiums may be higher and choice narrower than that 
which AHPs can sometimes provide. The existing commonality requirement 
sometimes prevents associations from achieving sufficient scale in 
local markets to effectively establish and operate efficient AHPs. The 
existing uncertainty as to the sufficiency of a common industry to 
permit establishment of an AHP may prevent the formation of more 
nationwide AHPs. And, the existing requirement that associations exist 
for purposes other than providing health benefits prevents the 
establishment of beneficial AHPs in circumstances where no other 
compelling reason exists to establish and maintain an association. By 
addressing these requirements, this proposal aims to promote the 
establishment and growth of AHPs and

[[Page 633]]

optimize small businesses' access to them.
     Relaxing the control requirement. The proposal generally 
requires that association members control the AHP. Relaxing this 
requirement might encourage more and faster establishment and growth of 
AHPs, as entrepreneurs identify and seize opportunities to reap and 
share with enrollees the economic benefits AHPs can deliver. DOL 
believes, however, that relaxing this requirement would increase the 
risk that AHPs would be vulnerable to mismanagement or abuse. 
Additionally, the Department's authority to loosen this requirement is 
unclear in light of ERISA's text.
     Including only fully-insured AHPs. DOL considered 
prohibiting broadening the circumstances under which an AHP is treated 
as a single plan under ERISA only for fully insured AHPs. Historically, 
self-insured MEWAs have been particularly vulnerable to financial 
mismanagement and abuse. MEWA promoters sometimes have used self-
insurance both to evade State oversight and to maximize opportunities 
for abusive financial self-dealing, often with highly negative 
consequences for their enrollees. Nonetheless, DOL recognizes that 
well-managed self-insured AHPs may be able to realize efficiencies that 
insured AHPs cannot. In light of this potential, and considering the 
enforcement tools that the ACA added to DOL's arsenal, DOL elected to 
allow AHPs to continue to self-insure under this proposal. This 
provision will serve to further promote the establishment and growth of 
effective AHPs, but it will also compel DOL to commit additional 
resources to AHPs' oversight.
     Limiting or increasing AHPs' product and/or price 
flexibility. As noted earlier, this proposal allows small businesses to 
band together to obtain advantages that attend the provision of 
insurance by a large employer, including access to the large-group 
market. The large-group market is not subject to certain product and 
pricing restrictions that govern the individual and small group 
markets. As noted earlier, some stakeholders expressed their concern 
that allowing small businesses to escape these restrictions could lead 
to excessive risk segmentation and might destabilize some local 
individual and small group markets. The Department considered, but 
rejected, subjecting AHPs to constraints similar to those applicable to 
the individual and small group markets. The goal of the proposed rule 
is to allow AHPs to leverage advantages available to large employers to 
assemble large, stable risk pools, pursue administrative savings, and 
offer small businesses more, and more affordable, health insurance 
options. In light of that objective, imposing the product and pricing 
restrictions that distinguish the individual and small group markets 
from the large group market would have been too limiting. The 
flexibility also may increase AHPs' market reach, making more 
affordable options available to more small businesses than would be 
possible without it. This proposal would mitigate AHPs' potential to 
segment risk and destabilize individual and small group markets by 
applying nondiscrimination rules that bar them from conditioning 
eligibility, benefits, or premiums on the health status of small 
businesses' employees. Some stakeholders argue that nondiscrimination 
provisions themselves unduly restrict AHPs and could prevent AHP 
formation (and hence lower the number of insured people). DOL 
considered, but rejected, omitting the nondiscrimination provisions in 
part. These provisions, among other functions, serve to distinguish 
AHPs from commercial insurers as a legal matter.

1.13. Conclusion

    This proposed rule broadens the conditions under which AHPs will be 
treated as large group health benefit plans under ERISA, the ACA and 
State law. Under the proposal, AHPs generally can offer small 
businesses more, and more affordable, benefit options than are 
available to them in the individual and small group markets, in part 
through the creation of various efficiencies. AHPs' flexibility to 
tailor products and adjust prices to more closely reflect expected 
claims will also improve social welfare for AHP participants. Although 
they may limit AHPs' appeal and thus we are seeking comment on them, 
rules barring discrimination based on health status will moderate the 
incentives for relatively healthy people disproportionately to leave 
the individual and small group markets, which would further destabilize 
local individual and small group markets. Operational risks may demand 
increased federal and State oversight. The proposal may increase the 
federal deficit.

2. Paperwork Reduction Act

    The proposed rule is not subject to the requirements of the 
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA 95) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), 
because it does not contain a collection of information as defined in 
44 U.S.C. 3502(3).

3. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes 
certain requirements with respect to federal rules that are subject to 
the notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the 
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and which are 
likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
small entities. Unless an agency determines that a proposal is not 
likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
small entities, section 603 of the RFA requires the agency to present 
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) of the proposed rule. 
The Department has determined that this proposed rule, which would 
broaden the criteria for determining when employers may join together 
in a group or association to sponsor a group health plan under ERISA, 
is likely to have a significant impact on a substantial number of small 
entities. Therefore, the Department provides its IRFA of the proposed 
rule, below.
Need for and Objectives of the Rule
    This proposed rule is intended and expected to deliver benefits 
primarily to the employees of small businesses and their families, as 
well as the small businesses themselves. As detailed earlier, this 
proposed rule would encourage the establishment and growth of AHPs. 
AHPs may offer small businesses more, and more affordable, health 
benefit options than otherwise are available to them in the individual 
and small group markets, resulting in employer-sponsored coverage for 
more Americans, and more diverse and affordable insurance options.
Affected Small Entities
    Potential beneficiaries of savings and increased choice from AHP 
coverage under the proposed rule include:
     Some of the 25 million individuals under age 65 who 
currently are covered in individual markets, including approximately 3 
million who are sole proprietors or dependents thereof, and an 
additional 6 million who are employees of small businesses or 
dependents thereof.
     The 25 million individuals under age 65 who currently are 
covered in small group markets.
     Some of the 28 million individuals under age 65 who 
currently lack insurance, including 2 million who are sole proprietors 
or dependents thereof, and an additional 5 million who are employees of 
small businesses or dependents thereof.

[[Page 634]]

     Some of the 1.6 million private, small-firm establishments 
(those with fewer than 50 employees) that currently offer insurance and 
the 4 million that do not.
Impact of the Rule
    By expanding AHPs, this proposal would provide more, and more 
affordable, health insurance options for small businesses, thereby 
yielding economic benefits for participating small businesses. The 
proposal includes provisions to mitigate any risk of negative 
spillovers for other small businesses. The proposal may impact 
individual and small group issuers whose enrollees might switch to 
AHPs, some of which would likely be small entities.
Duplication, Overlap, and Conflict With Other Rules and Regulations
    The proposed actions would not conflict with any relevant federal 
rules. As discussed above, the proposed rule would merely broaden the 
conditions under which an association can act as an ``employer'' under 
ERISA for purposes of offering a group health plan and would not change 
AHPs' status as large group plans and MEWAs, under ERISA, the ACA, and 
State law.

4. Congressional Review Act

    The proposed rule is subject to the Congressional Review Act (CRA) 
provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and, if finalized, will be transmitted to 
Congress and the Comptroller General for review. The proposed rule is a 
``major rule'' as that term is defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2), because it 
is likely to result in an annual effect on the economy of $100 million 
or more.

5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-
4) requires each federal agency to prepare a written statement 
assessing the effects of any federal mandate in a proposed or final 
agency rule that may result in an expenditure of $100 million or more 
(adjusted annually for inflation with the base year 1995) in any one 
year by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by 
the private sector. For purposes of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, 
as well as Executive Order 12875, this proposal does not include any 
federal mandate that the Department expects would result in such 
expenditures by State, local, or tribal governments, or the private 
sector. This proposed rule would merely broaden the conditions under 
which AHPs will be treated as large group health benefit plans under 
ERISA, the ACA and State law. In so doing, it makes available to more 
small businesses some of the advantages currently enjoyed by large 
employer-sponsored plans.

6. Federalism Statement

    Executive Order 13132 outlines fundamental principles of 
federalism, and requires the adherence to specific criteria by federal 
agencies in the process of their formulation and implementation of 
policies that have ``substantial direct effects'' on the States, the 
relationship between the national government and States, or on the 
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of 
government. Federal agencies promulgating regulations that have 
federalism implications must consult with State and local officials and 
describe the extent of their consultation and the nature of the 
concerns of State and local officials in the preamble to the final 
rule.
    In the Department's view, these proposed regulations would have 
federalism implications because they would have direct effects on the 
States, the relationship between the national government and the 
States, and on the distribution of power and responsibilities among 
various levels of government. The Department believes these effects are 
limited, insofar as the proposal would not change AHPs' status as large 
group plans and MEWAs, under ERISA, the ACA, and State law. As 
discussed above in this preamble, because ERISA classifies AHPs as 
MEWAs, they generally are subject to State insurance regulation. 
Specifically, if an AHP is not fully insured, then under section 
514(b)(6)(A)(ii) of ERISA any State insurance law that regulates 
insurance may apply to the AHP to the extent that such State law is not 
inconsistent with ERISA. If, on the other hand, an AHP is fully 
insured, section 514(b)(6)(A)(i) of ERISA provides that only those 
State insurance laws that regulate the maintenance of specified 
contribution and reserve levels may apply to the AHP. The Department 
notes that State rules vary widely in practice, and many States 
regulate AHPs less stringently than individual or small group 
insurance. The Department welcomes input from affected States, 
including the NAIC and State insurance officials, regarding this 
assessment.

7. Executive Order 13771 Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory 
Costs

    Executive Order 13771, titled Reducing Regulation and Controlling 
Regulatory Costs, was issued on January 30, 2017. This proposed rule is 
expected to be an EO 13771 deregulatory action, because it would expand 
small businesses' access to more lightly regulated and more affordable 
health insurance options, by removing certain restrictions on the 
establishment and maintenance of AHPs under ERISA.

List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 2510

    Employee benefit plans, Pensions.

    For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Department of Labor 
proposes to amend 29 CFR part 2510 as follows:

PART 2510--DEFINITIONS OF TERMS USED IN SUBCHAPTERS C, D, E, F, G, 
AND L OF THIS CHAPTER

0
1. The authority citation for part 2510 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority:  29 U.S.C. 1002(2), 1002(5), 1002(21), 1002(37), 
1002(38), 1002(40), 1031, and 1135; Secretary of Labor's Order No. 
1-2011, 77 FR 1088 (Jan. 9, 2012); Sec. 2510.3-101 also issued under 
sec. 102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 43 FR 47713 (Oct. 17, 
1978), E.O. 12108, 44 FR 1065 (Jan. 3, 1979) and 29 U.S.C. 1135 
note. Sec. 2510.3-38 is also issued under sec. 1, Pub. L. 105-72, 
111 Stat. 1457 (1997).

0
2. Section 2510.3-3 is amended by revising paragraph (c) introductory 
text to read as follows:


Sec.  2510.3-3  Employee benefit plan.

* * * * *
    (c) Employees. For purposes of this section and except as provided 
in Sec.  2510.3-5(e):
* * * * *
0
 3. Section 2510.3-5 is added to read as follows:


Sec.  2510.3-5   Employer.

    (a) In general. The purpose of this section is to clarify which 
persons may act as an ``employer'' within the meaning of section 3(5) 
of the Act in sponsoring a multiple employer group health plan. Section 
733(a)(1) defines the term ``group health plan,'' in relevant part, as 
an employee welfare benefit plan to the extent that the plan provides 
medical care to employees or their dependents through insurance, 
reimbursement, or otherwise. The Act defines an ``employee welfare 
benefit plan'' in section 3(1), in relevant part, as any plan, fund, or 
program established or maintained by an employer, employee 
organization, or by both an

[[Page 635]]

employer and an employee organization, for the purpose of providing 
certain listed welfare benefits to participants or their beneficiaries. 
For purposes of being able to establish and maintain a welfare benefit 
plan, an ``employer'' under section 3(5) of the Act includes any person 
acting directly as an employer, or any person acting indirectly in the 
interest of an employer in relation to an employee benefit plan. A 
group or association of employers is specifically identified in section 
3(5) of the Act as a person able to act directly or indirectly in the 
interest of an employer, including for purposes of establishing or 
maintaining an employee welfare benefit plan.
    (b) Bona fide group or association of employers. For purposes of 
Title I of the Act and this chapter, a bona fide group or association 
of employers capable of establishing a group health plan that is an 
employee welfare benefit plan shall include a group or association of 
employers that meets the following requirements:
    (1) The group or association exists for the purpose, in whole or in 
part, of sponsoring a group health plan that it offers to its employer 
members;
    (2) Each employer member of the group or association participating 
in the group health plan is a person acting directly as an employer of 
at least one employee who is a participant covered under the plan;
    (3) The group or association has a formal organizational structure 
with a governing body and has by-laws or other similar indications of 
formality;
    (4) The functions and activities of the group or association, 
including the establishment and maintenance of the group health plan, 
are controlled by its employer members, either directly or indirectly 
through the regular nomination and election of directors, officers, or 
other similar representatives that control the group or association and 
the establishment and maintenance of the plan;
    (5) The employer members have a commonality of interest as 
described in paragraph (c) of this section;
    (6) The group or association does not make health coverage through 
the association available other than to employees and former employees 
of employer members and family members or other beneficiaries of those 
employees and former employees;
    (7) The group or association and health coverage offered by the 
group or association complies with the nondiscrimination provisions of 
paragraph (d) of this section; and
    (8) The group or association is not a health insurance issuer 
described in section 733(b)(2) of ERISA, or owned or controlled by such 
a health insurance issuer.
    (c) Commonality of interest. Commonality of interest of employer 
members of a group or association will be determined based on relevant 
facts and circumstances and may be established by:
    (1) Employers being in the same trade, industry, line of business 
or profession; or
    (2) Employers having a principal place of business in a region that 
does not exceed the boundaries of the same State or the same 
metropolitan area (even if the metropolitan area includes more than one 
State).
    (d) Nondiscrimination. A bona fide group or association, and any 
health coverage offered by the bona fide group or association, must 
comply with the nondiscrimination provisions of this paragraph (d).
    (1) The group or association must not condition employer membership 
in the group or association based on any health factor of an employee 
or employees or a former employee or former employees of the employer 
member (or any employee's family members or other beneficiaries), as 
defined in Sec.  2590.702(a) of this chapter.
    (2) The group health plan sponsored by the group or association 
must comply with the rules of Sec.  2590.702(b) of this chapter with 
respect to nondiscrimination in rules for eligibility for benefits, 
subject to paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
    (3) The group health plan sponsored by the group or association 
must comply with the rules of Sec.  2590.702(c) of this chapter with 
respect to nondiscrimination in premiums or contributions required by 
any participant or beneficiary for coverage under the plan, subject to 
paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
    (4) In applying the nondiscrimination provisions of paragraphs 
(d)(2) and (3) of this section, the group or association may not treat 
different employer members of the group or association as distinct 
groups of similarly-situated individuals.
    (5) The rules of this paragraph (d) are illustrated by the 
following examples:

    Example 1.  (i) Facts. Association A offers group health 
coverage to all members. According to the bylaws of Association A, 
membership is subject to the following criteria: All members must be 
restaurants located in a specified area. Restaurant B, which is 
located within the specified area, has several employees with large 
health claims. Restaurant B applies for membership in Association A, 
and is denied membership based on the claims experience of its 
employees.
    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1, Association A's exclusion of 
Restaurant B from Association A discriminates on the basis of claims 
history, which is a health factor under Sec.  2590.702(a)(1) of this 
chapter. Accordingly, Association A violates the requirement in 
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, and, therefore would not meet the 
definition of a bona fide group or association of employers under 
paragraph (b) of this section.
    Example 2.  (i) Facts. Association C offers group health 
coverage to all members. According to the bylaws of Association C, 
membership is subject to the following criteria: All members must 
have a principal place of business in a specified metropolitan area. 
Individual D is a sole proprietor whose principal place of business 
is within the specified area. As part of the membership application 
process, Individual D provides certain health information to 
Association C. After learning that Individual D has diabetes, based 
on D's diabetes, Association C denies Individual D's membership 
application.
    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2, Association C's exclusion of 
Individual D because D has diabetes is a decision that discriminates 
on the basis of a medical condition, which is a health factor under 
Sec.  2590.702(a)(1) of this chapter. Accordingly, Association C 
violates the requirement in paragraph (d)(1) of this section and 
would not meet the definition of a bona fide group or association of 
employers under paragraph (b) of this section.
    Example 3.  (i) Facts. Association F offers group health 
coverage to all plumbers working for plumbing companies in a State. 
Plumbers employed by a plumbing company on a full-time basis (which 
is defined under the terms of the arrangement as regularly working 
at least 30 hours a week) are eligible for health coverage without a 
waiting period. Plumbers employed by a plumbing company on a part-
time basis (which is defined under the terms of the arrangement as 
regularly working at least 10 hours per week, but less than 30 hours 
per week) are eligible for health coverage after a 60-day waiting 
period.
    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, making a distinction between 
part-time versus full-time employment status is a permitted 
distinction between similarly situated individuals under Sec.  
2590.702(d) of this chapter, provided the distinction is not 
directed at individuals under Sec.  2590.702(d)(3) of this chapter. 
Accordingly, the requirement that plumbers working part time must 
satisfy a waiting period for coverage is a rule for eligibility that 
does not violate Sec.  2590.702(b) or, as a consequence, paragraph 
(d)(2) of this section.
    Example 4.  (i) Facts. Association G sponsors a group health 
plan, available to all employers doing business in Town H. 
Association G charges Business I more for premiums than it charges 
other members because Business I employs several individuals with 
chronic illnesses.
    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 4, Business I cannot be treated 
as a separate group of similarly situated individuals from other 
members under paragraph (d)(4) of this section. Therefore, charging 
Business I more for premiums based on one or more health

[[Page 636]]

factors of the employees of Business I violates Sec.  2590.702(c) of 
this chapter and, consequently, the requirement in paragraph (d)(3) 
of this section.
    Example 5.  (i) Facts. Association J sponsors a group health 
plan that is available to all members. According to the bylaws of 
Association J, membership is open to any entity whose principal 
place of business is in State K, which has only one major 
metropolitan area, the capital city of State K. Members whose 
principal place of business is in the capital city of State K are 
charged more for premiums than members whose principal place of 
business is outside of the capital city.
    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 5, making a distinction between 
members whose principal place of business is in the capital city of 
State K, as compared to some other area in State K, is a permitted 
distinction between similarly situated individuals under Sec.  
2590.702(d) of this chapter, provided the distinction is not 
directed at individuals under Sec.  2590.702(d)(3) of this chapter. 
Accordingly, Association J's rule for charging different premiums 
based on principal place of business does not violate paragraph 
(d)(3) of this section.
    Example 6.  (i) Facts. Association L sponsors a group health 
plan, available to all members. According to the bylaws of 
Association L, membership is open to any entity whose principal 
place of business is in State M. Sole Proprietor N's principal place 
of business is in City O, within State M. It is the only member 
whose principal place of business is in City O, and it is otherwise 
similarly situated with respect to all other members of the 
association. After learning that Sole Proprietor N has been 
diagnosed with cancer, based on the cancer diagnosis, Association L 
changes its premium structure to charge higher premiums for members 
whose principal place of business is in City O.
    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 6, cancer is a health factor 
under Sec.  2590.702(a) of this chapter. Making a distinction based 
on a health factor, between members that are otherwise similarly 
situated is in this case a distinction directed at an individual 
under Sec.  2590.702(d)(3) of this chapter and is not a permitted 
distinction. Accordingly, by charging higher premiums to members 
whose principal place of business is City O, Association L violates 
Sec.  2590.702(c) of this chapter and, consequently, paragraph 
(d)(4) of this section.

    (e) Dual treatment of working owners as employers and employees--
(1) A working owner of a trade or business may qualify as both an 
employer and as an employee of the trade or business for purposes of 
the requirements in paragraph (b) of this section, including paragraph 
(b)(2) that each employer member of the group or association 
participating in the group health plan must be a person acting directly 
as an employer of one or more employees who are participants covered 
under the plan, and paragraph (b)(6) that the group or association does 
not make health coverage offered to employer members through the 
association available other than to employees and former employees of 
employer members and the family members or other beneficiaries of those 
employees and former employees.
    (2) The term ``working owner'' as used in this paragraph (e) means 
any individual:
    (i) Who has an ownership right of any nature in a trade or 
business, whether incorporated or unincorporated, including partners 
and other self-employed individuals;
    (ii) Who is earning wages or self-employment income from the trade 
or business for providing personal services to the trade or business;
    (iii) Who is not eligible to participate in any subsidized group 
health plan maintained by any other employer of the individual or of 
the spouse of the individual; and
    (iv) Who either:
    (A) Works at least 30 hours per week or at least 120 hours per 
month providing personal services to the trade or business, or
    (B) Has earned income from such trade or business that at least 
equals the working owner's cost of coverage for participation by the 
working owner and any covered beneficiaries in the group health plan 
sponsored by the group or association in which the individual is 
participating.
    (3) Absent knowledge to the contrary, the group or association 
sponsoring the group health plan may reasonably rely on written 
representations from the individual seeking to participate as a working 
owner as a basis for concluding that the conditions in paragraph (e)(2) 
are satisfied.

Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson,
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits Security Administration, 
Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2017-28103 Filed 1-4-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4510-29-P



                                                 614

                                                 Proposed Rules                                                                                                 Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                Vol. 83, No. 4

                                                                                                                                                                Friday, January 5, 2018



                                                 This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER                    and also to be treated as employees with               FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                 contains notices to the public of the proposed          respect to a trade, business or                        Elizabeth Schumacher, Office of Health
                                                 issuance of rules and regulations. The                  partnership for purposes of being                      Plan Standards and Compliance
                                                 purpose of these notices is to give interested          covered by the employer group’s or                     Assistance, Employee Benefits Security
                                                 persons an opportunity to participate in the            association’s health plan. The goal of                 Administration, (202) 693–8335 or Janet
                                                 rule making prior to the adoption of the final
                                                                                                         the rulemaking is to expand access to                  K. Song, Office of Regulations and
                                                 rules.
                                                                                                         affordable health coverage, especially                 Interpretations, Employee Benefits
                                                                                                         among small employers and self-                        Security Administration, (202) 693–
                                                 DEPARTMENT OF LABOR                                     employed individuals, by removing                      8500. These are not toll free numbers.
                                                                                                         undue restrictions on the establishment                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                 Employee Benefits Security                              and maintenance of association health
                                                                                                                                                                A. Overview
                                                 Administration                                          plans under ERISA. The proposed
                                                                                                         regulation would affect such association                  Since the Affordable Care Act 1 (or
                                                 29 CFR Part 2510                                        health plans, health coverage under                    ACA) was enacted, many consumers
                                                                                                         these health plans, groups and                         have continued to face rising costs of
                                                 RIN 1210–AB85                                           associations of employers sponsoring                   coverage and a lack of quality affordable
                                                                                                         such plans, participants and                           healthcare options. On October 12,
                                                 Definition of ‘‘Employer’’ Under Section                                                                       2017, President Trump issued Executive
                                                                                                         beneficiaries with health coverage under
                                                 3(5) of ERISA—Association Health                                                                               Order 13813, ‘‘Promoting Healthcare
                                                                                                         these plans, health insurance issuers,
                                                 Plans                                                                                                          Choice and Competition Across the
                                                                                                         and purchasers of health insurance not
                                                 AGENCY:  Employee Benefits Security                     purchased through association health                   United States,’’ stating that ‘‘[i]t shall be
                                                 Administration, Department of Labor.                    plans.                                                 the policy of the executive branch, to
                                                                                                                                                                the extent consistent with law, to
                                                 ACTION: Proposed rule.                                  DATES:  Comments are due on or before                  facilitate the purchase of insurance
                                                                                                         March 6, 2018.                                         across State lines and the development
                                                 SUMMARY:   This document contains a
                                                 proposed regulation under Title I of the                ADDRESSES: You may submit written                      and operation of a healthcare system
                                                 Employee Retirement Income Security                     comments, identified by RIN 1210–                      that provides high-quality care at
                                                 Act (ERISA) that would broaden the                      AB85, by one of the following methods:                 affordable prices for the American
                                                 criteria under ERISA section 3(5) for                     • Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://                people.’’ The Executive Order states that
                                                 determining when employers may join                     www.regulations.gov. Follow the                        the Administration will prioritize three
                                                 together in an employer group or                        instructions for submitting comments.                  areas for improvement in the near term:
                                                 association that is treated as the                        • Mail: Office of Regulations and                    association health plans (AHPs), short-
                                                 ‘‘employer’’ sponsor of a single                        Interpretations, Employee Benefits                     term, limited-duration insurance, and
                                                 multiple-employer ‘‘employee welfare                    Security Administration, Room N–5655,                  health reimbursement arrangements
                                                 benefit plan’’ and ‘‘group health plan’’                U.S. Department of Labor, 200                          (HRAs). With regard to AHPs, the
                                                 as those terms are defined in Title I of                Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,                    Executive Order directs the Secretary of
                                                 ERISA. By treating the association itself               DC 20210, Attention: Definition of                     Labor, within 60 days of the date of the
                                                 as the employer sponsor of a single                     Employer—Small Business Health Plans                   Executive Order, to consider proposing
                                                 plan, the regulation would facilitate the               RIN 1210–AB85.                                         regulations or revising guidance,
                                                 adoption and administration of such                       Instructions: All submissions received               consistent with law, to expand access to
                                                 arrangements. The regulation would                      must include the agency name and                       health coverage by allowing more
                                                 modify the definition of ‘‘employer,’’ in               Regulatory Identifier Number (RIN) for                 employers to form AHPs. The Executive
                                                 part, by creating a more flexible                       this rulemaking. Persons submitting                    Order further notes that ‘‘[l]arge
                                                 ‘‘commonality of interest’’ test for the                comments electronically are encouraged                 employers often are able to obtain better
                                                 employer members than the Department                    to submit only by one electronic method                terms on health insurance for their
                                                 of Labor (DOL or Department) had                        and not to submit paper copies.                        employees than small employers
                                                 adopted in sub-regulatory interpretive                  Comments will be available to the
                                                                                                                                                                   1 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
                                                 rulings under ERISA section 3(5). At the                public, without charge, online at http://
                                                                                                                                                                (Pub. L. 111–148), enacted on March 23, 2010, and
                                                 same time, the regulation would                         www.regulations.gov and http://                        the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act
                                                 continue to distinguish employment-                     www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa and at the                   of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–152), enacted on March 30,
                                                 based plans, the focal point of Title I of              Public Disclosure Room, Employee                       2010, collectively are known as the Affordable Care
                                                                                                         Benefits Security Administration, Suite                Act or ACA. The Affordable Care Act reorganizes,
                                                 ERISA, from mere commercial                                                                                    amends, and adds to the provisions in part A of title
                                                 insurance programs and administrative                   N–1513, 200 Constitution Avenue NW,                    XXVII of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act)
                                                 service arrangements marketed to                        Washington, DC 20210.                                  relating to group health plans and health insurance
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                                                 employers. For purposes of Title I of                     Warning: Do not include any                          issuers in the group and individual markets. In
                                                                                                                                                                addition, the Affordable Care Act adds section
                                                 ERISA, the proposal would also permit                   personally identifiable or confidential                715(a)(1) to ERISA and section 9815(a)(1) to the
                                                 working owners of an incorporated or                    business information that you do not                   Internal Revenue Code (Code) to incorporate the
                                                 unincorporated trade or business,                       want publicly disclosed. Comments are                  provisions of part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act
                                                 including partners in a partnership, to                 public records and are posted on the                   (PHS Act sections 2701 through 2728) into ERISA
                                                                                                                                                                and the Code, and make them applicable to group
                                                 elect to act as employers for purposes of               internet as received, and can be                       health plans, and health insurance issuers
                                                 participating in an employer group or                   retrieved by most internet search                      providing health insurance coverage in connection
                                                 association sponsoring a health plan                    engines.                                               with group health plans.



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                     615

                                                 because of their larger pools of insurable              coverage are generally treated as a                    Since these AHPs tend to cover many
                                                 individuals across which they can                       collection of plans, separately                        employees, the coverage, in such cases,
                                                 spread risk and administrative costs.                   sponsored by each of the individual                    tends to be regulated as large group
                                                 Expanding access to AHPs can help                       employers.                                             coverage for ACA purposes.
                                                 small businesses overcome this                             Whether, and the extent to which,                      The current criteria that an employer
                                                 competitive disadvantage by allowing                    various regulatory requirements apply                  association must satisfy to sponsor a
                                                 them to group together to self-insure or                to association health coverage, like other             single multiple employer plan, however,
                                                 purchase large group health insurance.                  coverage, depends on whether the                       are narrow. Thus, the Department often
                                                 Expanding access to AHPs will also                      coverage is treated as individual or                   has found that the association is not the
                                                 allow more small businesses to avoid                    group coverage and, in turn, whether                   sponsor of a multiple employer plan;
                                                 many of the PPACA’s costly                              the group coverage is small or large                   instead, each employer that gets its
                                                 requirements. Expanding access to                       group coverage. Generally, unless the                  health coverage through the association
                                                 AHPs would provide more affordable                      arrangement sponsored by the                           is considered to have established a
                                                 health insurance options to many                        association constitutes a single ERISA-                separate, single-employer health benefit
                                                 Americans, including hourly wage                        covered plan, the current regulatory                   plan covering its own employees. In
                                                 earners, farmers, and the employees of                  framework disregards the association in                such cases, the association, much like
                                                 small businesses and entrepreneurs that                 determining whether the coverage                       an insurance company, is simply the
                                                 fuel economic growth.’’                                 obtained by any particular participating               mechanism by which each individual
                                                    The Executive Order directs the                      individual or employer is treated as                   employer obtains benefits and
                                                 Secretary, to the extent permitted by law               individual, small group, or large group                administrative services for its own
                                                 and as supported by sound policy, to                    market coverage. Instead, the test for                 separate plan. Therefore, to the extent
                                                 consider expanding the conditions that                  determining the type of coverage                       the separate employers are small
                                                 satisfy the commonality-of-interest                     focuses on whether the coverage is                     employers, each of their plans are
                                                 requirements under existing DOL                         offered to individuals or employers.                   subject to regulation as small group
                                                 advisory opinions interpreting the                                                                             coverage for ACA purposes. Similarly,
                                                                                                         And, if the coverage is offered to
                                                 definition of an ‘‘employer’’ under                                                                            in the case of sole proprietors and other
                                                                                                         employers, whether the group coverage
                                                 section 3(5) of ERISA. The Executive                                                                           business owners that do not employ
                                                                                                         is large group or small group coverage
                                                 Order also directs the Department to                                                                           other individuals, the coverage they
                                                                                                         depends on the number of people
                                                 consider ways to promote AHP                                                                                   obtain for themselves through an
                                                                                                         employed by the particular employer
                                                 formation on the basis of common                                                                               association is treated as individual
                                                                                                         obtaining the coverage. Thus, unless the
                                                 geography or industry.                                                                                         coverage. As a result of this regulatory
                                                    AHPs are an innovative option for                    association plan is treated as a single
                                                                                                                                                                structure today, AHPs currently face a
                                                 expanding access to employer-                           ERISA-covered plan, the size of each
                                                                                                                                                                complex and costly compliance
                                                 sponsored coverage (especially for small                individual employer participating in the
                                                                                                                                                                environment that may simultaneously
                                                 businesses). AHPs permit employers to                   association determines whether that
                                                                                                                                                                subject the AHP to large group, small
                                                 band together to purchase health                        employer’s coverage is subject to the
                                                                                                                                                                group, and individual market
                                                 coverage. Supporters contend that AHPs                  small group or large group market rules
                                                                                                                                                                regulation, which undermines one of
                                                 can help reduce the cost of health                      (or the individual market rules, if the
                                                                                                                                                                the core purposes and advantages of
                                                 coverage by giving groups of employers                  participant is an individual and not an
                                                                                                                                                                forming or joining an AHP. Accordingly,
                                                 increased bargaining power vis-à-vis                   employer that can establish and
                                                                                                                                                                the Department is proposing to amend
                                                 hospitals, doctors, and pharmacy benefit                maintain a group health plan), and it is
                                                                                                                                                                the definition of employer in section
                                                 providers, and creating new economies                   possible that different association
                                                                                                                                                                3(5) of ERISA to change this state of
                                                 of scale, administrative efficiencies, and              members will have coverage that is
                                                                                                                                                                affairs.
                                                 a more efficient allocation of plan                     subject to the individual market, small
                                                 responsibilities (as the AHP effectively                group market, and/or large group market                B. Purpose of Regulatory Action
                                                 transfers the obligation to provide and                 rules, as determined by each member’s                     Executive Order 13813 directs the
                                                 administer benefit programs from                        circumstances.                                         Secretary to consider issuing regulations
                                                 participating employers, who may have                      There are circumstances, however,                   that will expand access to more
                                                 little expertise in these matters, to the               even under the Department’s existing                   affordable health coverage by permitting
                                                 AHP sponsor).                                           sub-regulatory guidance, when                          more employers to form AHPs, and the
                                                    Under current federal law and                        employer association health coverage is                Secretary has been specifically directed
                                                 regulations, health insurance coverage                  treated as being provided through a                    to consider expanding the conditions
                                                 offered or provided through an                          plan, fund, or program that is a single                that a group of employers must satisfy
                                                 employer trade association, chamber of                  ERISA-covered employee welfare                         to act as an ‘‘employer’’ under ERISA for
                                                 commerce, or similar organization, to                   benefit plan. In general, this occurs                  purposes of sponsoring a group health
                                                 individuals and small employers is                      when the employer association, rather                  plan by reconsidering the
                                                 generally regulated under the same                      than the individual employer member,                   ‘‘commonality-of-interest’’ requirements
                                                 federal standards that apply to                         is considered the sponsoring                           under current Departmental guidance.
                                                 insurance coverage sold by health                       ‘‘employer’’ that establishes and                      This proposed regulation would define
                                                 insurance issuers directly to these                     maintains the plan. In such cases, the                 the term ‘‘group or association of
                                                 individuals and small employers, unless                 health coverage program is, accordingly,               employers’’ under ERISA section 3(5)
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                                                 the coverage sponsored by the                           treated as a single multiple employer                  more broadly, in a way that would allow
                                                 association constitutes a single ERISA-                 plan for purposes of Title I of ERISA.2                more freedom for businesses to join
                                                 covered plan. As a practical matter,                                                                           together in organizations that could
                                                 however, under existing sub-regulatory                    2 The Department’s prior guidance under ERISA
                                                                                                                                                                offer group health coverage regulated
                                                 guidance, the Department treats few                     section 3(5) addressed health benefits and other
                                                                                                         benefits under section 3(1) of ERISA. However,         under the ACA as large group coverage.
                                                 associations as sponsoring single                       these proposed rules are limited to health benefits.
                                                 ERISA-covered plans. Instead the                        Accordingly, for simplicity, these proposed            including when discussing the application of prior
                                                 associations’ arrangements for health                   regulations often refer only to health benefits,       Departmental guidance.



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                                                 616                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 A principal objective of the proposed                   employer associations to provide group                 similar functions on behalf of these
                                                 rule is to expand employer and                          health coverage to their employer-                     members with respect to the plan and
                                                 employee access to more affordable,                     members, thus making available                         any trust established under the program.
                                                 high-quality coverage. The Department                   advantages distinct from non-plan                      DOL guidance generally refers to these
                                                 proposes changes in its approach to the                 MEWAs, including, often, access to the                 entities as ‘‘bona fide’’ employer groups
                                                 ERISA section 3(5) definition of                        large group market.                                    or associations. See, e.g., Advisory
                                                 employer under ERISA. The ACA has                                                                              Opinions 2008–07A, 2003–17A and
                                                                                                         C. Background
                                                 caused individual and small group                                                                              2001–04A. See also Advisory Opinion
                                                 insurance premiums to increase                          1. Section 3(5) of ERISA and the Current               96–25A (if an employer adopts for its
                                                 significantly. In part as a result of this              Standards for an Association To Be                     employees a program of benefits
                                                 increase, health insurance available in                 Treated as the ‘‘Employer’’ Sponsor of                 sponsored by an employer group or
                                                 the large group market is now typically                 an Employee Welfare Benefit Plan That                  association that does not itself
                                                 less expensive, all else equal, than                    Is a Group Health Plan.                                constitute an ‘‘employer,’’ such an
                                                 coverage in the small group or                             The term ‘‘employee welfare benefit                 adopting employer may have
                                                 individual market. In addition, treating                plan’’ is defined in section 3(1) of                   established a separate, single-employer
                                                 health coverage sponsored by an                         ERISA to include, among other                          benefit plan covered by Title I of
                                                 employer association as a single group                  arrangements, ‘‘any plan, fund, or                     ERISA).
                                                 health plan may promote economies of                    program . . . established or maintained                  In distinguishing employer groups or
                                                 scale, administrative efficiencies, and                 by an employer or by an employee                       associations that can act as an ERISA
                                                 transfer plan maintenance                               organization, or by both, to the extent                section 3(5) employer in sponsoring a
                                                 responsibilities from participating                     that such plan, fund, or program was                   multiple employer plan from those that
                                                 employers to the association. The                       established or is maintained for the                   cannot, the touchstone has long been
                                                 proposed definition includes                            purpose of providing for its participants              whether the group or association has a
                                                 conditions, including                                   or their beneficiaries, through the                    sufficiently close economic or
                                                 nondiscrimination provisions, designed                  purchase of insurance or otherwise . . .               representational nexus to the employers
                                                 to continue to draw a line between the                  medical, surgical, or hospital care or                 and employees that participate in the
                                                 sorts of employer-sponsored                             benefits, or benefits in the event of                  plan. This ‘‘commonality of interest’’
                                                 arrangements that are regulated by                      sickness, accident, disability, death or               requirement distinguishes bona fide
                                                 ERISA on the one hand, and commercial                   unemployment . . . .’’ Thus, in order to               groups or associations of employers who
                                                 insurance-type arrangements that lack                   be an employee welfare benefit plan, a                 provide coverage to their employees and
                                                 the requisite connection to the                         plan must, among other criteria, be                    the families of their employees from
                                                 employment relationship on the other,                   established or maintained by an                        arrangements that more closely
                                                 as well as to prevent potential adverse                 employer, an employee organization, or                 resemble State-regulated private
                                                 impacts on the individual and small                     both. The term ‘‘employer’’ is defined in              insurance offered to the market at large.
                                                 group markets.                                          section 3(5) of ERISA as ‘‘. . . any                   See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 94–07A;
                                                                                                         person acting directly as an employer,                 Advisory Opinion 2001–04A. Courts
                                                    It is important to note that the                                                                            have also held that there must be some
                                                 proposed regulation would not preclude                  or indirectly in the interest of an
                                                                                                         employer, in relation to an employee                   cohesive relationship between the
                                                 associations that do not meet the                                                                              provider of benefits and the recipient of
                                                 conditions of the proposal from offering                benefit plan; and includes a group or
                                                                                                         association of employers acting for an                 benefits under the plan so that the entity
                                                 health coverage in accordance with                                                                             that maintains the plan and the
                                                 existing ACA requirements and                           employer in such capacity.’’ Thus,
                                                                                                         ERISA defines the term ‘‘employer’’ to                 individuals who benefit from the plan
                                                 applicable State insurance regulation.                                                                         are tied by a common economic or
                                                 See, e.g., CMS Insurance Standards                      include the ‘‘direct’’ (or common law)
                                                                                                         employer of the covered employees or                   representational interest. Wisconsin
                                                 Bulletin, Application of Individual and                                                                        Educ. Assn. Ins. Trust v. Iowa State Bd.
                                                 Group Market Requirements Under Title                   ‘‘any other person acting indirectly in
                                                                                                         the interest of’’ the common law                       of Public Instruction, 804 F.2d 1059,
                                                 XXVII of the Public Health Service Act                                                                         1064 (8th Cir. 1986). See also MD
                                                 when Insurance Coverage is Sold to, or                  employer.3 Although there are various
                                                                                                         ways in which groups of employers can                  Physicians & Associates, Inc. v. State
                                                 through, Associations (September 1,                                                                            Bd. of Ins., 957 F.2d 178 (5th Cir. 1992),
                                                 2011) and Department of Labor                           participate in a single plan, for example
                                                                                                         because they share substantial common                  cert. denied, 506 U.S. 861 (1992);
                                                 Publication, Multiple Employer Welfare                                                                         National Business Assn. Trust v.
                                                 Arrangements Under ERISA, A Guide to                    ownership (e.g., a controlled group of
                                                                                                         corporations), the Department has taken                Morgan, 770 F. Supp. 1169 (W.D. Ky.
                                                 Federal and State Regulation (available                                                                        1991).
                                                 at www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/                the view, on the basis of the definitional
                                                                                                                                                                  DOL advisory opinions and court
                                                 about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-                     provisions of ERISA, as well as the
                                                                                                                                                                decisions have applied a facts-and-
                                                 center/publications/mewa-under-erisa-                   overall structure of Title I of ERISA,
                                                                                                                                                                circumstances approach to determining
                                                 a-guide-to-federal-and-state-                           that, in the absence of the involvement
                                                                                                                                                                whether there is a sufficient common
                                                 regulation.pdf). In particular, health                  of an employee organization, a single
                                                                                                                                                                economic or representational interest or
                                                 insurance coverage sold to, or through,                 ‘‘multiple employer’’ plan may also
                                                                                                                                                                genuine organizational relationship for
                                                                                                         exist where a cognizable group or
                                                 associations that do not sponsor their                                                                         there to be a bona fide employer group
                                                                                                         association of employers, acting in the
                                                 own separate ERISA-covered employee                                                                            or association capable of sponsoring an
                                                                                                         interest of its employer members,
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                                                 benefit plans would not need to alter                                                                          ERISA plan on behalf of its employer
                                                                                                         establishes a benefit program for the
                                                 their operations if the proposed rule                                                                          members. This analysis has focused on
                                                                                                         employees of member employers and
                                                 becomes final. Rather than constricting                                                                        three broad sets of issues, in particular:
                                                                                                         exercises control over the amendment
                                                 the offering of such non-plan multiple                                                                         (1) Whether the group or association is
                                                                                                         process, plan termination, and other
                                                 employer welfare arrangements                                                                                  a bona fide organization with business/
                                                 (MEWAs), the proposed rule would                          3 For more information on common law
                                                                                                                                                                organizational purposes and functions
                                                 simply make more widely available                       employment relationships, see Nationwide Mutual        unrelated to the provision of benefits;
                                                 another vehicle —the AHP— for the                       Insurance Co. v. Darden, 503 U.S. 318 (1992).          (2) whether the employers share some


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                      617

                                                 commonality and genuine                                 have provided quality health coverage                  insurance issued by an insurance
                                                 organizational relationship unrelated to                to their members’ employees with less                  company that is ‘‘qualified to conduct
                                                 the provision of benefits; and (3)                      administrative overhead. But others                    business in a State.’’ With respect to
                                                 whether the employers that participate                  have failed to pay promised health                     other non-insurance State laws, AHPs
                                                 in a benefit program, either directly or                benefits to sick and injured workers                   under the proposal would be subject to
                                                 indirectly, exercise control over the                   while diverting, to the pockets of                     the same general ERISA preemption
                                                 program, both in form and substance.                    fraudsters, employer and employee                      standards that apply to other ERISA-
                                                 The first two issues have tended to                     contributions from their intended                      covered employee benefit plans.
                                                 merge, depending on the facts of a                      purpose of funding benefits.                              The Affordable Care Act established a
                                                 particular case. When an entity meets                      Congress has enacted reforms to curb                multipronged approach to MEWA
                                                 each of these requirements, the                         MEWA abuse. Prior to 1983, a number                    abuses. Improvements in reporting
                                                 Department has concluded that it is                     of States attempted to subject MEWAs to                requirements, together with stronger
                                                 appropriate to treat the entity as an                   State insurance law requirements but                   enforcement tools, are designed to
                                                 ‘‘employer’’ within the meaning of                      were frustrated in their regulatory and                reduce MEWA fraud and abuse. These
                                                 section 3(5) of ERISA, rather than                      enforcement efforts by MEWA-promoter                   include expanded reporting and
                                                 merely as a commercial insurance-type                   claims of ERISA-plan status and federal                required registration for MEWAs with
                                                 arrangement that lacks the requisite                    preemption. Recognizing that it was                    the Department prior to operating in a
                                                 connection to the employment                            both appropriate and necessary for                     State. The additional information
                                                 relationship.                                           States to be able to establish, apply, and             facilitates joint State and Federal efforts
                                                    This approach has ensured that the                   enforce State insurance laws with                      to prevent harm and take enforcement
                                                 Department’s regulation of employee                     respect to MEWAs, Congress amended                     action. The Affordable Care Act also
                                                 benefit plans is focused on employment-                 ERISA in 1983 to provide an exception                  strengthened enforcement by giving the
                                                 based arrangements, as contemplated by                  to ERISA’s broad preemption provisions                 Secretary of Labor authority to issue a
                                                 ERISA’s text, but neither the                           for the regulation of MEWAs under                      cease and desist order when a MEWA
                                                 Department’s previous advisory                          State insurance laws. In general, under                engages in fraudulent or other abusive
                                                 opinions, nor relevant court cases, have                the 1983 amendments, if a MEWA that                    conduct and issue a summary seizure
                                                 ever held that the Department is                        is also an employee welfare benefit plan               order when a MEWA is in a financially
                                                 foreclosed from adopting a more flexible                (an uncommon situation under prior                     hazardous condition.5
                                                 test in a regulation, or from departing                 guidance, as explained elsewhere) is not
                                                 from the three particular factors set forth             fully insured, then under section                      3. Impact of ERISA Definition of
                                                 above in determining whether a group                    514(b)(6)(A)(ii) of ERISA, any State law               Employer on Health Insurance Markets
                                                 or association can be treated as acting as              that regulates insurance may apply to                     Federal and State healthcare laws,
                                                 an ‘‘employer’’ or ‘‘indirectly in the                  the MEWA to the extent that such State                 including the Affordable Care Act,
                                                 interest of an employer,’’ for purposes of              law is not inconsistent with ERISA. For                include a variety of requirements that
                                                 the statutory definition. These                         example, a State law could regulate                    sometimes differ based on whether
                                                 definitional terms are ambiguous as                     solvency, benefit levels, or rating.                   health coverage is insured or self-
                                                 applied to a group or association in the                Similarly, States could require                        insured, and if the coverage is insured,
                                                 context of ERISA section 3(5), and the                  registration and claims data reporting of              whether it is offered in the individual,
                                                 statute does not specifically refer to or               MEWA operators. If, on the other hand,                 small group, or large group health
                                                 impose the particular historical                        a MEWA is also an employee welfare                     insurance market. Whether coverage is
                                                 elements of the ‘‘commonality’’ test on                 benefit plan and is fully insured, ERISA               offered in the individual or group health
                                                 the determination of whether a group or                 section 514(b)(6)(A)(i) of ERISA                       insurance market is determined by
                                                 association acts as the ‘‘employer’’                    provides that State laws that regulate                 reference to ERISA. Specifically,
                                                 sponsor of an ERISA-covered plan                        the maintenance of specified                           ‘‘individual market coverage’’ is health
                                                 within the scope of ERISA section 3(5).                 contribution and reserve levels (and that              insurance coverage that is offered other
                                                 Accordingly, that determination may be                  enforce those standards) may apply to                  than in connection with a group health
                                                 more broadly guided by ERISA’s                          the MEWA, but other State non-                         plan. PHS Act section 2791(e)(1)(A). See
                                                 purposes and appropriate policy                         insurance laws are preempted. ERISA                    also 26 CFR 54.9801–2; 29 CFR
                                                 considerations, including the need to                   section 514(b)(6)(D) provides, in turn,                2590.701–2; 45 CFR 144.103. A ‘‘group
                                                 expand access to healthcare and to                      that a MEWA will be considered fully                   health plan’’ is generally defined as an
                                                 respond to statutory changes and                        insured for purposes of section 514(b)(6)              employee welfare benefit plan under
                                                 changing market dynamics.                               only if all of the benefits offered or                 ERISA section 3(1), to the extent the
                                                                                                         provided under the MEWA are                            plan provides medical care. ERISA
                                                 2. Federal and State Regulation of
                                                                                                         guaranteed under a contract or policy of
                                                 Multiple Employer Welfare                                                                                         5 Section 6605 of the Affordable Care Act added
                                                 Arrangements                                            providing any ERISA welfare benefit to the             section 521 to ERISA to give the Secretary of Labor
                                                    For many years, promoters of health                  employees of two or more employers (including one      additional enforcement authority to protect plan
                                                 coverage arrangements and others have                   or more self-employed individuals), or to their        participants, beneficiaries, employees or employee
                                                                                                         beneficiaries. Section 3(40) expressly excludes from   organizations, or other members of the public
                                                 established and operated MEWAs, also                    the MEWA definition any such plan or arrangement       against fraudulent, abusive, or financially
                                                 described as ‘‘multiple employer trusts’’               that is established or maintained under or pursuant    hazardous MEWAs. ERISA section 521(a)
                                                 or ‘‘METs,’’ as vehicles for marketing                  to one or more agreements which the Secretary          authorizes the Secretary of Labor to issue an ex
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                                                 health and welfare benefits to employers                finds to be collective bargaining agreements, by a     parte cease and desist order if it appears to the
                                                                                                         rural electric cooperative, or by a rural telephone    Secretary that the alleged conduct of a MEWA
                                                 for their employees.4 Some MEWAs                        cooperative association. The definition of MEWA        under section 3(40) of ERISA is fraudulent, or
                                                                                                         thus includes both ERISA-covered employee              creates an immediate danger to the public safety or
                                                   4 The term MEWA or ‘‘multiple employer welfare        welfare benefit plans and other arrangements which     welfare, or is causing or can be reasonably expected
                                                 arrangement’’ is defined in ERISA section 3(40).        offer or provide medical, surgical, hospital care or   to cause significant, imminent, and irreparable
                                                 The term includes an employee welfare benefit           benefits, or benefits in the event of sickness,        public injury. Section 521(e) of ERISA authorizes
                                                 plan, or any other arrangement (other than an           accident, disability, or any other benefit described   the Secretary to issue a summary seizure order if
                                                 employee welfare benefit plan) which is established     in ERISA Section 3(1). AHPs as described in this       it appears that a MEWA is in a financially
                                                 or maintained for the purpose of offering or            proposal are one type of MEWA.                         hazardous condition.



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                                                 618                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 section 733(a); PHS Act section 2791.                   members of a single risk pool, also                    individual and group market
                                                 See also 26 CFR 54.9831–1(a); 29 CFR                    applies only in the individual and small               requirements of the PHS Act to
                                                 2590.732(a); 45 CFR 146.145(a). ‘‘Group                 group markets, not the large group                     insurance coverage offered or provided
                                                 health insurance coverage’’ means, in                   market.9 In addition, the health                       through associations, CMS will ignore
                                                 connection with a group health plan,                    insurance premium rules that prohibit                  the association and look directly to each
                                                 health insurance coverage offered in                    issuers from varying premiums except                   association member to determine the
                                                 connection with such plan. ERISA                        with respect to location, age (within                  status of each member’s coverage. As a
                                                 section 733(b)(4); PHS Act section                      certain limits), family size, and tobacco-             result, association coverage may be
                                                 2791(b)(4). See also 26 CFR 54.9801–2;                  use (within certain limits) apply only in              treated as comprised of individual
                                                 29 CFR 2590.701–2; 45 CFR 144.103.                      the individual and small group                         market coverage, small group market
                                                    The group health insurance market is                 markets.10 Finally, the Medical Loss                   coverage, large group market coverage,
                                                 divided into the small group market and                 Ratio (MLR) provisions, which limit the                and mixed associations of more than
                                                 the large group market, depending on                    portion of premium dollars health                      one coverage type.
                                                 the number of employees employed by                     insurance issuers may spend on                            The CMS 2011 guidance further states
                                                 the employer. PHS Act section                           administration, marketing, and profits                 that, ‘‘in most situations involving
                                                 2791(e)(2)–(7). See also 45 CFR 144.103.                establish different thresholds for the                 employment-based association coverage,
                                                 Generally, group health insurance                       small group market and the large group                 the group health plan exists at the
                                                 offered by an employer with at least one                market.11 Self-insured group health                    individual employer level and not at the
                                                 and not more than 50 employees is in                    plans are exempt from each of these                    association-of-employers level. In these
                                                 the small group market, while group                     obligations regardless of the size of the              situations, the size of each individual
                                                 health insurance offered by an employer                 employer that establishes or maintains                 employer participating in the
                                                 with at least 51 employees is in the large              the plan. These differences in                         association determines whether that
                                                 group market. Id.6                                      obligations result in a complex and                    employer’s coverage is subject to the
                                                    With respect to insured coverage,                    costly compliance environment for                      small group market or the large group
                                                 whether coverage is offered in the                      coverages provided through                             market rules. In the rare instances where
                                                 individual, small group, or large group                 associations, particularly if the                      the association of employers is, in fact,
                                                 market affects compliance obligations                   coverages are simultaneously subject to                sponsoring the group health plan and
                                                 under the Affordable Care Act and other                 individual, small group, and large group               the association itself is deemed the
                                                 State and Federal insurance laws. For                   market regulation.                                     ‘employer,’ the association coverage is
                                                 example, only individual and small                         Guidance issued by the HHS Centers                  considered a single group health plan.
                                                 group market health insurance coverage                  for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)                 In that case, the number of employees
                                                 is subject to the requirement to cover                  in 2011 (CMS 2011 guidance) clarifies                  employed by all of the employers
                                                 essential health benefits as defined                    that the test for determining whether                  participating in the association
                                                 under section 1302 of the Affordable                    association coverage is individual, small              determines whether the coverage is
                                                 Care Act.7 Moreover, the risk                           group, or large group market coverage                  subject to the small group market or the
                                                 adjustment program, which transfers                     for purposes of Title XXVII of the PHS                 large group market rules.’’
                                                 funds from plans with lower-risk                        Act is the same test as that applied to                   Since the enactment of the Affordable
                                                 enrollees to plans with higher-risk                     health insurance offered directly to                   Care Act, DOL and HHS have heard a
                                                 enrollees, applies only to health                       individuals or employers.12 Association                number of concerns from stakeholders—
                                                 insurance issuers offering coverage in                  coverage does not exist as a distinct                  especially working owners of businesses
                                                 the individual and small group markets,                 meaningful category of health insurance                that do not employ other individuals,
                                                 not the large group market.8 The single                 coverage under Title XXVII of the PHS                  and independent contractors—regarding
                                                 risk pool requirement, which requires                   Act.13 Instead, when applying the                      challenges that small businesses face in
                                                 each health insurance issuer to consider                                                                       securing affordable health coverage
                                                 the claims experience of all individuals                  9 See section 1312(c) of the Affordable Care Act.    options.
                                                 enrolled in plans offered by the issuer                 States may require issuers to merge their individual      Some stakeholders have suggested to
                                                 in the individual market to be in a                     and small group risk pools.                            the Department that allowing
                                                                                                           10 See PHS Act section 2701, as added by the
                                                 single risk pool, and all its individuals                                                                      businesses, especially small businesses,
                                                                                                         Affordable Care Act.
                                                 in the small group market to be                           11 The MLR provision of the Affordable Care Act
                                                                                                                                                                more flexibility to form AHPs would
                                                                                                         requires most health insurance issuers that cover      facilitate more choice and potentially
                                                   6 Under the ACA, the upper bound for the              individuals or small employers to spend at least       make health coverage more affordable.
                                                 definition of a small employer for purposes of title    80% of their premium dollars on healthcare claims      These stakeholders opined that the AHP
                                                 XXVII of the PHS Act was to change from 50 (as          and quality improvement, leaving the remaining         structure would give them increased
                                                 originally enacted) to 100 employees as of 2016.        20% for overhead expenses, such as administrative
                                                 However, the Protecting Affordable Coverage for         costs, marketing, and profit. The MLR threshold is     negotiating power to bargain for lower
                                                 Employees Act (PACE Act, Pub. L. 114–60)                higher for large group plans, which must spend at      premiums for their employees, as well
                                                 amended the definition so that the upper bound          least 85% of premium dollars on healthcare claims      as the ability to purchase coverage that
                                                 would remain at 50. The PACE Act also permits           and quality improvement. 45 CFR part 158.              would be less expensive because it
                                                 States to elect an upper bound of 100 employees.          12 See CMS Insurance Standards Bulletin Series—
                                                 CMS guidance indicates that States may elect to
                                                                                                                                                                would not be subject to some of the
                                                                                                         (September 1, 2011) available at: https://
                                                 extend this upper bound to 100 employees by any         www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/           regulatory requirements applicable to
                                                 means that is legally binding under State law,          association_coverage_9_1_2011.pdf. See also CMS        the small group market but not the large
                                                 provided the definition applies to all insurers.        Insurance Standards Bulletin Transmittal No. 02–02     group market. Proponents also contend
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                                                 States that elect to extend the upper bound were        (August 2002) available at: https://www.cms.gov/
                                                 requested to notify CMS. See https://www.cms.gov/
                                                                                                                                                                that AHPs can help reduce the cost of
                                                                                                         CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/dwnlds/hipaa_
                                                 CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/                   02_02_508.pdf.                                         health coverage because of increased
                                                 Downloads/FAQ-on-the-Impact-of-the-PACE-Act-              13 Title XXVII of the PHS Act does recognize         bargaining power, economies of scale,
                                                 on-State-Small-Group-Expansion.pdf. CMS has             coverage offered through ‘‘bona fide associations,’’
                                                 informed DOL that, to date, no States have elected      but only for purposes of providing limited             Bona fide groups or associations of employers
                                                 to change the upper bound to 100.                       exceptions from its guaranteed issue (in limited       under the definition proposed in this rulemaking
                                                   7 See PHS Act section 2707, as added by the
                                                                                                         cases) and guaranteed renewability requirements.       would not necessarily qualify as ‘‘bona fide
                                                 Affordable Care Act.                                    PHS Act secs. 2741(e)(1); 2742(b)(5) and (e);          associations’’ under the PHS Act definition for
                                                   8 See section 1343 of the Affordable Care Act.        2703(b)(6), as added by the ACA; and 2791(d)(3).       purposes of these PHS Act provisions.



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                              619

                                                 administrative efficiencies, and transfer               would apply solely for purposes of Title               proposed rule do not address the
                                                 of plan maintenance responsibilities                    I of ERISA and for determining whether                 application of the ERISA section 3(5)
                                                 from participating employers to the                     health insurance coverage is regulated                 statutory phrase, ‘‘acting. . .indirectly
                                                 AHP sponsor. AHPs may also help                         by PHS Act provisions that apply in the                in the interest’’ or ‘‘group or association
                                                 contain costs by creating a stable risk                 individual, small group, or large group                of employers,’’, in any context other
                                                 pool that may enable AHPs to self-                      market, and not, for example, for                      than as applied to an employer group or
                                                 insure rather than purchase insurance                   purposes of taxation under the Code.                   association sponsoring an AHP.
                                                 from commercial insurers.
                                                    Legislative proposals designed to                    4. Overview of Proposed Regulation                     a. Employers Could Band Together for
                                                 foster the formation of AHPs have                          The Department believes providing                   the Single Purpose of Obtaining Health
                                                 repeatedly been introduced in                           additional opportunities for employer                  Coverage
                                                 Congress.14 These legislative efforts                   groups or associations to offer health                   The proposed regulation would
                                                 generally would make it easier for                      coverage to their members’ employees                   remove existing restrictions in the
                                                 employers to form AHPs and set a                        under a single plan may, under the                     Department’s sub-regulatory guidance
                                                 uniform federal framework for                           conditions proposed here, offer many                   on ERISA section 3(5) to allow
                                                 regulation. In the absence of legislation,              small businesses more affordable                       employers to more easily join together
                                                 however, Executive Order 13813 directs                  alternatives than are currently available              in organizations that offer group health
                                                 the Department to consider proposing                    to them in the individual or small group               coverage to member employers and their
                                                 regulations or revising guidance,                       markets. Consequently, the proposed                    employees under one group health plan.
                                                 consistent with law, to expand access to                rule may prompt some working owners                    Specifically, the regulation would allow
                                                 health coverage by allowing more                        who were previously uninsured and                      employers to band together for the
                                                 employers to form AHPs by expanding                     some small businesses that did not                     express purpose of offering health
                                                 the conditions that satisfy the                         previously offer insurance to their                    coverage if they either are: (1) in the
                                                 commonality-of-interest requirements                    employees, to enroll in AHPs, and                      same trade, industry, line of business, or
                                                 under existing Department advisory                      similarly prompt some small businesses                 profession; or (2) have a principal place
                                                 opinions interpreting the definition of                 with insured health plans to switch                    of business within a region that does not
                                                 an ‘‘employer’’ under section 3(5) of                   from their existing individual or small                exceed the boundaries of the same State
                                                 ERISA in the context of AHPs in a                       group policies to AHPs. In addition, the               or the same metropolitan area (even if
                                                 manner that would focus on the                          option for small employers to join AHPs                the metropolitan area includes more
                                                 association rather than the individual                  could offer better financial protection to             than one State). As discussed elsewhere
                                                 members of the association when                         employers (and their employees) than if                in this document, the restrictions in the
                                                 evaluating association coverage.                        they self-insured and purchased stop-                  Department’s existing advisory opinions
                                                    Upon due consideration as directed                   loss insurance 16 that may not                         were intended to help distinguish
                                                 by the Executive Order, the Department                  adequately protect them from financial                 healthcare arrangements sponsored by
                                                 is proposing for public comment a                       risk. Under the proposed rule, AHPs                    an entity acting as an ‘‘employer’’
                                                 revision to its long-standing                           that buy insurance 17 would not be                     within the meaning of section 3(5) of
                                                 interpretation of what constitutes an                   subject to the insurance ‘‘look-through’’              ERISA from commercial-insurance-type
                                                 ‘‘employer’’ capable of sponsoring an                   doctrine as set forth in the CMS 2011                  arrangements that lack the requisite
                                                 ‘‘employee benefit plan’’ under ERISA                   guidance; instead, because an AHP                      connection to the employment
                                                 in the context of group health coverage.                under the proposed rule would                          relationship. The Department has
                                                 Under the proposal, AHPs that meet the                  constitute a single plan, whether the                  concluded that other conditions in this
                                                 regulation’s conditions would have a                    plan would be buying insurance as a                    proposal can adequately serve that
                                                 ready means of offering their employer-                 large or small group plan would be                     purpose while removing the condition
                                                 members, and their employer members’                    determined by reference to the number                  that the employer association must have
                                                 employees, a single group health plan                   of employees in the entire AHP.                        a purpose other than offering health
                                                 subject to the same State and Federal                      The proposed regulation would                       coverage as a potential undue restriction
                                                 regulatory structure as other ERISA-                    redefine the criteria in the Department’s              on the establishment and maintenance
                                                 covered employee welfare benefit plans.                 existing sub-regulatory guidance for a                 of AHPs under ERISA. The proposal
                                                 This proposed rule has been developed                   bona fide group or association of                      also would allow associations to rely on
                                                 in consultation with HHS, CMS, the                      employers capable of establishing a                    other characteristics upon which they
                                                 Department of the Treasury, and the                     multiple employer group health plan                    previously relied to satisfy the
                                                 Internal Revenue Service, with which                    that is an employee welfare benefit plan               commonality provision of paragraph (c)
                                                 the Department is working to implement                  and a group health plan as those terms                 of the proposed rules, because the
                                                 the Affordable Care Act, Executive                      are defined in ERISA. The Department                   Department’s existing sub-regulatory
                                                 Order 13813, and Executive Order                        notes that this preamble and the                       guidance applies the commonality
                                                 13765.15 However, these proposed rules                                                                         requirement as a facts and
                                                                                                         Act, and provides for coordination and
                                                   14 See,                                               consultation. See 64 FR 70164 (December 15, 1999).
                                                                                                                                                                circumstances test, and the Department
                                                          e.g., Small Business Health Fairness Act of
                                                 2017, H.R. 1101, 115th Cong. sec. 1 (2017); see also,     16 Stop-loss insurance (sometimes also known as      intends that any employer group or
                                                 the Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017,             excess insurance) is generally an insurance product    association that meets the commonality
                                                 discussion draft of an amendment in the form of a       that provides protection for self-insured employers    requirement in the Department’s
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                                                 substitute to the American Healthcare Act, H.R.         or plans by serving as a reimbursement mechanism       existing sub-regulatory requirement
                                                 1628, 115th Cong. sec. 1 (2017) (available at           for catastrophic claims exceeding pre-determined
                                                 www.budget.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/                    levels. See https://www.siia.org/i4a/pages/            should also be treated as meeting the
                                                 ERN17500.pdf.).                                         index.cfm?pageID=4549.                                 commonality requirement in the
                                                   15 The Departments of Labor, HHS, and the               17 The CMS 2011 guidance ‘‘Application of            proposed regulation. The Department
                                                 Treasury operate under a Memorandum of                  Individual and Group Market Requirements under         seeks comment on whether the final
                                                 Understanding that implements section 104 of the        Title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act when
                                                 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act     Insurance Coverage Is Sold to, or Through,
                                                                                                                                                                rule, if adopted, should also recognize
                                                 of 1996 (HIPAA) and subsequent amendments,              Associations’’ apples only to insured arrangements,    other bases for finding a commonality of
                                                 including certain sections of the Affordable Care       and not to self-insured arrangements.                  interest.


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                                                 620                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                    The latter part of the second prong of               requirement that the group or                          requires. The proposed regulation
                                                 this proposal’s definition relating to                  association be a pre-existing                          would also retain the requirement in the
                                                 States and metropolitan areas will allow                organization. Rather, employers could                  Department’s existing sub-regulatory
                                                 an AHP to satisfy the commonality                       band together in new organizations                     guidance under section 3(5) of ERISA
                                                 requirement if its members have a                       whose sole purpose is to provide group                 that an AHP’s employer-members
                                                 principal place of business within a                    health coverage to member employers                    control the AHP. This requirement is
                                                 region that does not exceed the                         and their employees. And by allowing                   necessary to satisfy the statutory
                                                 boundaries of the same State or                         formation of such an organization based                requirement in ERISA section 3(5) that
                                                 metropolitan area (even if the                          on either common industry or                           the group or association must act ‘‘in the
                                                 metropolitan area includes more than                    geography, the Department expects that                 interest of’’ the direct employers in
                                                 one State).                                             the regulation could greatly increase                  relation to the employee benefit plan,
                                                    Examples of such metropolitan areas                  association coverage options available to              and to prevent formation of commercial
                                                 include the Greater New York City                       American workers.                                      enterprises that claim to be AHPs but,
                                                 Area/Tri-State Region covering portions                   One of the primary aims of this                      in reality, merely operate similar to
                                                 of New York, New Jersey and                             proposal is to give small employers (as                traditional insurers selling insurance in
                                                 Connecticut; the Washington                             well as sole proprietors and other                     the group market. In the latter
                                                 Metropolitan Area of the District of                    working-owners) the opportunity to join                circumstance, the association lacks the
                                                 Columbia and portions of Maryland and                   together to provide more affordable                    requisite connection to the employment
                                                 Virginia; and the Kansas City                           healthcare to their employees; however,                relationship, inasmuch as it neither acts
                                                 Metropolitan Area covering portions of                  the proposed regulation would not                      directly as an employer, nor ‘‘in the
                                                 Missouri and Kansas. AHPs could also                    restrict the size of the employers that are            interest’’ of employers, within the
                                                 satisfy the commonality requirement by                  able to participate in a bona fide group               meaning of section 3(5) of ERISA. The
                                                 limiting themselves to a smaller                        or association of employers. The                       Department intends that any employer
                                                 geographic region, such as a city or                    Department expects minimal interest                    group or association that meets the
                                                 county. The Department invites                          among large employers in establishing                  control requirement in the Department’s
                                                 comments specifically on whether more                   or joining an AHP as envisioned in this                existing sub-regulatory requirement
                                                 clarification would be helpful regarding                proposal because large employers                       should also be treated as meeting the
                                                 the definition of a metropolitan area.                  already enjoy many of the large group                  control requirement in the proposed
                                                 For example, the Department is                          market advantages that this proposal                   regulation.
                                                 interested in whether a federal                         would afford small employers.
                                                 designation by the U.S. Census or the                   However, the Department anticipates                    c. Group or Association Plan Coverage
                                                 Office of Management and Budget                         that there may be some large employers                 Must Be Limited to Employees of
                                                 (OMB), which delineates metropolitan                    that may see cost savings and/or                       Employer Members and Treatment of
                                                 and micropolitan statistical areas                      administrative efficiencies in using an                Working Owners
                                                 according to published standards (see                   AHP as the vehicle for providing health                   In addition, paragraph (b)(6) of the
                                                 www.census.gov/programs-surveys/                        coverage to their employees.                           proposed regulations would require that
                                                 metro-micro.html), or another                                                                                  only employees and former employees
                                                                                                         b. The Group or Association Must Have                  of employer members (and family/
                                                 definition, should be used and, if so,
                                                                                                         an Organizational Structure and Be                     beneficiaries of those employees and
                                                 how, for purposes of establishing
                                                                                                         Functionally Controlled by Its Employer                former employees) may participate in a
                                                 eligibility for continued or new
                                                                                                         Members                                                group health plan sponsored by the
                                                 employer membership (e.g., at the
                                                 beginning of each plan year). The                          Paragraph (b) of the proposed                       association and that the group or
                                                 Department is also interested, for                      regulation defines certain criteria for a              association does not make health
                                                 example, in comments on whether there                   bona fide group or association of                      coverage offered through the association
                                                 is any reason for concern that                          employers to be capable of establishing                available to anybody other than to
                                                 associations could manipulate                           a group health plan under ERISA. The                   employees and former employees of
                                                 geographic classifications to avoid                     proposal would require that the group                  employer members and their families or
                                                 offering coverage to employers expected                 or association have a formal                           other beneficiaries. Together, these
                                                 to incur more costly health claims. The                 organizational structure with a                        criteria are intended to ensure that, for
                                                 Department also seeks comments on                       governing body and have by-laws or                     purposes of Title I of ERISA, the groups
                                                 whether there are other examples that                   other similar indications of formality                 or associations sponsoring the covered
                                                 would be helpful to clarify the provision               appropriate for the legal form in which                AHPs are bona fide employment-based
                                                 and also on whether there should be a                   the group or association operates, and                 associations, as clarified by this
                                                 special process established to obtain a                 that the group or association’s member                 proposal, and not more general
                                                 determination from the Department that                  employers control its functions and                    membership organizations essentially
                                                 all an association’s members have a                     activities, including the establishment                operating as unlicensed health
                                                 principal place of business in a                        and maintenance of the group health                    insurance providers selling commercial
                                                 metropolitan area.                                      plan, either directly or through the                   group health coverage to individuals
                                                    By expressly allowing the group or                   regular election of directors, officers, or            and employers without the type of
                                                 association to exist for the purpose, in                other similar representatives. These                   connection to the employment
                                                 whole or in part, of offering or providing              requirements largely duplicate                         relationship envisioned by ERISA’s
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                                                 health coverage to its members, the                     conditions in the Department’s existing                section 3(1) definition of employee
                                                 regulation would depart from previous                   sub-regulatory guidance under ERISA                    welfare benefit plan. See, e.g.,
                                                 sub-regulatory guidance providing that                  section 3(5), and ensure that the                      Wisconsin Educ. Assn. Ins. Trust v. Iowa
                                                 the group or association must exist for                 organizations are genuine organizations                State Bd. of Public Instruction, 804 F.2d
                                                 a bona fide purpose other than offering                 with the organizational structure                      1059, 1064 (8th Cir. 1986) (‘‘The only
                                                 health coverage to be an employer for                   necessary to act ‘‘in the interest’’ of                relationship between the sponsoring
                                                 purposes of section 3(5) of ERISA. The                  participating employers with respect to                labor union and these non-member
                                                 proposal also would not include any                     employee benefit plans as the statute                  recipients stems from the benefit plan


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                             621

                                                 itself. Such a relationship is similar to               ‘‘participants’’ in ERISA plans. For                   U.S. 1 (2004), concluded in a case
                                                 the relationship between a private                      example, Advisory Opinion 99–04A                       involving section 2510.3–3, that
                                                 insurance company, which is subject to                  reviews various provisions of ERISA                    ‘‘[u]nder ERISA, a working owner may
                                                 myriad State insurance regulations, and                 and the Code that specifically address                 have dual status, i.e., he can be an
                                                 the beneficiaries of a group insurance                  working owner issues in ERISA plans,                   employee entitled to participate in a
                                                 plan.’’). Accord Mandala v. California                  and concludes that, taken as a whole,                  plan and, at the same time, the
                                                 Law Enforcement Ass’n, 561 F. Supp.2d                   they ‘‘reveal a clear Congressional                    employer (or owner or member of the
                                                 1130, 1135 (C.D. Cal. 2008)).                           design to include ’working owners’                     employer) who established the plan.’’
                                                    The text of ERISA relevant here                      within the definition of ’participant’ for             The definition of ‘‘plans without
                                                 specifies that only employees and                       purposes of Title I of ERISA.’’ 18                     employees’’ in 29 CFR 2510.3–3(b)
                                                 former employees of the member                             This proposed rule would also serve                 simply defines a limited circumstance
                                                 employers, and their families or other                  to confirm that the Department’s                       in which the only parties participating
                                                 beneficiaries, may receive coverage                     regulation at 29 CFR 2510.3–3 does not                 in the benefit arrangement are an
                                                 through an AHP as an ERISA-covered                      limit the ability of working owners to                 individual owner/partner and spouse,
                                                 benefit plan. ERISA is an acronym for                   participate in AHPs alongside other                    and declines to deem the individuals, in
                                                 the ‘‘Employee Retirement Income                        employer members. Section 2510.3–3(b)                  that limited circumstance, as employees
                                                 Security Act of 1974.’’ Consistent with                 excludes ‘‘plans without employees’’                   of the trade or business for purposes of
                                                 the Act’s title and understandings about                from the definition of employee benefit                the regulation. In that narrow
                                                 the workplace, the touchstone of ERISA                  plans covered by Title I of ERISA,                     circumstance, the regulation concludes
                                                 is the provision of benefits through the                thereby ensuring that a health insurance               that ERISA’s reporting and disclosure,
                                                 employment relationship. That                           arrangement that covers, for example,                  fiduciary, and enforcement provisions
                                                 understanding appears in the definition                 only the working owner and his or her                  are unnecessary.
                                                 of ‘‘employee welfare benefit plan,’’                   spouse, is not generally subject to                       The regulatory definition does not
                                                 which defines which benefit                             ERISA’s reporting and disclosure,                      apply, however, outside that limited
                                                 arrangements are subject to ERISA. An                   fiduciary, and enforcement provisions.                 context and, accordingly, does not
                                                 ‘‘employee welfare benefit plan’’ is                    Thus, Section (c) of 29 CFR 2510.3–3 is                prevent sole proprietors or other
                                                 defined as ‘‘any plan, fund, or program                 titled ‘‘Employees’’ and states: ‘‘For                 working owners from being participants
                                                 . . . established or maintained by an                   purposes of this section [i.e., for                    in broader plan arrangements, such as
                                                 employer or by an employee                              purposes of the regulation defining a                  the AHPs that are the subject of this
                                                 organization, or by both, to the extent                 covered plan]: (1) An individual and his               proposal. As proposed here, AHPs are a
                                                 that such plan, fund, or program was                    or her spouse shall not be deemed to be                far cry from such individual
                                                 established or is maintained for the                    employees with respect to a trade or                   arrangements ‘‘administered’’ by a
                                                 purpose of providing for its participants               business, whether incorporated or                      single individual on behalf of himself or
                                                 or their beneficiaries [benefits such as                unincorporated, which is wholly owned                  herself and a spouse. Instead, the
                                                 health insurance].’’ ERISA section 3(1).                by the individual or by the individual                 association and the AHP are responsible
                                                 The term ‘‘participant’’ is in turn                     and his or her spouse, and (2) A partner               for the provision of employment-based
                                                 defined as ‘‘any employee or former                     in a partnership and his or her spouse                 benefits payable to numerous workers
                                                 employee of an employer . . . who is or                 shall not be deemed to be employees                    employed by multiple employers. Many
                                                 may become eligible to receive a benefit                with respect to the partnership.’’                     or most of the affected employers and
                                                 . . . from an employee benefit plan                     Accordingly, if the sole participants in               employees will not be directly involved
                                                 which covers employees of such                          a benefit arrangement are the individual               in the administration of benefits, and all
                                                 employer.’’ Id. section 3(7) (emphasis                  owner of a business and his or her                     of the employers and employees should
                                                 added). In other words, a participant is                spouse or partners in the same                         benefit from prudence and loyalty
                                                 an employee of an employer who may                      partnership and their spouses, the                     requirements for those running the
                                                 receive benefits from that employer’s                   regulation treats the arrangement as a                 AHP, as well as such other protections
                                                 own benefits plan. Individuals who are                  plan without employees and excludes it                 as reporting and disclosure obligations
                                                 not ‘‘participants’’ within the meaning                 from the definition of ERISA-covered                   and claims procedure requirements, and
                                                 of ERISA section 3(7), e.g., individuals                plans.                                                 enforcement, in the same manner and to
                                                 who are not employees or former                            However, that same regulation                       the same extent as participants in other
                                                 employees of employers sponsoring a                     expressly limits this language to 29 CFR               ERISA plan arrangements.
                                                 particular plan, are ineligible to be                   2510.3–3, and sole owners or partners                     Accordingly, this proposal would
                                                 covered (or have their families or other                are not excluded from being participants               extend by regulation the availability of
                                                 beneficiaries covered) by an ERISA                      in a plan that also covers one or more                 the dual status of working owners to
                                                 plan. See, e.g., Wisconsin Educ. Assn.                  common law employees in addition to                    AHPs as a type of multiple employer
                                                 Ins. Trust, 804 F.2d at 1064.                           the sole owner or partners of the same                 plan, and make it clear that 29 CFR
                                                    Significantly, in paragraph (e) of the               partnership and their spouses. Rather,                 2510.3–3 does not broadly preclude
                                                 regulation, the proposal would                          plans covering working owners and                      working owners of trades or businesses
                                                 expressly provide that working owners,                  their non-owner employees clearly fall                 and other self-employed individuals
                                                 such as sole proprietors and other self-                within ERISA’s scope. Thus, the U.S.                   without common law employees from
                                                 employed individuals, may elect to act                  Supreme Court in Yates v. Hendon, 541                  joining a group health plan sponsored
                                                 as employers for purposes of                                                                                   by an employer group or association.
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                                                 participating in an employer group or                      18 The Advisory Opinion cites Code section
                                                                                                                                                                The Department set forth above its view
                                                 association and also be treated as                      401(c), which for purposes of certain provisions       regarding the permissible interpretation
                                                                                                         relating to qualified retirement plans, and also for
                                                 employees of their businesses for                       certain other Code provisions related to employee      of the 29 CFR 2510.3–3 regulation as it
                                                 purposes of being covered by the group                  benefits that cross-reference section 401(c),          relates to working owners participating
                                                 or association’s health plan. This                      generally treats a sole proprietor as both an          in AHPs. Notwithstanding those views,
                                                                                                         employer and an employee and treats partners
                                                 approach is consistent with advisory                    (including owners of entities taxed as partnerships,
                                                                                                                                                                to the extent the regulation could result
                                                 opinions in which the Department has                    such as limited liability companies) as employees      in working owners not being able to
                                                 concluded that working owners may be                    of the partnership.                                    participate as employees even in some


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                                                 622                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 circumstances, the Department believes                  not be eligible for other subsidized                   genuinely engaged in a trade or business
                                                 the policies and objectives underlying                  group health plan coverage under                       and are performing services for the trade
                                                 this proposal support an amendment of                   another employer or a spouse’s                         or business in a manner that is in the
                                                 the 29 CFR 2510.3–3 regulation so that                  employer.                                              nature of an employment relationship.
                                                 it clearly does not interfere with                         The Department included the                            Under the proposal, an AHP thus
                                                 working owners participating in AHPs                    proposed working owner criteria to                     could be comprised of participants who
                                                 as envisioned in this proposal.                         ensure that a legitimate trade or                      are common law employees, common
                                                 Accordingly, and to eliminate any                       business exists. ERISA governs benefits                law employees and working owners, or
                                                 potential ambiguity regarding the                       provided in the context of an                          comprised of only working owners. In
                                                 interaction of this proposal with the                   employment relationship. The                           all cases, the working owner would be
                                                 regulation at 29 CFR 2510–3–3, this                     Department is concerned, therefore, that               treated as an employee and the business
                                                 proposal also includes a technical                      without such criteria, the regulation                  as the individual’s employer for
                                                 amendment of paragraph (c) of 2510.3–                   could effectively eliminate the statutory              purposes of being an employer member
                                                 3 to include an express cross-reference                 distinction between offering and                       of the association and an employee
                                                 to the working owner provision in this                  maintaining employment-based ERISA-                    participant in the AHP. In the
                                                 proposal.                                               covered plans, on the one hand, and the                Department’s view, allowing sole
                                                    Specifically, the proposed regulation                mere marketing of insurance to                         proprietors and other working owners
                                                 includes a provision that expressly                     individuals outside the employment                     without common law employees to
                                                 states that a working owner of a trade                  context, on the other. Thus, for example,              participate in AHPs covered by ERISA
                                                 or business without common law                          an association would fall outside the                  on an equal basis with other employers
                                                 employees, regardless of the legal form                 purview of this rule if it offered                     and employees furthers ERISA’s
                                                 in which the business is operated (e.g.,                coverage to persons who are not                        purposes of promoting employee benefit
                                                 sole proprietors or other working                       genuinely engaged in a trade or business               plans and protecting the interests of
                                                 owners of businesses, whether                           (e.g., a vendor marketing AHP coverage                 plan participants and their beneficiaries.
                                                 incorporated or unincorporated), may                    could not make eligibility turn on such                This approach acknowledges that an
                                                 elect to act as an employer for purposes                de minimis ‘‘commercial activities’’ as                AHP may include as employer-members
                                                 of participating in an employer group or                giving a ‘‘customer’’ a single on-demand               working owners with common law
                                                 association and be treated as an                        ride for a fee, or knitting a single scarf             employees and also addresses the
                                                 employee of the trade or business for                   to be offered for sale on the internet,                operational impracticability of having
                                                 purposes of being covered by the                        with no requirement that the individual                an AHP switch in and out of its status
                                                 employer group’s or association’s health                ever engage in the supposed ‘‘trade or                 as a single multiple employer plan
                                                 plan, if the individual is earning income               business’’ ever again). The rule is                    during periods in which the AHP
                                                 from the trade or business for providing                intended to cover genuine employment-                  sometimes has and sometimes does not
                                                 personal services to the trade or                       based relationships, not to provide                    have employees other than sole
                                                 business; and either provides on average                cover for the marketing of individual                  proprietors.
                                                 at least 30 hours of personal services to               insurance masquerading as                                 Finally, as noted above, AHPs that
                                                 the trade or business per week or 120                   employment-based coverage.                             already meet the Department’s current
                                                 hours of such service per month, or has                    The Department recognizes that it                   commonality of interest and employer-
                                                 earned income derived from such trade                   could be possible to draw the line                     member control standards will continue
                                                 or business that at least equals the cost               between employment-based                               to be treated as meeting those
                                                 of coverage under the group or                          arrangements, as covered by ERISA, and                 requirements under the proposal for
                                                 association’s health plan. In addition,                 non-ERISA arrangements in other ways.                  sponsoring a single multiple employer
                                                 the individual must not be eligible for                 For example, the Department also                       plan under ERISA. However, if the
                                                 other subsidized group health plan                      recognizes that some legitimate start-up               proposal is adopted as a final rule, upon
                                                 coverage under a group health plan                      trades or businesses may take time to                  effectiveness of the final rule, such an
                                                 sponsored by any other employer of the                  become profitable, and ongoing genuine                 existing AHP would need to meet all the
                                                 individual or by a spouse’s employer.19                 trades or businesses may experience bad                conditions in the final rule to continue
                                                 The proposal also includes an express                   years financially. Alternative                         to act as an ERISA section 3(5) employer
                                                 provision that would allow the group or                 approaches could focus on other                        going forward.
                                                 association sponsoring the AHP to rely,                 measures of the trade or business as a                    To the extent a final rule consistent
                                                 absent knowledge to the contrary, on                    source of earnings or other measures of                with this proposal would be
                                                 written representations from the                        time spent on the work activity.                       inconsistent with any prior sub-
                                                 individual seeking to participate as a                  Accordingly, the Department solicits                   regulatory guidance, the final rule
                                                 working owner as a basis for concluding                 comments on whether the proposed                       would supersede that guidance. For
                                                 that these conditions are satisfied.                    standard is workable and, if so, whether               example, the regulation would
                                                 Comments are invited on this provision,                 any additional clarifications would be                 supersede the statement in Advisory
                                                 including whether an individual must                    helpful to address issues relating to how              Opinion 2003–13A that ERISA section
                                                                                                         working owners could reasonably                        3(5) does not cover groups with
                                                   19 The earned income standard and other group         predict whether they will meet the                     memberships that include persons who
                                                 health plan eligibility provision are informed by       earned income and hours worked                         are not employers of common-law
                                                 Federal tax standards, including section 162(l) of      requirements, and whether AHPs                         employees. In the case of statutory and
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                                                 the Code that describe conditions for self-employed     should be required to obtain any                       regulatory provisions like those
                                                 individuals to deduct the cost of health insurance.
                                                 However, federal tax treatment, including tax
                                                                                                         evidence in support of such a prediction               involved here, the Department has the
                                                 administration of Code section 162(l) and any           beyond a representation from the                       authority to supersede its previous
                                                 potential IRS reporting requirements, of working        working owner. Thus, the Department                    interpretations, as articulated in non-
                                                 owners is not affected by the proposed regulation’s     generally invites comment on whether                   binding advisory opinions, to address
                                                 characterization of a working owner as an employer
                                                 for purposes of participating in a sponsoring
                                                                                                         different criteria would be more                       marketplace developments and new
                                                 employer group or association and an employee for       appropriate to ensure that so-called                   policy and regulatory issues, see
                                                 purposes of being covered by the group health plan.     ‘‘working owners’’ who join an AHP are                 generally Perez v. Mortgage Bankers


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                              623

                                                 Assn, 135 S. Ct. 1199 (2015), and the                   Association of Insurance Commissioners                  which an employer group or association
                                                 authority to supersede a prior                          (NAIC) also wrote a letter to the                       sponsoring an ERISA employee benefit
                                                 interpretation by a federal court, see                  Chairwoman and Ranking Member                           plan may exist solely for the purpose of
                                                 National Cable & Telecommunications                     stating that the legislation would                      providing group health coverage. In the
                                                 Ass’n v. Brand X internet Services                      encourage AHPs to select healthy                        Department’s view, AHPs that
                                                 (Brand X), 545 U.S. 967, 125 S. Ct. 2688                groups by designing benefit packages                    discriminate among employer-members
                                                 (2005) (‘‘A court’s prior judicial                      and setting rates to the detriment of                   in ways that would violate the
                                                 construction of a statute trumps an                     unhealthy groups.22                                     nondiscrimination provisions in the
                                                 agency construction otherwise entitled                     Alternatively, some have argued that                 proposal may not reflect the common
                                                 to Chevron deference only if the prior                  more actuarially appropriate pricing                    employer interests that characterize an
                                                 court decision holds that its                           where premiums match risk tends to                      employee benefit plan as compared to
                                                 construction follows from the                           lead people to buy the efficient amount                 the sort of commercial insurance
                                                 unambiguous terms of the statute and                    of coverage, rather than underinsuring                  enterprise that ERISA intended to leave
                                                 thus leaves no room for agency                          or overinsuring, and that such pricing                  to state, rather than federal, regulation.
                                                 discretion.’’). The ERISA statutory                     also reduces the likelihood that                        The nondiscrimination provisions are
                                                 definition of the term ‘‘employer,’’                    insurance markets deteriorate into                      also based on the Department’s broad
                                                 which includes direct employers and                     adverse selection spirals. In the case of               rulemaking authority under ERISA
                                                 any other person acting indirectly in the               associations, some stakeholders have                    section 505 (authorizing ‘‘such
                                                 interest of the employer in relation to an              argued that the presence of                             regulations as [the Secretary] finds
                                                 employee benefit plan, including a                      nondiscrimination rules may create                      necessary or appropriate to carry out the
                                                 group or association of employers, is not               instability in the AHP market, as                       provisions of this title’’) and ERISA
                                                 an unambiguous term that leaves no                      employers with disproportionately                       section 734. ERISA section 734
                                                 room for agency discretion. Moreover,                   unhealthy employees seek to join AHPs                   authorizes the Secretary to promulgate
                                                 by proceeding through notice and                        to lower their rates while AHPs with                    such regulations as may be necessary or
                                                 comment rulemaking, the Department                      disproportionately healthy employees                    appropriate to carry out the provisions
                                                 has exercised its authority in a way that               constantly modify their rules of                        of Part 7 of ERISA, including ERISA
                                                 ensures all interested stakeholders will                admission to avoid this outcome. And                    section 715(a)(1), which incorporates
                                                 have an opportunity to present their                    stakeholders have argued that allowing                  the provisions of part A of title XXVII
                                                 views on the implications and                           employers to join together voluntarily                  of the PHS Act (generally, sections 2701
                                                 significance of the proposal in light of                on their own terms to offer health                      through 2728 of the PHS Act) into
                                                 past guidance, judicial decisions, and                  coverage to their members would reflect                 ERISA and makes those provisions
                                                 sound public policy.                                    those employers’ interests and                          applicable to plans and issuers.
                                                                                                         maximize the potential for the market,                    The nondiscrimination provisions in
                                                 d. Health Nondiscrimination Protections                 while the converse would deter AHP                      paragraph (d) of the proposed regulation
                                                                                                         formation and lead to fewer insured                     build on the existing health
                                                    Two distinct potential issues prompt                 people.                                                 nondiscrimination provisions
                                                 the nondiscrimination protections in the                   Second, the nondiscrimination                        applicable to group health plans under
                                                 proposed rule. First, some stakeholders                 provisions distinguish genuine                          HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable
                                                 and experts have expressed concerns                     employment-based plans from                             Care Act (HIPAA/ACA health
                                                 that legislative proposals that would                   commercial enterprises that claim to be                 nondiscrimination rules), with an
                                                 have permitted employer groups or                       AHPs but that are more akin to                          additional clarification addressing how
                                                 associations to sponsor group health                    traditional insurers selling insurance in               to apply those rules to association
                                                 plans for the purpose of promoting and                  the employer marketplace. ERISA                         coverage.
                                                 expanding association health coverage                   sections 3(1) and (5) require a bona fide                 Specifically, paragraph (d)(1) of the
                                                 could have resulted in risk selection.                  employment nexus and a level of                         proposed regulation would ensure the
                                                 For example, in a letter to the                         cohesion and commonality among                          group or association does not restrict
                                                 Chairwoman and Ranking Member of                        entities acting on behalf of common law                 membership in the association itself
                                                 the House Committee on Education &                      employers, the common law employers,                    based on any health factor, as defined in
                                                 the Workforce, the American Academy                     and the covered employees, as                           the HIPAA/ACA health
                                                 of Actuaries argued that AHPs could                     distinguished from commercial                           nondiscrimination rules. The HIPAA/
                                                 create adverse selection if legislation 20              insurance arrangements that sell                        ACA health nondiscrimination rules
                                                 being considered by the committee                       insurance coverage to unrelated                         define a health factor as: health status,
                                                 allowed them to operate under different                 common law employers. The                               medical condition (including both
                                                 rules than other group health plans.                    nondiscrimination provisions maintain                   physical and mental illnesses), claims
                                                 They wrote: ‘‘If one set of plans operates              that nexus and cohesion—embodied in                     experience, receipt of healthcare,
                                                 under rules that are more advantageous                  the longstanding ERISA section 3(5)                     medical history, genetic information,
                                                 to healthy individuals, then those                      ‘‘commonality of interests’’                            evidence of insurability, and disability.
                                                 individuals will migrate to those plans;                requirement—in the new circumstance                     Code section 9802(a)(1), ERISA section
                                                 less healthy individuals will migrate to                permitted under the proposal under                      702(a)(1), and PHS Act section
                                                 the plans more advantageous to                                                                                  2705(a)(1). See also 26 CFR 54.9802–
                                                 them.’’ 21 Similarly, the National
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                                                                                                         2017) (available at https://www.actuary.org/files/      1(a), 29 CFR 2590.702(a), and 45 CFR
                                                                                                         publications/AHPs_HR1101_030817.pdf).                   146.121(a).
                                                   20 Small Business Health Fairness Act of 2017,          22 Letter from the NAIC to Virginia Foxx,
                                                 H.R. 1101, 115th Cong. (2017).                          Chairwoman, Committee on Education and the
                                                                                                                                                                   Paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of the
                                                   21 Letter from the American Academy of                Workforce, U.S. House of Representatives, and           proposed rules provide that the group
                                                 Actuaries to Virginia Foxx, Chairwoman,                 Robert C. Scott, Ranking Member, Committee on           health plan sponsored by the group or
                                                 Committee on Education and the Workforce, U.S.          Education and the Workforce, U.S. House of              association must comply with the
                                                 House of Representatives, and Robert C. Scott,          Representatives (Feb. 28, 2017) (available at http://
                                                 Ranking Member, Committee on Education and the          www.naic.org/documents/health_archive_naic_
                                                                                                                                                                 HIPAA/ACA health nondiscrimination
                                                 Workforce, U.S. House of Representatives (March 8,      opposes_small_business_fairness_act.pdf).               rules, which govern eligibility for


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                                                 624                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 benefits 23 and premiums for group                        beneficiaries based on any health factor              entirely—indistinguishable from such
                                                 health plan coverage. In determining                      of the participants or beneficiaries.                 commercial-insurance-type entities. The
                                                 what is a group of similarly situated                        In addition, under the HIPAA/ACA                   extension of ERISA coverage to such
                                                 individuals for purposes of applying                      health nondiscrimination rules, a plan                commercial entities would not be
                                                 those rules, this proposed regulation                     may, generally, subject to certain anti-              consistent with Congress’ deliberate
                                                 provides in paragraph (d)(4) how to                       abuse provisions for discrimination                   decision to limit ERISA’s coverage to
                                                 apply these HIPAA/ACA health                              directed at individuals, treat                        employment-based relationships.
                                                 nondiscrimination rules in the context                    beneficiaries as distinct groups based on             Coupled with the control requirement,
                                                 of a group or association of employers                    the bona fide employment-based                        also requiring AHPs to accept all
                                                 sponsoring a single group health plan.                    classification of the participant through             employers who fit their geographic,
                                                    Specifically, the HIPAA/ACA health                     whom the beneficiary is receiving                     industry, or any other non-health-based
                                                 nondiscrimination rules generally                         coverage, the relationship to the                     selection criteria that each AHP
                                                 prohibit health discrimination within                     participant, marital status, age or                   chooses, the nondiscrimination
                                                 groups of similarly situated individuals,                 student status (subject to PHS Act                    provisions ensure a level of cohesion
                                                 but they do not prohibit discrimination                   section 2714, as incorporated in ERISA                and commonality among entities acting
                                                 across different groups of similarly                      section 715, as well as ERISA section                 on behalf of common law employers,
                                                 situated individuals. In determining                      714) and other factors if the factor is not           the common law employers themselves,
                                                 what counts as a group of similarly                       a health factor. Finally, the HIPAA/ACA               and the covered employees, as
                                                 situated individuals, for these purposes,                 health nondiscrimination rules                        distinguished from commercial
                                                 paragraph (d) of the HIPAA/ACA health                     generally allow group health plans to                 insurance arrangements that sell
                                                 nondiscrimination rules generally                         treat participants and beneficiaries as               insurance coverage to unrelated
                                                 provides that plans may, subject to an                    distinct groups.                                      common law employers.
                                                 anti-abuse provision for discrimination                      The proposed regulations propose                      Paragraph (d)(5) contains examples
                                                 directed at individuals, treat                            that, in applying the HIPAA/ACA health                that illustrate the rules of paragraphs
                                                 participants as distinct groups if the                    nondiscrimination rules for defining                  (d)(1) through (d)(4).
                                                 groups are defined by reference to a                      similarly-situated individuals, the group                The Department specifically solicits
                                                 bona fide employment-based                                or association may not treat member                   comments on the above described
                                                 classification consistent with the                        employers as distinct groups of                       nondiscrimination requirements,
                                                 employer’s usual business practice. As                    similarly-situated individuals. As noted              including how they balance risk
                                                 stated in the HIPAA/ACA health                            above, the HIPAA/ACA health                           selection issues with the stability of the
                                                 nondiscrimination rules, whether an                       nondiscrimination rules apply within                  AHP market and the ability of
                                                                                                           groups of similarly-situated individuals.             employers to innovate and enter
                                                 employment-based classification is bona
                                                                                                           If an association could treat different               voluntary coverage arrangements. The
                                                 fide is determined based on all the
                                                                                                           employer-members as different bona                    Department also solicits comments on
                                                 relevant facts and circumstances,
                                                                                                           fide employment classifications, the                  the effect of additional or different
                                                 including whether the employer uses
                                                                                                           nondiscrimination protections in                      nondiscrimination protections, such as
                                                 the classification for purposes
                                                                                                           paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3) could                further limitations on price flexibility.
                                                 independent of qualification for health
                                                                                                           be ineffective, as AHPs could offer                   Specifically, the Department invites
                                                 coverage (for example, determining
                                                                                                           membership to all employers meeting                   comments on whether paragraph (d)(4)
                                                 eligibility for other employee benefits or
                                                                                                           the association’s membership criteria,                is an appropriate or sufficient response
                                                 determining other terms of
                                                                                                           but then charge specific employer                     to the need to distinguish AHPs from
                                                 employment). Examples in the HIPAA/                       members higher premiums, based on the                 commercial insurance (and on any
                                                 ACA health nondiscrimination rules of                     health status of those employers’                     alternative provisions that might
                                                 classifications that may be bona fide,                    employees and dependents.                             achieve the same goal, as well as on
                                                 based on all the relevant facts and                       Accordingly, under the proposed                       whether paragraph (d)(4) could
                                                 circumstances, include full-time versus                   regulation a group or association which               destabilize the AHP market or hamper
                                                 part-time status, different geographic                    seeks treatment as an ‘‘employer’’ under              employers’ ability to create flexible and
                                                 location, membership in a collective                      ERISA section 3(5) for purposes of                    affordable coverage options for their
                                                 bargaining unit, date of hire, length of                  sponsoring a single group health plan                 employees.
                                                 service, current employee versus former                   under ERISA section 3(1) cannot
                                                 employee status, and different                                                                                  5. Request for Public Comments
                                                                                                           simultaneously undermine that status
                                                 occupations. Under an anti-abuse                          by treating different employers as                       The Department invites comments on
                                                 provision contained in paragraph (d)(3)                   different groups based on a health factor             the specific issues identified in the
                                                 of the HIPAA/ACA health                                   of an individual or individuals within                discussion above, as well as on all
                                                 nondiscrimination rules, however, a                       an employer member. DOL seeks                         aspects of the proposed rule as a
                                                 distinction between groups of                             comment on whether this structure,                    potential alternative approach to the
                                                 individuals is not permitted if the                       which could potentially represent an                  Department’s existing sub-regulatory
                                                 creation or modification of an                            expansion of current regulations, would               guidance criteria. Comments are invited
                                                 employment or coverage classification is                  create involuntary cross-subsidization                on the interaction with and
                                                 directed at individual participants or                    across firms that would discourage                    consequences under other State and
                                                                                                           formation and use of AHPs.                            Federal laws, including the interaction
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                                                    23 A rule for eligibility for benefits is defined by
                                                                                                              Moreover, the Department views such                with the Code section 501(c)(9)
                                                 reference to the HIPAA/ACA health
                                                 nondiscrimination rules and includes rules relating
                                                                                                           employer-by-employer risk-rating as                   provisions for voluntary employees’
                                                 to enrollment, the effective date of coverage,            undermining the statutory aim of                      beneficiary associations (VEBAs),
                                                 waiting (or affiliation) periods, late or special         limiting plan sponsors to ‘‘employers’’               should an AHP want to use a VEBA.
                                                 enrollment, eligibility for benefit packages, benefits    and to entities acting ‘‘in the interest’’            The Department also invites comments
                                                 (including covered benefits, benefit restrictions, and
                                                 cost-sharing), continued eligibility, and terminating
                                                                                                           of employers, and instead extending                   on whether any notice requirements are
                                                 coverage. 26 CFR 54.9802–1(b)(1)(ii); 29 CFR              ERISA coverage to entities that seek to               needed to ensure that employer
                                                 2590.702(b)(1)(ii); 45 CFR 146.121(b)(1)(ii).             underwrite risk and are nearly—or                     members of associations, and


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                              625

                                                 participants and beneficiaries of group                  lines. Specifically, ERISA section                    relating to AHP solvency. The
                                                 health plans, are adequately informed of                 514(b)(6)(B) provides that the                        Department also invites comments on
                                                 their rights or responsibilities with                    Department may prescribe regulations                  whether additional provisions should be
                                                 respect to AHP coverage. Comments are                    under which non-fully insured MEWAs                   added to the final rule to assist existing
                                                 also solicited on the impact of these                    that are employee benefit plans may be                employer associations—including
                                                 proposals on the risk pools of the                       granted exemptions, individually or                   MEWAs that do not now constitute
                                                 individual and small group health                        class by class, from certain State                    AHPs—in making adjustments to their
                                                 insurance markets, and for data, studies                 insurance regulation. Section                         business structures, governing
                                                 or other information that would help                     514(b)(6)(B) does not, however, give the              documents, or group health coverage to
                                                 estimate the benefits, costs, and                        Department unlimited exemption                        become AHPs under the final rule.
                                                 transfers of the rule.                                   authority. The text limiting the                        The Department likewise encourages
                                                                                                          Department’s authority is in ERISA                    commenters to identify any aspect of the
                                                 6. Request for Information
                                                                                                          section 514(b)(6)(A). That section                    foregoing rules and obligations that
                                                    In addition to the proposal set forth in              provides that the Department cannot
                                                 this document, pursuant to Executive                                                                           would benefit from additional guidance
                                                                                                          exempt an employee benefit plan that is               as applied to AHPs, as well as any
                                                 Order 13813, the Department is                           a non-fully insured MEWA from state
                                                 considering other actions it could take                                                                        perceived deficiencies in existing
                                                                                                          insurance laws that can apply to a fully              guidance or regulatory safeguards.
                                                 to promote healthcare consumer choice                    insured MEWA plan under ERISA
                                                 and competition across the United                        section 514(b)(6)(A), i.e., state insurance           Regulatory Impact Analysis
                                                 States. The proposed rules would not                     laws that establish reserves and
                                                 alter existing ERISA statutory provisions                                                                      1.1. Executive Orders
                                                                                                          contribution requirements that must be
                                                 governing MEWAs. The proposed rules                      met in order for the non-fully insured                   Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
                                                 also would not modify the States’                        MEWA plan to be considered able to                    direct agencies to assess all costs and
                                                 authority to regulate health insurance                   pay benefits in full when due, and                    benefits of available regulatory
                                                 issuers or the insurance policies they                   provisions to enforce such standards.                 alternatives and, if regulation is
                                                 sell to AHPs. As described above, some                      Thus, self-insured MEWAs, even if                  necessary, to select regulatory
                                                 MEWAs have historically been unable                      covered by an exemption, would remain                 approaches that maximize net benefits
                                                 to pay claims due to fraud, insufficient                 subject to State insurance laws that                  (including potential economic,
                                                 funding, or inadequate reserves.24                       provide standards requiring the                       environmental, public health and safety
                                                 ERISA section 514(b)(6) gives the                        maintenance of specified levels of                    effects; distributive impacts; and
                                                 Department 25 and State insurance                        reserves and contributions as means of                equity). Executive Order 13563
                                                 regulators joint authority over MEWAs                    ensuring the payment of promised                      emphasizes the importance of
                                                 (including AHPs described in this                        benefits. While beyond the scope of this              quantifying both costs and benefits, of
                                                 proposed rule), to ensure appropriate                    proposed rulemaking, the Department is                reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
                                                 consumer protections for employers and                   interested in receiving additional input              and of promoting flexibility.
                                                 employees relying on an AHP for                          from the public about the relative merits
                                                 healthcare coverage.                                     of possible exemption approaches under                   Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
                                                    Some stakeholders have identified the                 ERISA section 514(b)(6)(B). The                       51735), ‘‘significant’’ regulatory actions
                                                 Department’s authority under ERISA                       Department is interested both in the                  are subject to review by the Office of
                                                 section 514(b)(6)(B) to exempt self-                     potential for such exemptions to                      Management and Budget (OMB).
                                                 insured MEWA plans from State                            promote healthcare consumer choice                    Section 3(f) of the Executive Order
                                                 insurance regulation as a way of                         and competition across the United                     defines a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
                                                 promoting consumer choice across State                   States, as well as in the risk such                   as an action that is likely to result in a
                                                                                                          exemptions might present to                           rule (1) having an annual effect on the
                                                    24 See U.S. Gov’t Accountability Office, GAO–92–
                                                                                                          appropriate regulation and oversight of               economy of $100 million or more in any
                                                 40, States Need Labor’s Help Regulating Multiple
                                                                                                          AHPs, including State insurance                       one year, or adversely and materially
                                                 Employer Welfare Arrangements, (1992) (available                                                               affecting a sector of the economy,
                                                 at http://www.gao.gov/products/HRD-92-40); See           regulation oversight functions.
                                                 also U.S. Gov’t Accountability Office, GAO–04–312,          The Department is also interested in               productivity, competition, jobs, the
                                                 Employers and Individuals Are Vulnerable to              comments on how best to ensure                        environment, public health or safety, or
                                                 Unauthorized or Bogus Entities Selling Coverage          compliance with the ERISA and ACA                     State, local or tribal governments or
                                                 (2004) (available at http://www.gao.gov/products/
                                                 GAO-04-312).                                             standards that would govern AHPs and                  communities (also referred to as
                                                    25 Because small employer group health plans          on any need for additional guidance on                ‘‘economically significant’’); (2) creating
                                                 typically are fully-insured or pay benefits out of the   the application of these standards or                 a serious inconsistency or otherwise
                                                 employer’s general assets, they are generally exempt     other needed consumer protections. In                 interfering with an action taken or
                                                 under current DOL regulations from most, if not all,                                                           planned by another agency; (3)
                                                 of ERISA’s annual reporting requirements. See 29         this connection, the Department
                                                 CFR 2520.104–20. However, as a MEWA, an AHP              emphasizes that AHPs would be subject                 materially altering the budgetary
                                                 MEWA would not be eligible for this filing               to existing generally applicable federal              impacts of entitlement grants, user fees,
                                                 exemption, even if it covered fewer than 100             regulatory standards governing ERISA                  or loan programs or the rights and
                                                 participants. Further, ERISA-covered group health
                                                 plans that have 100 participants or more generally       plans and additional requirements                     obligations of recipients thereof; or (4)
                                                 are required to file a Form 5500, whether insured        governing MEWAs specifically, and                     raising novel legal or policy issues
                                                 or self-insured. Thus, AHPs established as a result      sponsors of AHPs would need to                        arising out of legal mandates, the
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                                                 of the proposal would be required to file Forms          exercise care to ensure compliance with               President’s priorities, or the principles
                                                 5500. See ERISA section 101(b). In addition,
                                                 because, as noted above, these AHPs are also             those standards.                                      set forth in the Executive Order. It has
                                                 MEWAs, they would be required to file a Form M–             The Department requests comments                   been determined that this rule is
                                                 1. See ERISA section 101(g) and 29 CFR 2520.101–         on how it can best use the provisions of              economically significant within the
                                                 2. Both Form 5500 and Form M–1 information is            ERISA Title I to require and promote                  meaning of section 3(f)(1) of the
                                                 accessible by DOL, as well as the States, to fulfill
                                                 traditional oversight functions to help ensure that
                                                                                                          actuarial soundness, proper                           Executive Order. Therefore, OMB has
                                                 plans meet their obligations to pay benefits as          maintenance of reserves, adequate                     reviewed these proposed rules pursuant
                                                 promised under the plan and the law.                     underwriting and other standards                      to the Executive Order.


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                                                 626                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                    In accordance with the direction of                  insure rather than purchase group                      working owners, and to clarify that
                                                 Executive Order 13813, DOL is                           insurance in the large group market                    nationwide industry organizations such
                                                 proposing a rule to broaden the                         segment.) Historically, relative to large              as trade associations can sponsor
                                                 circumstances under which an AHP will                   employers, small businesses accessing                  nationwide AHPs.
                                                 be treated as a single multiple employer-               health insurance in the individual and                    This proposal would broaden the
                                                 plan under ERISA. The proposal is                       small group markets have faced at least                conditions under which associations
                                                 intended to extend advantages typically                 two disadvantages. First, owing to their               can sponsor AHPs, thereby increasing
                                                 enjoyed by large employer-sponsored                     small size, working owners and other                   the number of small businesses
                                                 health benefit plans to more working                    small businesses generally lack large                  potentially eligible to participate in
                                                 owners and small employers                              employers’ potential for administrative                AHPs and providing new, affordable
                                                 (collectively hereafter, small businesses)              efficiencies and negotiating power.                    health insurance options for many
                                                 that under the proposal would be                        Second, unlike large employers,                        Americans. It generally would do this in
                                                 eligible to participate in AHPs. AHPs                   individual small businesses do not                     four important ways. First, it would
                                                 generally can offer these small                         constitute naturally cohesive large risk               relax the existing requirement that
                                                 businesses more health benefit options,                 pools. Any single small business’s                     associations sponsoring AHPs must
                                                 and options that are more affordable,                   claims can spike abruptly due to one                   exist for a reason other than offering
                                                 than typically are available in today’s                 serious illness. Historically, individual              health insurance. Second, it would relax
                                                 individual and small group health                       and small group issuers often responded                the requirement that association
                                                 insurance markets. This document                        to such spikes by sharply increasing                   members share a common interest, as
                                                 assesses the proposal’s potential                       premiums, and/or by refusing to issue or               long as they operate in a common
                                                 impacts.                                                renew policies or to cover pre-existing                geographic area. Third, it would make
                                                                                                         conditions. More recently, State and                   clear that associations whose members
                                                 1.2. Introduction and Need for                                                                                 operate in the same industry can
                                                                                                         Federal legal changes including the
                                                 Regulation                                                                                                     sponsor AHPs, regardless of geographic
                                                                                                         ACA generally have outlawed these
                                                    U.S. families obtain health benefits                 practices. Current rules generally                     distribution. Fourth, it would clarify
                                                 from a number of different private and                  regulate the individual and small group                that working owners and their
                                                 public sources. Essentially all                         markets in which small businesses                      dependents are eligible to participate in
                                                 individuals age 65 or older are covered                 obtain insurance more stringently than                 AHPs. Consequently, for example, the
                                                 by Medicare. Most individuals under                     the large group markets and self-insured               proposal would newly allow a local
                                                 age 65 are covered by employer-                         employer plans. Unfortunately such                     chamber of commerce that meets the
                                                 sponsored insurance. Nearly all large                   rules can themselves limit choice,                     other conditions in the proposal to offer
                                                 employers offer health insurance to                     increase premiums, or even destabilize                 AHP coverage to its small-business
                                                 their employees, but only about one-half                small group and individual markets.                    members, including working owners.
                                                 of employers with fewer than 50                                                                                   As large groups, AHPs might offer
                                                                                                         They, in effect, force issuers to raise
                                                 employees do. Altogether, 61 percent of                                                                        small businesses some of the scale and
                                                                                                         premiums broadly, particularly for
                                                 individuals under age 65 have                                                                                  efficiency advantages typically enjoyed
                                                                                                         healthier small groups and individuals,
                                                 employer-sponsored coverage. Thirty-                                                                           by large employer plans. They
                                                                                                         which can prompt such groups and
                                                 eight percent of individuals under age                                                                         additionally could offer small
                                                                                                         individuals to seek more affordable
                                                 65 obtain coverage from private                                                                                businesses relief from ACA and State
                                                                                                         coverage elsewhere if available, or drop
                                                 employers with 50 or more employees,                                                                           rules that restrict issuers’ product
                                                                                                         insurance altogether. In contrast, large
                                                 9 percent from smaller private                                                                                 offerings and pricing in individual and
                                                                                                         employers’ natural ability to provide                  small group markets.
                                                 employers, and 14 percent from public-                  comprehensive coverage at relatively
                                                 sector employers.26                                     stable cost is mirrored by the regulatory              1.3. AHPs’ Potential Impacts
                                                    Large employers have a long history                  framework that applies to large group                     By facilitating the establishment and
                                                 of providing their employees with                       markets and self-insured ERISA plans.                  operation of more AHPs, this proposed
                                                 affordable health insurance options.                       Given the natural advantages enjoyed                rule aims to make more, and more
                                                 This regulation is needed to lower some                 by large employer groups, it may be                    affordable, health insurance options
                                                 barriers that can prevent many small                    advantageous to allow more small                       available to more employees of small
                                                 businesses from accessing such options.                 businesses to combine into large groups                businesses and the families of such
                                                    Today, businesses generally access                   for purposes of obtaining or providing                 employees. Insuring more American
                                                 insurance in one of three market                        health insurance. While some AHPs                      workers, and offering premiums and
                                                 segments, depending on their size.                      exist today, their reach currently is                  benefits that faithfully match
                                                 These segments are the individual                       limited by the Department’s existing                   employees’ preferences, are the most
                                                 market, which includes working owners                   interpretation of the conditions under                 important benefits of this rule. The
                                                 among other individuals and their                       which an AHP is an employer-                           proposed rule contains provisions
                                                 families, if they do not employ                         sponsored plan under ERISA. Under                      designed to prevent potentially adverse
                                                 employees and therefore cannot                          that interpretation, eligible association              impacts on individual or small group
                                                 establish a group health plan; the small                members must share a common interest                   risk pools that might otherwise carry
                                                 group market, which generally includes                  (generally, operate in the same                        social costs. AHPs will also affect tax
                                                 small businesses with at least one and                  industry), must join together for                      subsidies and revenue and the Medicaid
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                                                 not more than 50 employees; and the                     purposes other than providing health                   program.While the impacts of this
                                                 large group market, which includes                      insurance, must exercise control over                  proposed rule, and of AHPs themselves,
                                                 larger employers and some groups of                     the AHP, and must have one or more                     are intended to be positive on net, the
                                                 employers. (Many large employers self-                  employees in addition to the business                  incidence, nature and magnitude of both
                                                   26 DOL calculations based on the Abstract of
                                                                                                         owner. Accordingly, this proposed rule                 positive and negative effects are
                                                 Auxiliary Data for the March 2016 Annual Social
                                                                                                         aims to encourage the establishment and                uncertain. Predictions of these impacts
                                                 and Economic Supplement to the Current                  growth of AHPs comprising otherwise                    are confounded by numerous factors
                                                 Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.            unrelated small businesses, including                  including:


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                      627

                                                   • The dynamic and in some cases                       groups.27 AHPs may, under favorable                       As large groups, AHPs also may
                                                 unstable conditions currently prevailing                circumstances, achieve some savings in                 achieve some savings by offering self-
                                                 in local individual and small group                     the same way. On the other hand, rather                insured coverage. Because large group
                                                 insurance markets under existing ACA                    than avoiding these costs, some AHPs                   plans in and of themselves constitute
                                                 and State rules;                                        sometimes may merely internalize them,                 large and potentially stable risk pools, it
                                                   • A lack of data on the risk profiles                 in the form of employers’ cost to form                 often is feasible for them to self-insure
                                                 of existing and potential associations                  associations and AHPs’ own efforts to                  rather than to purchase fully-insured
                                                 and the individual and small group                      recruit and enroll association members,                large group insurance policies from
                                                 markets with which they intersect;                      and to sign members up for insurance.                  licensed health insurance issuers. Large
                                                   • A lack of data on the relative                      AHPs sponsored by pre-existing                         risk pools’ claims experience generally
                                                 availabilities and sizes of subsidies and               associations that exist for reasons other              varies only modestly from year to year,
                                                 tax preferences for prospective AHP                     than offering health insurance might                   so well-run large group plans can set
                                                 enrollees in Exchanges or Small                         have more potential to deliver                         premiums and operate with little risk of
                                                 Business Health Options Program                         administrative savings than those set up               financial shortfalls. By self-insuring,
                                                 (SHOP) Exchanges versus in AHPs;                        to offer health insurance. Organizations               some large AHPs may avoid some of the
                                                                                                                                                                overhead cost otherwise associated with
                                                   • Legislative proposals to amend or                   that already exist for reasons other than
                                                                                                         offering health insurance (such as                     fully-insured large group health
                                                 repeal and replace the ACA;                                                                                    insurance policies. However State
                                                   • States’ broad discretion to regulate                chambers of commerce or trade
                                                                                                         associations) may already have                         revenue may also decline in States that
                                                 AHPs, and variations in State practices;                                                                       tax insurance premiums.
                                                 and                                                     extensive memberships and thus may
                                                                                                                                                                   Also, as large groups, in addition to
                                                   • Interactions with related initiatives               have fewer setup, recruitment, and
                                                                                                                                                                potential administrative and overhead
                                                 per Executive Order 13813, including                    enrollment costs than organizations
                                                                                                                                                                savings, AHPs sometimes may be able to
                                                 HRAs and short-term limited duration                    newly formed to offer insurance. Under
                                                                                                                                                                achieve savings through market power,
                                                 insurance policies.                                     this proposal, such existing associations
                                                                                                                                                                negotiating discounts that come at
                                                                                                         that have been prohibited from offering                suppliers’ expense. In otherwise
                                                   In light of these uncertainties, what
                                                                                                         AHPs to some or all of their existing                  competitive markets, the exercise of
                                                 follows is a mostly qualitative
                                                                                                         members by the Department’s current                    market power sometimes can result in
                                                 assessment of this proposal’s potential
                                                                                                         interpretations could newly extend AHP                 economic inefficiency. The opposite
                                                 impacts, rather than a quantitative
                                                                                                         eligibility to existing members. Some                  might be true, however, where an AHP’s
                                                 prediction. The Department is seeking
                                                                                                         other AHPs, however, might thrive by                   market power acts to counterbalance
                                                 comments and data that will allow the
                                                 impacts of the rule to be quantified, and               delivering savings to members by other                 market power otherwise exercised by
                                                 that will enable it to more fully assess                means, such as by offering less                        issuers or providers. If large group
                                                 the proposed rule’s effects.                            comprehensive benefits, even if their                  premiums are not already at competitive
                                                                                                         administrative costs are higher.                       levels, sufficiently large AHPs may be
                                                 1.4. Potential Advantages of Scale                         Some other efficiency gains might                   able to negotiate with issuers for
                                                    Owing to their potentially large scale,              arise from AHPs’ scale in purchasing                   premium discounts. More frequently,
                                                 under the right conditions, AHPs result                 not insurance but healthcare services.                 issuers and other large payers,
                                                 in lower insurance premiums compared                    Healthcare payers and providers                        potentially including large, self-insured
                                                 to existing small group and individual                  sometimes realize administrative                       AHPs, may be able to negotiate
                                                 insurance market arrangements.                          efficiencies in their interactions if a                discounts and other savings measures
                                                 Consequently, AHPs may offer small                      large proportion of each provider’s                    with hospitals, providers, and third
                                                 businesses comparable coverage at                       patients are covered by a common                       party administrators (TPAs). Because
                                                 lower prices, thereby delivering                        payer. For example, streamlining of                    markets for healthcare services are
                                                 economic benefits to many working                       billing and payment processes and                      inherently local, payers’ market power
                                                 owners and employees of small                           procedures for preauthorization for                    generally requires not merely scale, but
                                                 businesses.                                             covered services may facilitate volume                 a large geographic market share.
                                                    Large employers often enjoy some                     discounts. A self-insured AHP with a                   Consequently, self-insured AHPs with
                                                 advantages of scale in the provision of                 sufficiently large presence in a local                 geographically concentrated
                                                 health benefits for their employees, and                market might capture some such                         membership are more likely to realize
                                                                                                         efficiency. On the other hand, in some                 such savings than are AHPs whose
                                                 AHPs may realize some of these same
                                                                                                         cases AHPs’ entry into markets                         membership is spread thinly across
                                                 advantages. Scale may yield savings via
                                                                                                         alongside other payers might erode such                States.
                                                 one or more of three mechanisms:                                                                                  On the other hand, AHPs might
                                                 administrative efficiencies from                        efficiency by reducing such issuer’s
                                                                                                         scale in purchasing healthcare services.               sometimes dilute other payers’ market
                                                 economies of scale, self-insurance, and                                                                        power to command provider
                                                 market power.                                           That is, an increase in the number of
                                                                                                         payers may sometimes increase the                      discounts,28 thereby increasing costs for
                                                    Administrative savings generally can                                                                        such payers’ enrollees. AHP’s net effect
                                                 be understood to constitute a social                    administrative burden associated with
                                                                                                         the payer-provider interface for some or               on payers’ market power with respect to
                                                 benefit, as resources are freed for other                                                                      providers and consequent effect on
                                                 uses without reducing consumption.                      all payers and providers. Consequently,
                                                                                                         the net impact of this proposal on                     enrollee costs consequently could be
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                                                 With respect to administrative                                                                                 positive or negative.
                                                 efficiency from economies of scale, large               efficiency in this interface (and on
                                                                                                                                                                   It should be noted that diluting
                                                 employers generally avoid the                           associated social welfare) could be
                                                                                                                                                                others’ market power can increase social
                                                 potentially high cost associated with                   positive or negative.
                                                 health insurance issuers’ efforts to                                                                             28 For a discussion of insurers’ market power see
                                                                                                           27 ACA   and State rules that limit underwriting
                                                 market to, enroll, and underwrite and                                                                          Sheffler, Richard M. and Daniel R.Arnold. ‘‘Insurer
                                                                                                         and set floors for insurers’ loss ratios may make      Market Power Lowers Prices in Numerous
                                                 set premiums for large numbers of                       some of these savings available even within the        Concentrated Provider Markets.’’ Health Affairs 36,
                                                 individual families or small employer                   existing individual and small group markets.           no. 9 (2017).



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                                                 628                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 welfare if it produces more healthy                     AHPs consequently could offer many                     with additional, potentially inefficient
                                                 competition. If local individual and                    small businesses more options than                     rules, including the requirement that all
                                                 small group market premiums are not                     could individual and small group                       individuals acquire coverage and
                                                 already at competitive levels, increasing               insurance issuers. For instance, AHPs                  mandatory transfers of ‘‘risk adjustment
                                                 competitive pressure from AHPs might                    could offer less comprehensive—and                     payments’’ from some issuers to others.
                                                 force some individual and small group                   hence more affordable—coverage that                    AHPs would not be subject to these
                                                 issuers to lower their own premiums.                    some employees may prefer.                             ACA and State rules, but will be subject
                                                 There is some evidence that competition                    Some stakeholders have expressed                    to the nondiscrimination rules that bar
                                                 among issuers has this effect,29 although               concern that AHPs, by offering less                    all group health plans from conditioning
                                                 the likelihood of this effect occurring in              comprehensive benefits, could attract                  eligibility, benefits, or premiums on
                                                 this case is unclear, as market rules and               healthier individuals, leaving less                    health status. Properly designed, these
                                                 claims experience may already have                      healthy individuals in the individual                  rules should help AHPs to assemble
                                                 eliminated excess profit.                               and small group markets and thus                       large, stable risk pools, while at the
                                                    Given all of these variables, the net                driving up the premiums in those                       same time limiting the risk that AHPs
                                                 transfer and social welfare effects                     markets and potentially destabilizing                  might tend to enroll healthier small
                                                 related to AHPs’ exercise of, or impact                 them. This risk may be small, however,                 businesses and thereby adversely affect
                                                 on others’ exercise of, market power are                relative to the benefits realized by small             individual and small group markets.
                                                 ambiguous.                                              businesses and their employees that                       Some stakeholders have raised
                                                    In summary, AHPs’ potential to reap                  gain access to more affordable insurance               concerns that AHPs will be more likely
                                                 advantages from scale may vary. Under                   that more closely matches their                        to form in industries with younger,
                                                 favorable conditions they may realize                   preferences. AHPs’ benefits to their                   healthier employees, as employers and
                                                 some administrative savings, and/or                     members can be substantial, as                         their employees receive greater access to
                                                 negotiate discounts from insurers,                      discussed above. For example, a small                  more affordable coverage than is
                                                 providers, or TPAs. Market forces may                   businesses electing less comprehensive                 available in the individual and small
                                                 favor AHPs that reap such advantages,                   AHP coverage can deliver benefits that                 group markets. The Department believes
                                                 but may also sustain AHPs that deliver                  are more closely tailored to their                     such concerns at this juncture are
                                                 savings to members by other means.                      employees’ actual health needs at a                    speculative. While AHPs may have
                                                 1.5. Increased Choice                                   price their employees prefer. In                       larger incentives to form in industries
                                                                                                         addition, to the extent that AHPs deliver              with younger, healthier workers, they
                                                    Because they would not be subject to                                                                        will also have incentives to form in
                                                 individual and small group market                       administrative savings or market power
                                                                                                         they may offer less expensive but                      industries with older or less healthy
                                                 rules, AHPs in the large group market                                                                          workers when, for example, they deliver
                                                 (which the Department expects would                     equally comprehensive benefit options
                                                                                                         as compared to plans available in the                  sufficient administrative savings to
                                                 include all or almost all AHPs) would                                                                          offset any additional cost of insuring an
                                                 enjoy greater flexibility with respect to               individual or small group markets. This
                                                                                                         feature of AHPs would appeal to their                  older or less healthy population. The
                                                 the products and prices they could offer                                                                       Department requests comments that
                                                 to small businesses. AHPs consequently                  less healthy members, prompting less
                                                                                                         healthy individuals to leave the                       would help further address this issue.
                                                 could offer many small businesses more                                                                            Likewise, some stakeholders have
                                                 affordable insurance options than would                 individual and small group markets and
                                                                                                                                                                raised concerns that, because AHPs will
                                                 be available to them in individual and                  potentially balancing out any exodus of
                                                                                                                                                                enjoy greater pricing flexibility to set
                                                 small group markets. Under the ACA                      healthy individuals from these markets.
                                                                                                                                                                premiums, some might offer lower
                                                 and State rules, non-grandfathered                      Moreover, this proposal addresses the                  prices to healthier groups and higher
                                                 individual and small group insurance                    risk of adverse effects on the individual              prices to less healthy groups than
                                                 policies generally must cover certain                   and small group markets by including                   individual and small group issuers are
                                                 benefits. These rules limit the policies                nondiscrimination provisions under                     allowed to offer to those same groups.
                                                 that issuers can offer to small                         which AHPs could not condition                         Of course, the nondiscrimination
                                                 businesses. Under this proposal, as                     eligibility for membership or benefits or              provisions in this proposal would
                                                 noted earlier in this section, AHPs                     vary members’ premiums based on their                  prohibit any such discrimination based
                                                 would generally be treated as large                     health status. The Department invites                  on health factors, but some non-health
                                                 employers and accordingly granted                       comments as to the benefits of AHPs                    factors (such as age) correlate to a large
                                                 access to the large group market (or,                   offering wider choice including less                   degree with healthcare expenditures,
                                                 alternatively, could self-insure). The                  comprehensive policies as well as any                  and AHPs under this proposal could
                                                 large group market is not subject to the                risk of adverse effects on individual or               vary premiums to reflect actuarial risk
                                                 same restrictions that apply in the                     small group markets.                                   based on such non-health factors. Some
                                                 individual and small group markets.30                   1.6. Risk Pooling                                      stakeholders argue that pursuit of lower
                                                                                                                                                                prices based on non-health factors
                                                    29 Frank, Richard G. and Thomas G. McGuire.            The proposal seeks to enable AHPs to                 would lead, for example, younger
                                                 ‘‘Regulated Medicare Advantage and Marketplace          assemble large, stable risk pools. The                 association members to join AHPs but
                                                 Individual Health Insurance Markets Rely on             ACA and State rules tightly regulate
                                                 Insurer Competition.’’ Health Affairs 36 no. 9                                                                 might lead older members to remain in
                                                 (2017).
                                                                                                         how individual and small group issuers                 individual and small group markets.
                                                    30 Some States do set some minimum standards         pool risk, for example by limiting the                    This argument, however, depends on
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                                                 for benefits covered by large group policies,           degree to which premiums can be                        the assumption that pricing flexibility is
                                                 however. Such mandates would apply to fully             adjusted based on age. These rules can                 the principal or only advantage
                                                 insured AHPs. Because AHPs are MEWAs under              threaten market stability. The ACA and
                                                 ERISA, States also may have flexibility under                                                                  available to AHPs. In fact, as outlined
                                                 ERISA’s MEWA provisions to extend benefit               State rules attempt to address this threat             above, AHPs have the potential to create
                                                 standards to self-insured AHPs. ERISA generally                                                                significant efficiencies that could lower
                                                 precludes States from applying such standards to        individual and small group markets under the ACA,
                                                 self-insured ERISA plans that are not MEWAs. For        and for lists of benefit standards that States apply
                                                                                                                                                                premiums across the board. An AHP
                                                 lists of ‘‘essential health benefits’’ that must be     to large group plans, see https://www.cms.gov/cciio/   that realizes sufficient efficiencies may
                                                 covered by non-grandfathered coverage in States’        resources/data-resources/ehb.html.                     offer attractive prices even to less


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                       629

                                                 healthy groups. In that scenario, less                  market reforms, cited below in                             The foregoing evidence may be
                                                 healthy people would also have an                       connection with AHPs’ potential impact                  consistent with some key stakeholders’
                                                 incentive to leave the individual and                   on the uninsured population, mostly                     concerns that AHPs, if regulated too
                                                 small group markets, potentially                        find that reforms tightening market rules               loosely relative to issuers, might
                                                 balancing out any exodus of healthy                     result in only limited adverse selection.               adversely impact some risk pools.37 On
                                                 people from these markets. The                          This might suggest that this proposal, by               the other hand, severely restricting
                                                 Department requests comments that                       in effect loosening such rules, may                     AHPs would hinder them from
                                                 would help further address this issue.                  produce only limited risk selection                     providing additional, affordable
                                                    As noted earlier, the Department                     effects.                                                coverage options. The Department
                                                 intends that this proposal would help                      Some other evidence illustrates how                  believes that this proposal, under which
                                                 AHPs to assemble large, stable risk                     under some conditions changes in                        AHPs could not condition eligibility,
                                                 pools, while at the same time limiting                  product and price offerings can affect                  benefits, or premiums on health status,
                                                 any risk of adverse effects on individual               the composition of risk pools. One                      strikes the right balance to enable AHPs
                                                 and small group markets. In calibrating                 employer found that older and less                      to assemble large stable risk pools and
                                                 the proposal to advance those goals, the                healthy employees sometimes declined                    offer new affordable options to small
                                                 Department considered a range of                        to join younger and healthier                           businesses without posing substantial
                                                 evidence on the dynamics of health                      counterparts in switching to new, less                  risk of adverse effects on other risk
                                                 insurance markets under various                         comprehensive options, despite                          pools. AHPs’ potential to deliver
                                                 conditions and rules. The Department                    incentives provided to encourage such                   administrative savings further mitigates
                                                 believes available evidence is consistent               switches, perhaps due to concerns about                 any such risk
                                                 with the balanced approach adopted in                   reduced coverage.33 A review of
                                                 the proposal, and that the proposal                     experience with consumer-directed                       1.7. Individual and Small Group
                                                 would advance the intended goals, and                   health plans suggests some potential for                Markets
                                                 invites comments responsive to this                     similar effects.34 Some prior                              The Department separately
                                                 evidence and viewpoint.                                 experiences with different AHP and                      considered AHPs’ potential impacts on
                                                    Some of the evidence the Department                  group purchasing arrangements                           both individual and small group
                                                 reviewed appears to suggest this                        reportedly did not achieve sufficient                   markets. In both cases, AHPs could offer
                                                 proposal would have little impact on                    efficiencies to fully prevent or offset all             many small businesses more, and more
                                                 the composition of individual and small                 potential risk segmentation effects.35                  affordable, coverage options than
                                                 group market risk pools. Other potential                The Congressional Budget Office once                    otherwise available.
                                                 avenues for segmentation that exist                     predicted modest risk segmentation                         With respect to individual markets,
                                                 today do not appear to have produced                    from an AHP-like proposal, with small                   many of those insured there now might
                                                 major effects. For example, a small                     premium increases for small employers                   become eligible for AHPs. AHPs could
                                                 employer currently can segregate itself                 retaining traditional insurance, and                    enroll both working owners and
                                                 into a separate risk pool by self-insuring              increased coverage among healthier                      employees of small business that do not
                                                 and relying on stop-loss insurance to                   small groups partly offset by a small loss              currently offer insurance but might elect
                                                 backstop particularly large losses. Yet                 of coverage among less healthy ones.36                  to join AHPs. The latter group may be
                                                 the proportion of small-firm                                                                                    growing as small firms’ propensity to
                                                 establishments reporting that they use                     33 Fronstin, Paul, and M. Christopher Roebuck.
                                                                                                                                                                 offer health insurance for employees has
                                                 self-insurance has increased only                       ‘‘Health Plan Switching: A Case Study-Implications
                                                                                                         for Private- and Public-Health-Insurance Exchanges      declined substantially from 47 percent
                                                 modestly, from 12.7 percent in 2010 to                  and Increased Health Plan Choice.’’ EBRI Issue Brief    of establishments in 2000 to 29 percent
                                                 17.4 percent in 2016 and the percent of                 432, March 23, 2017. https://www.ebri.org/pdf/          in 2016.38 Of the 25 million U.S.
                                                 policy holders in self-insured plans at                 briefspdf/EBRI_IB_432_PlnSwtch.23Mar17.pdf.
                                                                                                                                                                 individuals under age 65 who were
                                                 small-firm establishments has increased                    34 Bundorf, M. Kate, ‘‘Consumer-Directed Health

                                                 from 12.5 percent to 15.7 percent over                  Plans: A Review of the Evidence.’’ The Journal of
                                                                                                         Risk and Insurance. January 2016.                       sites/default/files/109th-congress-2005-2006/
                                                 the same time period.31 In addition,                       35 Historically, some efforts to assemble large      costestimate/hr52500.pdf.
                                                 price inelasticity and inertia in                       purchasing coalitions to negotiate such discounts          37 See for example: (1) NAIC letter to Reps. Foxx

                                                 individuals’ and small businesses’                      have met with limited success. In one major             and Scott, February 28, 2017, http://www.naic.org/
                                                 health insurance purchases 32 may help                  example, the California Health Insurance                documents/health_archive_naic_opposes_small_
                                                                                                         Purchasing Cooperative, or HIPC, established by the     business_fairness_act.pdf; (2) American Academy
                                                 to limit and/or slow any potential                      State and later operated by a business coalition, was   of Actuaries. ‘‘Issue Brief: Association Health
                                                 impacts. If, as this evidence suggests,                 eventually disbanded after failing to deliver its       Plans,’’ February 2017; .and (3) America’s Health
                                                 small businesses might not vigorously                   intended savings. See, for example, National            Insurance Plans (AHIP), ‘‘Association-Sponsored
                                                 shop for better prices and products,                    Conference of State Legislatures, ‘‘Health Insurance    Health Plans and Reform of the Individual
                                                                                                         Purchasing Cooperatives: State and Federal Roles.’’     Healthcare Market’’ February 10, 2017.
                                                 there may be little potential for risk                  September 1, 2016. Last accessed September 25,             38 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality,
                                                 selection, but also limited demand for                  2017. http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/              Center for Financing, Access and Cost Trends.
                                                 AHPs.                                                   purchasing-coops-and-alliances-for-                     Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-Insurance
                                                    Various studies of past State and                    health.aspx#Other_Approaches. See also Bender,          Component, 2012–2016. Medical Expenditure Panel
                                                                                                         Karen, and Beth Fritchen. ‘‘Government-Sponsored        Survey Private Sector Insurance Component, Table
                                                 Federal individual and small group                      Health Insurance Purchasing Arrangements: Do            II.A.2. In 2016, among employees of firms with
                                                                                                         they Reduce Costs or Expand Coverage for                fewer than 50 employees, just one in four were
                                                   31 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality         Individuals and Small Employers?’’ 2008. Report         enrolled in insurance on the job. Nearly one-half
                                                 (AHRQ), 2016 Medical Expenditure Survey-                finds that purchasing arrangements increase             worked at firms that did not offer insurance.
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                                                 Insurance Component (MEPS–IC).                          premiums by as much as six percent. http://             Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
                                                   32 See M. Kate Bundorf, Joanthan Levin, and Neal      www.oliverwyman.com/content/dam/oliver-                 (AHRQ), 2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
                                                 Mahoney, ‘‘Pricing and Welfare in Health Plan           wyman/global/en/files/archive/2011/health_ins_          Insurance Component (MEPS–IC) Tables.
                                                 Choice,’’ American Economic Review 2012, 107(7),        purchasing_arrangements(1).pdf.                         Nonetheless, just 18 percent of small firm
                                                 3214–3248, pointing to price inelasticity; and             36 CBO Paper, ‘‘Increasing Small-Firm Health         employees were uninsured. Many obtained
                                                 Benjamin R. Handel, ‘‘Adverse Selection and Inertia     Insurance Coverage Through Association Health           insurance from a spouse’s or parent’s employer.
                                                 in Health Insurance Markets: When Nudging               Plans and HealthMarts,’’ January 2000. https://         DOL calculations based on the Abstract of Auxiliary
                                                 Hurts,’’ American Economic Review 2013, 103(7),         www.cbo.gov/publication/12066; CBO cost                 Data for the March 2016 Annual Social and
                                                 2643–2682, finding that inertia restrains adverse       estimate, H.R. 525 Small Business Health Fairness       Economic Supplement to the Current Population
                                                 selection and associated welfare losses.                Act of 2005. April 8, 2005. https://www.cbo.gov/        Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.



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                                                 630                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 insured in individual markets in 2015,                  enrollment period that occurs after they               not vary based on health. Issuers
                                                 approximately 3 million were working                    have experienced a medical need. By                    offering small group policies in a given
                                                 owners or dependents thereof, and an                    expanding AHPs, this proposed rule                     location both through the local SHOP
                                                 additional 6 million were employees of                  aims to provide many more individuals                  and directly must treat the two as a
                                                 small businesses that did not offer                     access to the potentially more stable and              single risk pool when setting premiums.
                                                 insurance or dependents thereof. With                   affordable large group market. However,                However, the issuers offering small
                                                 respect to small group markets,                         to the extent that AHPs prove                          group policies, the policies they offer,
                                                 essentially all insured businesses might                particularly attractive to younger or                  and the premiums charged can vary
                                                 become eligible for AHPs. In 2015, firms                lower cost individuals, they may                       from place to place and locally between
                                                 with fewer than 50 employees insured                    contribute to some Exchanges’                          SHOPs and outside markets. In some
                                                 24 million workers and dependents.39                    instability.                                           locations the availability of policies may
                                                    In an effort to facilitate the availability             Issuers may elect to offer individual               be limited, and/or the premiums
                                                 of individual insurance, the ACA                        market policies in Exchanges or outside                charged may be rising rapidly, although
                                                 established federal and State-based                     them, or both. Non-grandfathered                       in most locations small group markets
                                                 ‘‘Exchanges,’’ or centralized, regulated                individual market policies must satisfy                continue to offer some choice of issuers
                                                 marketplaces. The ACA envisioned that                   various ACA requirements including                     and policies and moderate premium
                                                 a number of health insurance issuers                    minimum benefit packages, minimum                      growth.43
                                                 would offer a set of comparable policies                actuarial value(s), and minimum loss
                                                 in each Exchange, making it possible for                ratios. They must be offered to any                       Few small employers have elected to
                                                 individuals to shop (and necessary for                  individual who applies, and premiums                   acquire health insurance via SHOPs. As
                                                 issuers to compete) for the best price                  must not vary depending on enrollees’                  of January 2017, just 27,205 small
                                                 and quality, while means-tested                         health status, instead varying only based              employers purchased small group
                                                 subsidies would ensure that coverage                    on location, age, tobacco use, and family              policies via SHOPs, covering 233,000
                                                 was affordable. This vision has not been                size, and within certain limits. Issuers               employees and dependents.44 (Much
                                                 realized fully in much of the country,                  offering individual policies in a given                larger numbers obtained coverage
                                                 however.                                                location both through the local                        directly from small group issuers via
                                                    In 2016, 11 million individuals were                 Exchange and outside it must treat the                 agents and brokers outside of SHOPs: In
                                                 enrolled via Exchanges. A large majority                two as a single risk pool when setting                 2016, 1.6 million small-firm
                                                 qualified for means-tested assistance                   premiums. The issuers offering                         establishments offered health benefits
                                                 with premiums (9 million) and/or cost                   individual policies, the policies offered,             for employees.) 45 Sixteen States and the
                                                 sharing (6 million).40 However, for                     and the premiums charged can vary                      District of Columbia operated SHOPs,
                                                 2018, only one issuer offered coverage                  from place to place and locally between                while federally-facilitated SHOPs
                                                 in the Exchange in each of                              Exchanges and outside markets.                         operated in 33 States. (Beginning in
                                                 approximately one-half of US counties.                     To facilitate access to health                      2017, a special waiver allowed Hawaii
                                                 Just two issuers participated in                        insurance for small employers, the ACA                 to operate its existing small group
                                                 Exchanges in many additional                            established the Small Business Health                  market within the relevant ACA
                                                 counties.41 Moreover, many Exchange                     Options Program, or ‘‘SHOP’’. Small                    framework without establishing a
                                                 enrollees have faced large premium                      employers may purchase insurance from                  SHOP.) At this point, SHOPs cover far
                                                 increases.42 The Administration already                 an issuer, agent, or broker via the SHOP,              fewer employees than existing plan-
                                                 has taken some steps to stabilize the                   or directly from issuers or through                    MEWAs/AHPs, which reportedly cover
                                                 Exchanges, but their success is                         agents or brokers not via a SHOP, or                   1.8 million participants.
                                                 uncertain given that the ACA creates                    they may self-insure. Employers
                                                                                                         purchasing group policies via a SHOP                      The Department considered the
                                                 significant incentives for some people to
                                                                                                         may qualify for tax credits to help cover              potential susceptibilities of individual
                                                 wait to purchase insurance until an
                                                                                                         premium costs. If available, small                     and small group markets to adverse
                                                   39 DOL calculations based on the Abstract of          employers also may obtain coverage                     selection under this proposal. All else
                                                 Auxiliary Data for the March 2016 Annual Social         from an AHP, and thereby pool together                 equal, individual markets may be more
                                                 and Economic Supplement to the Current                  with other employers and gain access to                susceptible to risk selection than small
                                                 Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.                                                                   group markets, as individuals’ costs
                                                   40 Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning
                                                                                                         the large group market. Small employers
                                                                                                         whose employees are represented by a                   generally vary more widely than small
                                                 and Evaluation (ASPE), U.S. Department of Health
                                                 and Human Services, Compilation of State Date on        union may participate in a (usually                    groups’. The ACA’s requirement that
                                                 the Affordable Care Act, December 2016.                 large) multiemployer health benefit                    essentially all individuals acquire
                                                   41 See U.S. Department of Health and Human
                                                                                                         plan, established pursuant to collective               coverage and the provision of subsidies
                                                 Services, ‘‘County by County Analysis of Plan Year                                                             in Exchanges may reduce that
                                                 2018 Insurer Participation in Health Insurance
                                                                                                         bargaining agreements between the
                                                 Exchanges,’’ available at https://www.cms.gov/          union and two or more employers.
                                                 CCIIO/Programs-and-Initiatives/Health-Insurance-           Issuers may offer small group policies                 43 Between 1996 and 2016 small (fewer than 50

                                                 Marketplaces/Downloads/2017-10-20-Issuer-               to small employers via SHOPs, directly                 employees) and large private-sector employer
                                                 County-Map.pdf.                                                                                                premium increases followed similar trajectories.
                                                   42 The places with the largest 2017 increases in
                                                                                                         through issuers, agents or brokers, or                 Both averaged 6 percent annually. Agency for
                                                 the unsubsidized second-lowest silver plan
                                                                                                         both. Either way, as with non-                         Healthcare Research and Quality. Average total
                                                 included Phoenix, AZ (up 145% from $207 to $507         grandfathered individual market                        single premium (in dollars) per enrolled employee
                                                 per month for a 40-year-old non-smoker). See            policies, non-grandfathered small group                at private-sector establishments that offer health
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                                                 Cynthia Cox, Michelle Long, Ashley Semanskee,                                                                  insurance by firm size and selected characteristics
                                                                                                         policies must satisfy various ACA                      (Table I.C.1). Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
                                                 Rabah Kamal, Gary Claxton, and Larry Levitt, ‘‘2017
                                                 Premium Changes and Insurer Participation in the
                                                                                                         requirements including minimum                         Insurance Component Tables.
                                                 Affordable Care Act’s Health Insurance                  benefit packages, minimum actuarial                       44 SHOP numbers reported by SB–SHOPs to

                                                 Marketplaces,’’ Kaiser Family Foundation, October       value(s), and minimum loss ratios. They                CCIIO State Marketplace Insurance Programs Group
                                                 24, 2016 (updated November 1, 2016), available at       must be offered to any small employer                  and FF–SHOP Enrollment Database, May 15, 2017.
                                                 https://www.kff.org/health-reform/issue-brief/2017-                                                               45 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

                                                 premium-changes-and-insurer-participation-in-the-
                                                                                                         who applies, and premiums may vary                     (AHRQ), 2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
                                                 affordable-care-acts-health-insurance-                  only based on location, age, and tobacco               Insurance Component (MEPS–IC). Small firms
                                                 marketplaces/.                                          use, and within certain limits; they may               include those with fewer than 50 employees.



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                        631

                                                 susceptibility, however.46 The                          coverage.50 AHPs’ potential to expand                   Department, using a form known as
                                                 Department believes that under this                     coverage may be greater than this                       Form M1.52 The Department last
                                                 proposal AHPs’ adherence to applicable                  experience suggests, however. Market                    examined the universe of these reports
                                                 nondiscrimination rules and potential                   conditions and the size and composition                 in September of 2014.53 That
                                                 for administrative savings would                        of the uninsured population are                         examination included reports for
                                                 mitigate any risk of adverse selection                  different today, and as noted earlier,                  MEWAs (including AHPs) operating in
                                                 against individual and small group                      small firms’ propensity to offer                        each year from 2010 through 2013.
                                                 markets.                                                insurance to their employees has fallen,                According to this examination, in 2013,
                                                                                                         suggesting potential opportunities for                  392 MEWAs covered approximately 1.6
                                                 1.8. Medicaid                                           AHPs to expand coverage.                                million employees. The vast majority of
                                                    Under the ACA, Medicaid eligibility                                                                          these MEWAs reported themselves as
                                                                                                         1.10. Operational Risks
                                                 was expanded in many States. Some                                                                               ERISA plans that covered employees of
                                                 Medicaid-eligible workers may become                       ERISA generally classifies AHPs as                   two or more employers. Nearly all of
                                                 eligible to enroll in AHPs under this                   MEWAs. Historically, a number of                        these covered more than 50 employees
                                                 proposal. Among 42 million individuals                  MEWAs have suffered from financial                      and therefore constituted large-group
                                                 under age 65 enrolled in Medicaid or                    mismanagement or abuse, often leaving                   employer plans for purposes of the
                                                 CHIP in 2015, 2 million were working                    participants and providers with unpaid                  ACA. A few reported as so-called ‘‘non-
                                                 owners or dependents thereof, and 6                     benefits and bills.51 Both DOL and State                plan’’ MEWAs, that provided or
                                                 million were employees of small                         insurance regulators have devoted                       purchased health or other welfare
                                                 businesses that did not offer insurance                 substantial resources to detecting and                  benefits for two or more ERISA plans
                                                 or dependents thereof.47                                correcting these problems, and in some                  sponsored by individual employers
                                                                                                         cases, prosecuting wrongdoers. Some of                  (most of which probably were small-
                                                 1.9. The Uninsured                                      these entities attempt to evade oversight               group plans for ACA purposes). Some of
                                                                                                         and enforcement actions by claiming to                  these might qualify to begin operating as
                                                    Twenty-eight million individuals in
                                                                                                         be something other than MEWAs, such                     ‘‘plan-MEWAs’’ (or AHPs) under this
                                                 the U.S. lacked health insurance
                                                                                                         as collectively-bargained multiemployer                 proposed rule. This proposed rule is
                                                 coverage in 2015.48 Because AHPs often
                                                                                                         ERISA plans. To address this continuing                 intended to facilitate the establishment
                                                 can offer more affordable alternatives to
                                                                                                         risk, the ACA gave DOL expanded                         of more new plan-MEWAs/AHPs, all of
                                                 individual and small group insurance
                                                                                                         authority to monitor MEWAs and                          which would be required to report
                                                 policies, it is possible that this proposed
                                                                                                         intervene when MEWAs are headed for                     annually to the Department.
                                                 rule will extend insurance coverage to
                                                                                                         trouble, and both DOL and State                            Most reporting MEWAs operate in
                                                 some otherwise uninsured individual
                                                                                                         enforcement efforts are ongoing.                        more than one State, and a handful
                                                 families and small groups. Of the 28                       ERISA requires MEWAs to report
                                                 million uninsured, approximately 3                                                                              operate in more than 20 States. In 2013,
                                                                                                         certain information annually to the                     46 MEWAs reported expanding
                                                 million are working owners or
                                                 dependents thereof and an additional 8                     50 See for example: (1) Thomas Buchmueller and
                                                                                                                                                                 operations into one or more new States.
                                                 million are employees of small                          John DiNardo, ‘‘Did Community Rating Induce an
                                                                                                                                                                 States with the most plan-MEWAs/
                                                 businesses that do not offer insurance or               Adverse Selection Death Spiral? Evidence from           AHPs in 2012 included California (147),
                                                 dependents thereof.49 It is likely that                 New York, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut,                Texas (106), and New York (100). Only
                                                                                                         ‘‘American Economic Review 2002, 92(1), 280–294,        one had fewer than 20 (South Dakota
                                                 some of these uninsured will become                     finding little net effect.’’’’ (2) Mark A. Hall,
                                                 eligible for an AHP under this proposed                 ‘‘HIPPA’s Small-Group Access Laws: Win, Loss, or        had 18). MEWAs were most likely to be
                                                 rule.                                                   Draw,’’ Cato Journal 2002 22(1), 71–83, generally
                                                                                                         calling the results a ‘‘draw.’’ (3) Susan M. Gates,       52 ERISA requires any plan MEWA/AHP (a
                                                    Past State and Federal reforms that                  Kanika Kapur, and Pinar Karaca-Mandic, ‘‘State          MEWA that is also an ERISA plan) to file an
                                                 tightened or loosened individual and                    Health Insurance Mandates, Consumer Directed            additional report annually with the Department.
                                                 small group market rules may,                           Health Plans, and Health Savings Account: Are           This is the same annual report filed by all ERISA
                                                                                                         They a Panacea for Small Businesses,’’ Chapter 3 in     plans that include 100 or more participants or hold
                                                 according to various studies, have                      In the Name of Entrepreneurship: The Logic and          plan assets, filed using Form 5500. However, while
                                                 changed the prices paid and policies                    Effects of Special Treatment for Small Businesses,      more than 90 percent of 2012 Form M1 filers
                                                 selected by different businesses,                       Susan M. Gates and Kristin J Leuschner, eds., Rand      reported that they were plan MEWAs, only a bit
                                                                                                         Corporation, 2007, finding little effect. (4) Sudha
                                                 somewhat improved access for targeted                   Xirasagar, Carleen H. Stoskopf, James R. Hussey,
                                                                                                                                                                 more than one-half of these entities also filed Form
                                                 groups (potentially at others’ expense),                                                                        5500 for that year. Among those that did, frequently
                                                                                                         Michael E. Samuels, William R. Shrader, and Ruth        some of the information reported across the two
                                                 and/or prompted some individuals or                     P. Saunders, ‘‘The Impact of State’ Small Group         forms was inconsistent. These reporting
                                                 small businesses to acquire or drop                     Health Insurance Reforms on Uninsurance Rates,’’
                                                                                                                                                                 inconsistencies raise questions about the reliability
                                                                                                         Journal of Health and Social Policy 2005, 20(3),
                                                 insurance, but had little net effect on                 finding little effect. (5) James R. Baumgardner and
                                                                                                                                                                 of MEWAs’ compliance with ERISA’s reporting
                                                                                                                                                                 requirements and the reliability of the information
                                                                                                         Stuart A Hagen, ‘‘Predicting Response to Regulatory
                                                                                                                                                                 recounted here.
                                                    46 H.R. 1 of the 115th Congress, enacted December    Change in the Small Group Health Insurance
                                                                                                                                                                   53 ‘‘Analysis of Form M–1 Data for Filing Years
                                                 22, 2017 will eliminate the shared responsibility       Market: The Case of Association Health Plans and
                                                                                                         Healthmarts,’’ Inquiry 2001/2002, 38(4), 351–364,       2010–2013,’’ September 23, 2014. https://
                                                 payment for failure to maintain health insurance                                                                www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/researchers/
                                                 coverage effective beginning in 2019. AHPs, by          predicting small effects.
                                                                                                            51 For discussions of this history, see: (1) U.S.    analysis/health-and-welfare/summit2014.pdf. A
                                                 offering eligible individuals more affordable options                                                           small number of new multiemployer welfare plans
                                                 than are available in individual markets, might         Gov’t Accountability Office, GAO–92–40, ‘‘State
                                                                                                         Need Labor’s Help Regulating Multiple Employer          that have been in operation for less than three years
                                                 reduce somewhat any potential increase in the                                                                   also are required to submit such reports. Such
                                                 uninsured population that could result from             Welfare Arrangements.’’, March 1992, available at
                                                                                                         http://www.gao.gov/assets/220/215647.pdf; (2) U.S.      multiemployer plans, which exist pursuant to
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                                                 elimination of the tax payment. At the same time,                                                               collective bargaining agreements between one or
                                                 however, such elimination might prompt some             Gov’t Accountability Office, GAO–04–312,
                                                                                                         ‘‘Employers and Individuals Are Vulnerable to           more employee organizations and two or more
                                                 individuals who would have joined AHPs to remain                                                                employers, are not subject to ERISA’s MEWA
                                                                                                         Unauthorized or Bogus Entities Selling Coverage.’’
                                                 uninsured instead.                                                                                              provisions (other than the reporting requirement),
                                                    47 DOL calculations based on the Abstract of
                                                                                                         February 2004, available at http://www.gao.gov/
                                                                                                         new.items/d04312.pdf; and Mila Kofman and               and are not affected by this regulation. These
                                                 Auxiliary Data for the March 2016 Annual Social         Jennifer Libster, ‘‘Turbulent Past, Uncertain Future:   multiemployer plans made up just 2 percent of all
                                                 and Economic Supplement to the Current                  Is It Time to Re-evaluate Regulation of Self-Insured    reporting entities in 2013. Because of their
                                                 Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.            Multiple Employer Arrangements?’’, Journal of           inclusion among the reports, the statistics presented
                                                    48 Id.
                                                                                                         Insurance Regulation, 2005, Vol. 23, Issue 3, p. 17–    here somewhat overstate the size of the true MEWA
                                                    49 Id.                                               33.                                                     universe.



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                                                 632                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 self-insured in certain western States                  likely to be resistant to abuse.                       10 years to properly oversee AHPs.56
                                                 including Wyoming (37 percent),                         Nevertheless, the flexibility afforded                 Together these budget impacts would
                                                 Oklahoma (31 percent), Montana (30                      AHPs under this proposal could                         have increased the federal deficit by
                                                 percent), and North Dakota (28 percent).                introduce more opportunities for                       $317 million over 10 years.
                                                    About one-fourth of reporting MEWAs                  mismanagement or abuse, increasing                       Today, consequent to the ACA, many
                                                 are self-insured in all the States in                   potential oversight demands on the                     individuals who in 2005 might have
                                                 which they operate, and another 9                       Department and State regulators.                       been uninsured instead are enrolled in
                                                 percent are self-insured in some States.                                                                       Medicaid or are insured and receive
                                                 (The remaining majority does not self-                  1.11. Federal Budget Impacts
                                                                                                                                                                subsidies on individual Exchanges, and
                                                 insure and instead purchases insurance                     The proposal is likely to have                      therefore would trade existing subsidies
                                                 from issuers in all States in which they                offsetting effects on the budget, with                 for potential new tax subsidies when
                                                 operate.) For MEWAs for which the type                  some increasing the deficit and others                 joining AHPs. Market forces generally
                                                 of benefits offered could be determined,                reducing the deficit. On balance, deficit-             favor individuals capturing the larger
                                                 nearly all offered health insurance, and                increasing effects are likely to dominate,             available subsidy, so it is likely that
                                                 many offered other, additional welfare                  making the proposal’s net impact on the                AHPs will mostly enroll higher income
                                                 benefits, such as dental or vision                      federal budget negative.                               individuals, whose net subsidies will
                                                 benefits, or life or disability insurance.                 Approximately 906,000 individuals                   increase, adding to the federal deficit.
                                                    MEWAs’ annual reports filed with the                 who are insured on the Exchanges and                   Resources allocated to support the
                                                 Department must indicate whether they                   eligible for subsidies, and                            Departments’ efforts to prevent and
                                                 are in compliance with a number of                      approximately 2 million Medicaid                       correct potential mismanagement and
                                                 ERISA’s minimum health plan                             enrollees, are working owners or                       abuse could add more to it. If, however,
                                                 standards, and with ERISA’s general                     dependents thereof. An additional 2                    AHPs do enroll some Medicaid
                                                 requirement that plans hold assets in                   million and 6 million, respectively, are               enrollees or individuals receiving large
                                                 trust. Nearly none reported lack of                     employees of small businesses that do                  subsidies on individual Exchanges,
                                                 compliance with the former, but 13                      not offer insurance or dependents                      savings from these impacts might offset
                                                 percent reported that they did not                      thereof.54 As of February 2017, 10.3                   a portion of these deficit increases.
                                                 comply with the trust requirement.                      million individuals were enrolled, and
                                                    This proposed rule includes                          paid their premiums, on a Federal or                   1.12. Regulatory Alternatives
                                                 provisions intended to protect AHPs                     State-based Exchange. Of these                            In developing this proposal DOL
                                                 against mismanagement and abuse. It                     individuals, 8.7 million received tax                  considered various alternative
                                                 requires that the group or association                  credits, and 5.9 million were receiving                approaches.
                                                 has a formal organizational structure                   cost-sharing reduction subsidies. The                     • Retaining existing rules and
                                                 with a governing body and has by-laws                   average advanced premium tax credit                    interpretations. DOL elected to propose
                                                 or other similar indications of formality               for these individuals was $371 per                     relaxing existing rules and
                                                 appropriate for the legal form in which                 month.55 Forty-two million individuals                 interpretations because they have
                                                 the group or association is operated, and               under age 65 were covered by Medicaid.                 proven to impede the establishment and
                                                 that the functions and activities of the                   In 2005, the Congressional Budget                   growth of potentially beneficial AHPs.
                                                 group or association, including the                     Office (CBO) estimated the potential                   Existing interpretations generally block
                                                 establishment and maintenance of the                    budget impacts of a 2005 legislative                   working owners who lack employees
                                                 group health plan, are controlled by its                proposal to expand AHPs. Under the                     from joining AHPs. Instead these
                                                 employer members. These requirements                    2005 legislation and contemporaneous                   individuals and their families are
                                                 are intended to ensure that the                         law, many individuals joining AHPs                     limited to options available in
                                                 organizations are bona fide                             previously would have been uninsured                   individual markets where premiums
                                                 organizations with the organizational                   or purchased individual policies                       may be higher and choice narrower than
                                                 structure necessary to act ‘‘in the                     without benefit of any subsidies; by
                                                 interests’’ of participating employers                                                                         that which AHPs can sometimes
                                                                                                         joining AHPs they stood to gain                        provide. The existing commonality
                                                 with respect to employee benefit plans                  potentially large subsidies in the form of
                                                 as ERISA requires. The proposed rule                                                                           requirement sometimes prevents
                                                                                                         tax exclusions. CBO predicted that the                 associations from achieving sufficient
                                                 also requires that the AHP’s member                     legislation, by increasing spending on
                                                 companies control the AHP. This                                                                                scale in local markets to effectively
                                                                                                         employer-provided insurance, would                     establish and operate efficient AHPs.
                                                 requirement is necessary both to satisfy                reduce federal tax revenue by $261
                                                 ERISA’s requirement that the group or                                                                          The existing uncertainty as to the
                                                                                                         million over 10 years, including a $76                 sufficiency of a common industry to
                                                 association must act for the direct                     million reduction in Social Security
                                                 employers in relation to the employee                                                                          permit establishment of an AHP may
                                                                                                         payroll taxes. CBO also predicted that                 prevent the formation of more
                                                 benefit plan, and to prevent formation of               AHPs would displace some Medicaid
                                                 commercial enterprises that claim to be                                                                        nationwide AHPs. And, the existing
                                                                                                         coverage and thereby reduce federal                    requirement that associations exist for
                                                 AHPs but that operate like traditional                  spending by $80 million over 10 years.
                                                 issuers selling insurance in the                                                                               purposes other than providing health
                                                                                                         Finally, according to CBO, the                         benefits prevents the establishment of
                                                 employer marketplace and may be                         legislation would have required DOL to
                                                 vulnerable to abuse. In addition, the                                                                          beneficial AHPs in circumstances where
                                                                                                         hire 150 additional employees and                      no other compelling reason exists to
                                                 proposal would require that only                        spend an additional $136 million over
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                                                 employer members may participate in                                                                            establish and maintain an association.
                                                 the AHP and health coverage is not                         54 DOL calculations based on the Abstract of
                                                                                                                                                                By addressing these requirements, this
                                                 made available other than to or in                      Auxiliary Data for the March 2016 Annual Social
                                                                                                                                                                proposal aims to promote the
                                                 connection with a member of the                         and Economic Supplement to the Current                 establishment and growth of AHPs and
                                                 association. Together, these criteria are               Population Survey, U.S. Department of Labor.
                                                                                                            55 CMS, ‘‘2017 Effectuated Enrollment Snapshot,’’     56 CBO cost estimate, H.R. 525 Small Business
                                                 intended to ensure that associations                    June 12, 2017. https://downloads.cms.gov/files/        Health Fairness Act of 2005. April 8, 2005. https://
                                                 sponsoring AHPs are bona fide                           effectuated-enrollment-snapshot-report-06-12-          www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/109th-congress-
                                                 employment-based associations and                       17.pdf                                                 2005-2006/costestimate/hr52500.pdf



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                              633

                                                 optimize small businesses’ access to                    stable risk pools, pursue administrative               3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                 them.                                                   savings, and offer small businesses                       The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
                                                    • Relaxing the control requirement.                  more, and more affordable, health                      U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes
                                                 The proposal generally requires that                    insurance options. In light of that                    certain requirements with respect to
                                                 association members control the AHP.                    objective, imposing the product and                    federal rules that are subject to the
                                                 Relaxing this requirement might                         pricing restrictions that distinguish the              notice and comment requirements of
                                                 encourage more and faster                               individual and small group markets
                                                                                                                                                                section 553(b) of the Administrative
                                                 establishment and growth of AHPs, as                    from the large group market would have
                                                                                                                                                                Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and
                                                 entrepreneurs identify and seize                        been too limiting. The flexibility also
                                                 opportunities to reap and share with                                                                           which are likely to have a significant
                                                                                                         may increase AHPs’ market reach,
                                                 enrollees the economic benefits AHPs                                                                           economic impact on a substantial
                                                                                                         making more affordable options
                                                 can deliver. DOL believes, however, that                                                                       number of small entities. Unless an
                                                                                                         available to more small businesses than
                                                 relaxing this requirement would                                                                                agency determines that a proposal is not
                                                                                                         would be possible without it. This
                                                 increase the risk that AHPs would be                                                                           likely to have a significant economic
                                                                                                         proposal would mitigate AHPs’
                                                 vulnerable to mismanagement or abuse.                                                                          impact on a substantial number of small
                                                                                                         potential to segment risk and destabilize
                                                 Additionally, the Department’s                                                                                 entities, section 603 of the RFA requires
                                                                                                         individual and small group markets by
                                                 authority to loosen this requirement is                 applying nondiscrimination rules that                  the agency to present an initial
                                                 unclear in light of ERISA’s text.                       bar them from conditioning eligibility,                regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) of
                                                    • Including only fully-insured AHPs.                 benefits, or premiums on the health                    the proposed rule. The Department has
                                                 DOL considered prohibiting broadening                   status of small businesses’ employees.                 determined that this proposed rule,
                                                 the circumstances under which an AHP                    Some stakeholders argue that                           which would broaden the criteria for
                                                 is treated as a single plan under ERISA                 nondiscrimination provisions                           determining when employers may join
                                                 only for fully insured AHPs.                            themselves unduly restrict AHPs and                    together in a group or association to
                                                 Historically, self-insured MEWAs have                   could prevent AHP formation (and                       sponsor a group health plan under
                                                 been particularly vulnerable to financial               hence lower the number of insured                      ERISA, is likely to have a significant
                                                 mismanagement and abuse. MEWA                           people). DOL considered, but rejected,                 impact on a substantial number of small
                                                 promoters sometimes have used self-                     omitting the nondiscrimination                         entities. Therefore, the Department
                                                 insurance both to evade State oversight                 provisions in part. These provisions,                  provides its IRFA of the proposed rule,
                                                 and to maximize opportunities for                       among other functions, serve to                        below.
                                                 abusive financial self-dealing, often                   distinguish AHPs from commercial                       Need for and Objectives of the Rule
                                                 with highly negative consequences for                   insurers as a legal matter.
                                                 their enrollees. Nonetheless, DOL                                                                                 This proposed rule is intended and
                                                 recognizes that well-managed self-                      1.13. Conclusion                                       expected to deliver benefits primarily to
                                                 insured AHPs may be able to realize                        This proposed rule broadens the                     the employees of small businesses and
                                                 efficiencies that insured AHPs cannot.                  conditions under which AHPs will be                    their families, as well as the small
                                                 In light of this potential, and                         treated as large group health benefit                  businesses themselves. As detailed
                                                 considering the enforcement tools that                  plans under ERISA, the ACA and State                   earlier, this proposed rule would
                                                 the ACA added to DOL’s arsenal, DOL                     law. Under the proposal, AHPs                          encourage the establishment and growth
                                                 elected to allow AHPs to continue to                    generally can offer small businesses                   of AHPs. AHPs may offer small
                                                 self-insure under this proposal. This                   more, and more affordable, benefit                     businesses more, and more affordable,
                                                 provision will serve to further promote                 options than are available to them in the              health benefit options than otherwise
                                                 the establishment and growth of                         individual and small group markets, in                 are available to them in the individual
                                                 effective AHPs, but it will also compel                 part through the creation of various                   and small group markets, resulting in
                                                 DOL to commit additional resources to                   efficiencies. AHPs’ flexibility to tailor              employer-sponsored coverage for more
                                                 AHPs’ oversight.                                        products and adjust prices to more                     Americans, and more diverse and
                                                    • Limiting or increasing AHPs’                       closely reflect expected claims will also              affordable insurance options.
                                                 product and/or price flexibility. As                    improve social welfare for AHP                         Affected Small Entities
                                                 noted earlier, this proposal allows small               participants. Although they may limit
                                                 businesses to band together to obtain                   AHPs’ appeal and thus we are seeking                     Potential beneficiaries of savings and
                                                 advantages that attend the provision of                 comment on them, rules barring                         increased choice from AHP coverage
                                                 insurance by a large employer,                          discrimination based on health status                  under the proposed rule include:
                                                 including access to the large-group                     will moderate the incentives for                         • Some of the 25 million individuals
                                                 market. The large-group market is not                   relatively healthy people                              under age 65 who currently are covered
                                                 subject to certain product and pricing                  disproportionately to leave the                        in individual markets, including
                                                 restrictions that govern the individual                 individual and small group markets,                    approximately 3 million who are sole
                                                 and small group markets. As noted                       which would further destabilize local                  proprietors or dependents thereof, and
                                                 earlier, some stakeholders expressed                    individual and small group markets.                    an additional 6 million who are
                                                 their concern that allowing small                       Operational risks may demand                           employees of small businesses or
                                                 businesses to escape these restrictions                 increased federal and State oversight.                 dependents thereof.
                                                 could lead to excessive risk                            The proposal may increase the federal                    • The 25 million individuals under
                                                 segmentation and might destabilize                      deficit.                                               age 65 who currently are covered in
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                                                 some local individual and small group                                                                          small group markets.
                                                 markets. The Department considered,                     2. Paperwork Reduction Act                               • Some of the 28 million individuals
                                                 but rejected, subjecting AHPs to                           The proposed rule is not subject to the             under age 65 who currently lack
                                                 constraints similar to those applicable to              requirements of the Paperwork                          insurance, including 2 million who are
                                                 the individual and small group markets.                 Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA 95) (44                     sole proprietors or dependents thereof,
                                                 The goal of the proposed rule is to allow               U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), because it does not              and an additional 5 million who are
                                                 AHPs to leverage advantages available                   contain a collection of information as                 employees of small businesses or
                                                 to large employers to assemble large,                   defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(3).                          dependents thereof.


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                                                 634                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   • Some of the 1.6 million private,                    AHPs will be treated as large group                    7. Executive Order 13771 Reducing
                                                 small-firm establishments (those with                   health benefit plans under ERISA, the                  Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
                                                 fewer than 50 employees) that currently                 ACA and State law. In so doing, it                     Costs
                                                 offer insurance and the 4 million that do               makes available to more small                             Executive Order 13771, titled
                                                 not.                                                    businesses some of the advantages                      Reducing Regulation and Controlling
                                                 Impact of the Rule                                      currently enjoyed by large employer-                   Regulatory Costs, was issued on January
                                                                                                         sponsored plans.                                       30, 2017. This proposed rule is expected
                                                    By expanding AHPs, this proposal
                                                                                                                                                                to be an EO 13771 deregulatory action,
                                                 would provide more, and more                            6. Federalism Statement
                                                                                                                                                                because it would expand small
                                                 affordable, health insurance options for
                                                                                                            Executive Order 13132 outlines                      businesses’ access to more lightly
                                                 small businesses, thereby yielding
                                                                                                         fundamental principles of federalism,                  regulated and more affordable health
                                                 economic benefits for participating
                                                                                                         and requires the adherence to specific                 insurance options, by removing certain
                                                 small businesses. The proposal includes
                                                                                                         criteria by federal agencies in the                    restrictions on the establishment and
                                                 provisions to mitigate any risk of
                                                                                                         process of their formulation and                       maintenance of AHPs under ERISA.
                                                 negative spillovers for other small
                                                 businesses. The proposal may impact                     implementation of policies that have                   List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 2510
                                                 individual and small group issuers                      ‘‘substantial direct effects’’ on the                    Employee benefit plans, Pensions.
                                                 whose enrollees might switch to AHPs,                   States, the relationship between the
                                                 some of which would likely be small                                                                              For the reasons stated in the
                                                                                                         national government and States, or on
                                                 entities.                                                                                                      preamble, the Department of Labor
                                                                                                         the distribution of power and
                                                                                                                                                                proposes to amend 29 CFR part 2510 as
                                                 Duplication, Overlap, and Conflict With                 responsibilities among the various                     follows:
                                                 Other Rules and Regulations                             levels of government. Federal agencies
                                                                                                         promulgating regulations that have                     PART 2510—DEFINITIONS OF TERMS
                                                   The proposed actions would not
                                                                                                         federalism implications must consult                   USED IN SUBCHAPTERS C, D, E, F, G,
                                                 conflict with any relevant federal rules.
                                                                                                         with State and local officials and                     AND L OF THIS CHAPTER
                                                 As discussed above, the proposed rule
                                                                                                         describe the extent of their consultation
                                                 would merely broaden the conditions                                                                            ■  1. The authority citation for part 2510
                                                 under which an association can act as                   and the nature of the concerns of State
                                                                                                         and local officials in the preamble to the             is revised to read as follows:
                                                 an ‘‘employer’’ under ERISA for
                                                                                                         final rule.                                              Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1002(2), 1002(5),
                                                 purposes of offering a group health plan
                                                                                                                                                                1002(21), 1002(37), 1002(38), 1002(40), 1031,
                                                 and would not change AHPs’ status as                       In the Department’s view, these                     and 1135; Secretary of Labor’s Order No. 1–
                                                 large group plans and MEWAs, under                      proposed regulations would have                        2011, 77 FR 1088 (Jan. 9, 2012); Sec. 2510.3–
                                                 ERISA, the ACA, and State law.                          federalism implications because they                   101 also issued under sec. 102 of
                                                 4. Congressional Review Act                             would have direct effects on the States,               Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 43 FR
                                                                                                         the relationship between the national                  47713 (Oct. 17, 1978), E.O. 12108, 44 FR
                                                    The proposed rule is subject to the                  government and the States, and on the                  1065 (Jan. 3, 1979) and 29 U.S.C. 1135 note.
                                                 Congressional Review Act (CRA)                          distribution of power and                              Sec. 2510.3–38 is also issued under sec. 1,
                                                 provisions of the Small Business                                                                               Pub. L. 105–72, 111 Stat. 1457 (1997).
                                                                                                         responsibilities among various levels of
                                                 Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of                                                                         ■ 2. Section 2510.3–3 is amended by
                                                                                                         government. The Department believes
                                                 1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and, if                                                                            revising paragraph (c) introductory text
                                                 finalized, will be transmitted to                       these effects are limited, insofar as the
                                                                                                         proposal would not change AHPs’ status                 to read as follows:
                                                 Congress and the Comptroller General
                                                 for review. The proposed rule is a                      as large group plans and MEWAs, under                  § 2510.3–3   Employee benefit plan.
                                                 ‘‘major rule’’ as that term is defined in               ERISA, the ACA, and State law. As                      *     *     *    *    *
                                                 5 U.S.C. 804(2), because it is likely to                discussed above in this preamble,                        (c) Employees. For purposes of this
                                                 result in an annual effect on the                       because ERISA classifies AHPs as                       section and except as provided in
                                                 economy of $100 million or more.                        MEWAs, they generally are subject to                   § 2510.3–5(e):
                                                                                                         State insurance regulation. Specifically,              *     *     *    *    *
                                                 5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                         if an AHP is not fully insured, then                   ■ 3. Section 2510.3–5 is added to read
                                                    Title II of the Unfunded Mandates                    under section 514(b)(6)(A)(ii) of ERISA                as follows:
                                                 Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4)                      any State insurance law that regulates
                                                 requires each federal agency to prepare                 insurance may apply to the AHP to the                  § 2510.3–5   Employer.
                                                 a written statement assessing the effects               extent that such State law is not                        (a) In general. The purpose of this
                                                 of any federal mandate in a proposed or                 inconsistent with ERISA. If, on the other              section is to clarify which persons may
                                                 final agency rule that may result in an                 hand, an AHP is fully insured, section                 act as an ‘‘employer’’ within the
                                                 expenditure of $100 million or more                     514(b)(6)(A)(i) of ERISA provides that                 meaning of section 3(5) of the Act in
                                                 (adjusted annually for inflation with the               only those State insurance laws that                   sponsoring a multiple employer group
                                                 base year 1995) in any one year by State,               regulate the maintenance of specified                  health plan. Section 733(a)(1) defines
                                                 local, and tribal governments, in the                                                                          the term ‘‘group health plan,’’ in
                                                                                                         contribution and reserve levels may
                                                 aggregate, or by the private sector. For                                                                       relevant part, as an employee welfare
                                                                                                         apply to the AHP. The Department notes
                                                 purposes of the Unfunded Mandates                                                                              benefit plan to the extent that the plan
                                                                                                         that State rules vary widely in practice,
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                                                 Reform Act, as well as Executive Order                                                                         provides medical care to employees or
                                                 12875, this proposal does not include                   and many States regulate AHPs less                     their dependents through insurance,
                                                 any federal mandate that the                            stringently than individual or small                   reimbursement, or otherwise. The Act
                                                 Department expects would result in                      group insurance. The Department                        defines an ‘‘employee welfare benefit
                                                 such expenditures by State, local, or                   welcomes input from affected States,                   plan’’ in section 3(1), in relevant part, as
                                                 tribal governments, or the private sector.              including the NAIC and State insurance                 any plan, fund, or program established
                                                 This proposed rule would merely                         officials, regarding this assessment.                  or maintained by an employer,
                                                 broaden the conditions under which                                                                             employee organization, or by both an


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                  635

                                                 employer and an employee                                section 733(b)(2) of ERISA, or owned or                   (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 1,
                                                 organization, for the purpose of                        controlled by such a health insurance                  Association A’s exclusion of Restaurant B
                                                 providing certain listed welfare benefits               issuer.                                                from Association A discriminates on the
                                                                                                            (c) Commonality of interest.                        basis of claims history, which is a health
                                                 to participants or their beneficiaries. For
                                                                                                                                                                factor under § 2590.702(a)(1) of this chapter.
                                                 purposes of being able to establish and                 Commonality of interest of employer
                                                                                                                                                                Accordingly, Association A violates the
                                                 maintain a welfare benefit plan, an                     members of a group or association will                 requirement in paragraph (d)(1) of this
                                                 ‘‘employer’’ under section 3(5) of the                  be determined based on relevant facts                  section, and, therefore would not meet the
                                                 Act includes any person acting directly                 and circumstances and may be                           definition of a bona fide group or association
                                                 as an employer, or any person acting                    established by:                                        of employers under paragraph (b) of this
                                                 indirectly in the interest of an employer                  (1) Employers being in the same trade,              section.
                                                 in relation to an employee benefit plan.                industry, line of business or profession;                 Example 2. (i) Facts. Association C offers
                                                 A group or association of employers is                  or                                                     group health coverage to all members.
                                                                                                            (2) Employers having a principal                    According to the bylaws of Association C,
                                                 specifically identified in section 3(5) of                                                                     membership is subject to the following
                                                 the Act as a person able to act directly                place of business in a region that does
                                                                                                                                                                criteria: All members must have a principal
                                                 or indirectly in the interest of an                     not exceed the boundaries of the same                  place of business in a specified metropolitan
                                                 employer, including for purposes of                     State or the same metropolitan area                    area. Individual D is a sole proprietor whose
                                                 establishing or maintaining an employee                 (even if the metropolitan area includes                principal place of business is within the
                                                 welfare benefit plan.                                   more than one State).                                  specified area. As part of the membership
                                                    (b) Bona fide group or association of                   (d) Nondiscrimination. A bona fide                  application process, Individual D provides
                                                 employers. For purposes of Title I of the               group or association, and any health                   certain health information to Association C.
                                                 Act and this chapter, a bona fide group                 coverage offered by the bona fide group                After learning that Individual D has diabetes,
                                                                                                         or association, must comply with the                   based on D’s diabetes, Association C denies
                                                 or association of employers capable of
                                                                                                         nondiscrimination provisions of this                   Individual D’s membership application.
                                                 establishing a group health plan that is                                                                          (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 2,
                                                 an employee welfare benefit plan shall                  paragraph (d).
                                                                                                                                                                Association C’s exclusion of Individual D
                                                 include a group or association of                          (1) The group or association must not               because D has diabetes is a decision that
                                                 employers that meets the following                      condition employer membership in the                   discriminates on the basis of a medical
                                                 requirements:                                           group or association based on any                      condition, which is a health factor under
                                                    (1) The group or association exists for              health factor of an employee or                        § 2590.702(a)(1) of this chapter. Accordingly,
                                                 the purpose, in whole or in part, of                    employees or a former employee or                      Association C violates the requirement in
                                                 sponsoring a group health plan that it                  former employees of the employer                       paragraph (d)(1) of this section and would
                                                 offers to its employer members;                         member (or any employee’s family                       not meet the definition of a bona fide group
                                                    (2) Each employer member of the                      members or other beneficiaries), as                    or association of employers under paragraph
                                                                                                         defined in § 2590.702(a) of this chapter.              (b) of this section.
                                                 group or association participating in the                                                                         Example 3. (i) Facts. Association F offers
                                                 group health plan is a person acting                       (2) The group health plan sponsored
                                                                                                                                                                group health coverage to all plumbers
                                                 directly as an employer of at least one                 by the group or association must comply                working for plumbing companies in a State.
                                                 employee who is a participant covered                   with the rules of § 2590.702(b) of this                Plumbers employed by a plumbing company
                                                 under the plan;                                         chapter with respect to                                on a full-time basis (which is defined under
                                                    (3) The group or association has a                   nondiscrimination in rules for eligibility             the terms of the arrangement as regularly
                                                 formal organizational structure with a                  for benefits, subject to paragraph (d)(4)              working at least 30 hours a week) are eligible
                                                 governing body and has by-laws or other                 of this section.                                       for health coverage without a waiting period.
                                                 similar indications of formality;                          (3) The group health plan sponsored                 Plumbers employed by a plumbing company
                                                    (4) The functions and activities of the              by the group or association must comply                on a part-time basis (which is defined under
                                                                                                         with the rules of § 2590.702(c) of this                the terms of the arrangement as regularly
                                                 group or association, including the
                                                                                                         chapter with respect to                                working at least 10 hours per week, but less
                                                 establishment and maintenance of the                                                                           than 30 hours per week) are eligible for
                                                 group health plan, are controlled by its                nondiscrimination in premiums or                       health coverage after a 60-day waiting period.
                                                 employer members, either directly or                    contributions required by any                             (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 3, making
                                                 indirectly through the regular                          participant or beneficiary for coverage                a distinction between part-time versus full-
                                                 nomination and election of directors,                   under the plan, subject to paragraph                   time employment status is a permitted
                                                 officers, or other similar representatives              (d)(4) of this section.                                distinction between similarly situated
                                                 that control the group or association and                  (4) In applying the nondiscrimination               individuals under § 2590.702(d) of this
                                                 the establishment and maintenance of                    provisions of paragraphs (d)(2) and (3)                chapter, provided the distinction is not
                                                                                                         of this section, the group or association              directed at individuals under
                                                 the plan;
                                                                                                         may not treat different employer                       § 2590.702(d)(3) of this chapter. Accordingly,
                                                    (5) The employer members have a
                                                                                                                                                                the requirement that plumbers working part
                                                 commonality of interest as described in                 members of the group or association as
                                                                                                                                                                time must satisfy a waiting period for
                                                 paragraph (c) of this section;                          distinct groups of similarly-situated                  coverage is a rule for eligibility that does not
                                                    (6) The group or association does not                individuals.                                           violate § 2590.702(b) or, as a consequence,
                                                 make health coverage through the                           (5) The rules of this paragraph (d) are             paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
                                                 association available other than to                     illustrated by the following examples:                    Example 4. (i) Facts. Association G
                                                 employees and former employees of                         Example 1. (i) Facts. Association A offers           sponsors a group health plan, available to all
                                                 employer members and family members                     group health coverage to all members.                  employers doing business in Town H.
                                                 or other beneficiaries of those                         According to the bylaws of Association A,              Association G charges Business I more for
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                                                 employees and former employees;                         membership is subject to the following                 premiums than it charges other members
                                                    (7) The group or association and                     criteria: All members must be restaurants              because Business I employs several
                                                                                                         located in a specified area. Restaurant B,             individuals with chronic illnesses.
                                                 health coverage offered by the group or                                                                           (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 4,
                                                                                                         which is located within the specified area,
                                                 association complies with the                           has several employees with large health                Business I cannot be treated as a separate
                                                 nondiscrimination provisions of                         claims. Restaurant B applies for membership            group of similarly situated individuals from
                                                 paragraph (d) of this section; and                      in Association A, and is denied membership             other members under paragraph (d)(4) of this
                                                    (8) The group or association is not a                based on the claims experience of its                  section. Therefore, charging Business I more
                                                 health insurance issuer described in                    employees.                                             for premiums based on one or more health



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                                                 636                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 4 / Friday, January 5, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                 factors of the employees of Business I                  coverage offered to employer members                   ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
                                                 violates § 2590.702(c) of this chapter and,             through the association available other                AGENCY
                                                 consequently, the requirement in paragraph              than to employees and former
                                                 (d)(3) of this section.                                                                                        40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
                                                    Example 5. (i) Facts. Association J                  employees of employer members and
                                                 sponsors a group health plan that is available          the family members or other                            [EPA–R07–OAR–2017–0734; FRL 9972–64–
                                                 to all members. According to the bylaws of              beneficiaries of those employees and                   Region 7]
                                                 Association J, membership is open to any                former employees.
                                                 entity whose principal place of business is in                                                                 Air Plan Approval and Air Quality
                                                 State K, which has only one major                          (2) The term ‘‘working owner’’ as used              Designation; MO; Redesignation of the
                                                 metropolitan area, the capital city of State K.         in this paragraph (e) means any                        Missouri Portion of the St. Louis
                                                 Members whose principal place of business               individual:                                            Missouri-Illinois Area to Attainment of
                                                 is in the capital city of State K are charged              (i) Who has an ownership right of any               the 1997 Annual Standard for Fine
                                                 more for premiums than members whose
                                                 principal place of business is outside of the           nature in a trade or business, whether                 Particulate Matter and Approval of
                                                 capital city.                                           incorporated or unincorporated,                        Associated Maintenance Plan
                                                    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 5, making           including partners and other self-                     AGENCY: Environmental Protection
                                                 a distinction between members whose                     employed individuals;                                  Agency (EPA).
                                                 principal place of business is in the capital
                                                 city of State K, as compared to some other                 (ii) Who is earning wages or self-                  ACTION: Advanced notice of proposed
                                                 area in State K, is a permitted distinction             employment income from the trade or                    rulemaking.
                                                 between similarly situated individuals under            business for providing personal services
                                                 § 2590.702(d) of this chapter, provided the             to the trade or business;                              SUMMARY:    The Environmental Protection
                                                 distinction is not directed at individuals                                                                     Agency (EPA) is issuing this Advanced
                                                 under § 2590.702(d)(3) of this chapter.                    (iii) Who is not eligible to participate            Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR)
                                                 Accordingly, Association J’s rule for charging          in any subsidized group health plan                    to inform the public of currently
                                                 different premiums based on principal place             maintained by any other employer of                    available information that will be used
                                                 of business does not violate paragraph (d)(3)           the individual or of the spouse of the                 by the Administrator to issue a
                                                 of this section.                                        individual; and                                        subsequent action to propose
                                                    Example 6. (i) Facts. Association L                                                                         redesignation of the Missouri portion of
                                                 sponsors a group health plan, available to all             (iv) Who either:
                                                                                                                                                                the St. Louis MO-IL nonattainment area
                                                 members. According to the bylaws of                        (A) Works at least 30 hours per week
                                                 Association L, membership is open to any                                                                       for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS, (hereafter
                                                                                                         or at least 120 hours per month                        referred to as the ‘‘St. Louis area’’ or
                                                 entity whose principal place of business is in          providing personal services to the trade
                                                 State M. Sole Proprietor N’s principal place                                                                   ‘‘area’’). On September 2, 2011,
                                                 of business is in City O, within State M. It            or business, or                                        Missouri, through the Missouri
                                                 is the only member whose principal place of                (B) Has earned income from such                     Department of Natural Resources
                                                 business is in City O, and it is otherwise              trade or business that at least equals the             (MDNR) submitted a request for EPA to
                                                 similarly situated with respect to all other            working owner’s cost of coverage for                   redesignate the Missouri portion of the
                                                 members of the association. After learning                                                                     St. Louis MO-IL nonattainment area to
                                                 that Sole Proprietor N has been diagnosed
                                                                                                         participation by the working owner and
                                                                                                         any covered beneficiaries in the group                 attainment for the 1997 Annual National
                                                 with cancer, based on the cancer diagnosis,
                                                 Association L changes its premium structure             health plan sponsored by the group or                  Ambient Air Quality Standards
                                                 to charge higher premiums for members                   association in which the individual is                 (NAAQS) for fine particulate matter
                                                 whose principal place of business is in City            participating.                                         (PM2.5) and approve a state
                                                 O.                                                                                                             implementation plan (SIP) revision
                                                    (ii) Conclusion. In this Example 6, cancer              (3) Absent knowledge to the contrary,               containing a maintenance plan for the
                                                 is a health factor under § 2590.702(a) of this          the group or association sponsoring the                Missouri portion of the area. In advance
                                                 chapter. Making a distinction based on a                group health plan may reasonably rely                  of any potential rulemaking to address
                                                 health factor, between members that are                 on written representations from the                    the state of Missouri’s request, EPA is
                                                 otherwise similarly situated is in this case a          individual seeking to participate as a                 specifically requesting early input and
                                                 distinction directed at an individual under             working owner as a basis for concluding
                                                 § 2590.702(d)(3) of this chapter and is not a                                                                  comments on its interpretation that
                                                 permitted distinction. Accordingly, by
                                                                                                         that the conditions in paragraph (e)(2)                currently available data support a
                                                 charging higher premiums to members whose               are satisfied.                                         finding that the area will be attaining
                                                 principal place of business is City O,                                                                         the 1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS based
                                                                                                         Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson,
                                                 Association L violates § 2590.702(c) of this                                                                   on air quality monitoring data from
                                                 chapter and, consequently, paragraph (d)(4)             Deputy Assistant Secretary, Employee                   2015–2017, and on EPA’s advanced
                                                 of this section.                                        Benefits Security Administration, Department           notice of its expectation that the state’s
                                                                                                         of Labor.
                                                   (e) Dual treatment of working owners                                                                         plan for maintaining the 1997 Annual
                                                                                                         [FR Doc. 2017–28103 Filed 1–4–18; 8:45 am]             PM2.5 NAAQS for the St. Louis Area
                                                 as employers and employees—(1) A
                                                 working owner of a trade or business                    BILLING CODE 4510–29–P                                 (maintenance plan) including the
                                                 may qualify as both an employer and as                                                                         associated motor vehicle emission
                                                 an employee of the trade or business for                                                                       budgets (MVEBs) for nitrogen oxides
                                                 purposes of the requirements in                                                                                (NOX) and PM2.5 for the years 2008–
                                                 paragraph (b) of this section, including                                                                       2025 is approvable. EPA will take any
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 paragraph (b)(2) that each employer                                                                            information received from this ANPR
                                                 member of the group or association                                                                             into consideration when developing a
                                                 participating in the group health plan                                                                         proposed action for redesignating the
                                                 must be a person acting directly as an                                                                         Missouri portion of the St. Louis Area
                                                 employer of one or more employees                                                                              to attainment for the 1997 Annual PM2.5
                                                 who are participants covered under the                                                                         NAAQS.
                                                 plan, and paragraph (b)(6) that the group                                                                      DATES: Comments must be received on
                                                 or association does not make health                                                                            or before February 5, 2018.


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Document Created: 2018-10-26 09:31:26
Document Modified: 2018-10-26 09:31:26
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionProposed rule.
DatesComments are due on or before March 6, 2018.
ContactElizabeth Schumacher, Office of Health Plan Standards and Compliance Assistance, Employee Benefits Security Administration, (202) 693-8335 or Janet K. Song, Office of Regulations and Interpretations, Employee Benefits Security Administration, (202) 693-8500. These are not toll free numbers.
FR Citation83 FR 614 
RIN Number1210-AB85
CFR AssociatedEmployee Benefit Plans and Pensions

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