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Senate eyes 25-employee threshold for health mandate
Washington Business Journal ^ | 07/13/2009 | Kent Hoover

Posted on 07/13/2009 8:37:15 AM PDT by RightFighter

Businesses with 25 employees or more would be required to offer health insurance or pay $750 a year per full-time worker to the federal government, under health care reform legislation being considered in the Senate.

A "play or pay" employer mandate has been looming for months, but Democrats on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee finally defined how small a business would need to be in order to be exempted from the requirement.

Most business groups oppose requiring employers to provide health care or pay a fee to the government, even if there is an exemption for small businesses. They contend it would kill jobs and hurt businesses that are struggling to survive in a tough economy. Plus, they say the mandate would do nothing to address health care's underlying problem: It costs too much. Reduce the price of health insurance, they argue, and more businesses would provide it.

Employer responsibility under Senate legislation Employers who don't offer coverage to full-time workers would be assessed $750 a year for each employee Employers who don't offer coverage to part-time workers would be assessed $375 a year for each employee Employers must pay at least 60 percent of their employees' premiums to avoid the assessment Firms with fewer than 25 employees would be exempt from the assessment Source: Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee

Lynn Schurman, owner of Cold Spring Bakery in Cold Spring, Minn., would welcome an employer mandate, however. She has about 60 full-time and part-time employees, and is struggling to continue to provide health insurance coverage to them.

"It's part of my value system -- I want to treat employees fairly," Schurman said.

Her business pays about $100,000 a year for health insurance, she said. Competitors that don't cover their employees get an unfair advantage, she said.

"They should have some responsibility to provide insurance to their employees also," she said.

Schurman recently traveled to Washington, D.C., to talk to members of Congress about the need for health care reform. She is a member of the Main Street Alliance, a coalition of small business owners that supports giving individuals and small employers the option of getting health insurance through a government-run plan. This would help reduce costs by providing competition to private insurers, the alliance contends.

Alliance member Deanne Anderson, owner of Waterstone Spa in Ashland, Ore., agrees on the need for a public plan, but she has "mixed feelings" about an employer mandate. Her business would be exempt from the mandate in the Senate HELP Committee bill, but she said even businesses with more than 25 employees often can't afford health insurance or a $750-per-worker assessment.

"I really would feel sad to think that some businesses might go under after years of hard work, struggling to stay alive in this economy, because they were mandated to do something that they really can't afford to do," Anderson said.

Mandate really about revenue?

About 90 percent of businesses with 25 or more workers provided health insurance in 2008, according to a study conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research & Educational Trust.

The coverage rate dropped to 78 percent for businesses with 10 to 24 employees, and 49 percent for firms with three to nine employees. So most of the businesses that don't currently provide insurance would be exempt from the Senate HELP Committee's "play or pay" mandate. The Congressional Budget Office concluded the bill would have little impact on the number of Americans who receive insurance through their employer.

An employer mandate isn't about expanding coverage, said Neil Trautwein, vice president and employee benefits policy counsel for the National Retail Federation.

"I think it's about raising revenues," he said.

He fears many members of Congress want employers to pay for health insurance even if their workers get it somewhere else.

Massachusetts collected a lot less revenue than it expected when it imposed a $295-per-employee tax on businesses that don't provide adequate health insurance, said Jon Hurst, president of the Retailers Association of Massachusetts. (Businesses with 10 or fewer full-time employees were exempt from the state's "play or pay" requirement.)

The response by state officials was to propose increasing the coverage requirements for businesses in order to generate more tax revenue, Hurst said.

Costs went up in Massachusetts

The biggest problem with the Massachusetts health care reform effort, however, was that it did nothing to lower the cost of health insurance for small employers.

"Small employers have seen nothing but double-digit increases since the law went into place," Hurst said.

Instead of focusing on affordable coverage, Congress is considering requirements -- such as lower annual deductibles -- that would make health insurance more expensive, said Amanda Austin, director of federal public policy, Senate, at the National Federation of Independent Business.

NFIB supports market reforms to make insurance more affordable, but not at the price of an employer mandate.

"We still believe it's a job killer and it will absolutely harm businesses," Austin said.

Trautwein said there are still "faint embers of hope for fair and reasonable comprehensive reform," but the National Retail Federation is "quickly coming to the view that we're going to have to fight the end product in the end."

"We're really disappointed," he said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: employers; healthcare; insurance; taxes
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To: RightFighter
required to offer health insurance or pay $750 a year per full-time worker to the federal government

And just what the hell will the employer get for that $750 a year from the federal government since WE (the taxpayers) ARE the federal government?! Is this like a 'service fee' or something like credit card companies and banks charge?

You have to be pretty savy/stupid or take your pick to keep coming up with another word for T A X!

21 posted on 07/13/2009 9:04:49 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: RightFighter

Obama is solid gold for lawyers. How many companies will splinter into new 24 person businesses?


22 posted on 07/13/2009 9:06:39 AM PDT by noblejones (<deprecate>Ben Stein 2008.</deprecate> Sarah 2012, 2016, 2020.)
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To: griswold3
Dear griswold3,

I'm already starting to plan my exit from my business. I figure that over time, the “pay” part of “pay or play” will come to equal the [then-even-more-inflated] cost of group health insurance, and there will be no advantage to giving up one’s group health policy.

However, that could take several years.

In the meanwhile, I'd save a big pile of money every year, and that would go right to the bottom line, which, when determining the value of my company, would add a multiple of the money I save to the sale price of the business.

Many companies will jump at the chance to increase the bottom line so easily.

This is a recipe to destroy privately-provided health insurance.


sitetest

23 posted on 07/13/2009 9:06:58 AM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: RightFighter

I am a small business owner and if this is the plan sign me up ! I pay approx $250K per year for 55 employees. I could save 200K on this program; although they will tax that profit but I still come out ahead.
This is probably an error and it should be $750 per month....


24 posted on 07/13/2009 9:07:47 AM PDT by martinidon
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To: bill1952
>Businesses with 25 employees or more would be required to offer health insurance or pay $750 a year per full-time worker to the federal government...OK, so far no one has gotten health insurance out of this deal. I pay a few thousand a year, my employer pays over $10,000 a year for me. So how does FrankenGovenment buy Joe Sixpack health insurance with the $750 his employer paid?

Answer: it can't.

25 posted on 07/13/2009 9:08:27 AM PDT by Jack Black
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To: RightFighter

RETAIL BAKERS ASSOCIATION NAMES NEW PRESIDENT
LYNN SCHURMAN, CERTIFIED DECORATOR, OWNER COLD SPRING BAKERY

April 14, 2008

A participant in RBA’s March on Washington, held March 12 in conjunction with the American Baker’s Association, Schurman states the price hike is necessary in order for small bakeries to survive.

Retail Bakers of America (RBA)—a 501(c)6 not-for-profit trade association located in McLean, VA

******

Remind me to avoid this bakery...(they are also wholesale to other retailers & grocers)

http://www.coldspringbakery.com/


26 posted on 07/13/2009 9:13:10 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: martinidon
This is probably an error and it should be $750 per month....

Naw. Its just the way that government business is done on the slippery slope.

Give it time and it will be $750 a day

27 posted on 07/13/2009 9:14:51 AM PDT by bill1952 (Choice is an illusion created between those with power - and those without)
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To: kcvl

she is a typical liberal democrat


28 posted on 07/13/2009 9:16:56 AM PDT by martinidon
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To: RightFighter

There is another hidden tax increase here as well. Today, the employee contribution is paid with pre-tax dollars. Assuming every employer who owns a calculator will quit offering benefits, the employee contributions will become taxable income (or pay cuts.)


29 posted on 07/13/2009 9:21:20 AM PDT by IamConservative (I'll keep my money. You keep the change.)
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To: kcvl

“And just what the hell will the employer get for that $750 a year from the federal government”

Its not the employer, its the employee who will get this gem. Can you imagine the kind of health care they will get for $750 per year? I as an employer, will make sure my family has a much better plan. I am trying to talk my wife into running for Congress so I can get the crown jewel of all plans!


30 posted on 07/13/2009 9:21:29 AM PDT by martinidon
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To: RightFighter

$750 for a full year is a whole lot cheaper than paying insurance premiums.


31 posted on 07/13/2009 9:25:24 AM PDT by Redcloak ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: RightFighter

Lynn Schurman

Lynn Schurman wants to see the same sense of commitment from Minnesota’s congressional delegation that she feels for finding a solution to the nation’s health care crisis.

That’s why the Cold Spring Bakery owner spent the past two days in Washington with other Minnesotans, dropping in at lawmakers’ offices to talk about their health care experiences and to stress a need to revamp the system.

“There’s a sense of urgency that we can’t let this opportunity go by,” Schurman said. “We need to have health care reform, and we need to have something that works for small businesses.”

The activists participated in a demonstration outside the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and attended a public interfaith service Wednesday. They wrapped up their visit Thursday at a Capitol Hill rally of thousands, where “Sopranos” and “Nurse Jackie” star Edie Falco was among the key speakers.

The campaign’s main message is that Congress needs to pass a health care plan that provides coverage for the estimated 46 million Americans who lack it, reduces the overall costs of health care and includes a public option.

More Here

32 posted on 07/13/2009 9:28:38 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: RightFighter
For Lay Lobbyists, Healthcare Reform Turns Personal
By Tiffany Stanley - Religion News Service

July 6, 2009

It's wedding cake season, but at one Minnesota bakery, the boss has left the building to attend to other business.

Lynn Schurman struggles to provide health care for her 65 employees at Cold Spring Bakery and she wants Congress to know about it. So even with 23 tiered cakes on order for weekend nuptials, Lynn Schurman recently hung up her apron to join 500 faith-based activists to push health care reform on Capitol Hill.

Their goal? Pressing Congress to provide a so-called “public option,” essentially a government-run insurance plan, in the upcoming legislation.

Schurman, a member of St. Boniface Catholic Church, said health care reform reflects the Christian ethic of helping those described in the Bible as “the least of these.” It also “goes right to the heart of Catholic social teaching,” she said.

The lobbying push was organized by the Gamaliel Foundation, a Chicago faith-based social justice group that once trained a young street organizer named Barack Obama.

http://tinyurl.com/kje9sn

******

I thought we were supposed to keep faith & government separate (except when it benefits the left).

33 posted on 07/13/2009 9:33:54 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: kcvl
And just what the hell will the employer get for that $750 a year from the federal government since WE (the taxpayers) ARE the federal government?!

The employees will then go into the government health plan, which will ration their care canada-style. They will get all the health care that you can buy for $750/year once you have paid the cost of a huge federal bureaucracy.

Of course taxpayers will foot the bill for a lot of stuff too.

34 posted on 07/13/2009 9:35:05 AM PDT by freespirited (Money doesn't buy happiness but will pay a research staff to study the problem.)
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To: martinidon
I am trying to talk my wife into running for Congress so I can get the crown jewel of all plans!

Isn't that the truth. I don't think DC could handle it if a NORMAL human being landed on their planet!

35 posted on 07/13/2009 9:39:22 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: RightFighter

Guess I have to do some firing to get down to the 25 limit.


36 posted on 07/13/2009 9:45:54 AM PDT by bestintxas
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To: RightFighter

That 26th employee is dead meat.


37 posted on 07/13/2009 9:49:05 AM PDT by samadams2000 (Someone important make......The Call!)
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To: Leftism is Mentally Deranged
The 750 per year will soon become 1,000 “we didn’t know it would cost so much” then 2,500, then 4,000.

Correct. It started out exactly like this in MA. So many employers were opting to pay the penalty that after less than a year, the penalty was increased. That's the idea in the first place.

38 posted on 07/13/2009 9:57:01 AM PDT by randita
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To: randita

our congresscritters do nothing but piss me off. These a$$holes cough and then rush over to Bethesda Medical and get top notch treatment instantly. It doesn’t work that way out in the real world. As a pilot, they should have to use the Medicare system for 4 years before cramming govt run health care down our throats.

I have insurance but never, i mean never, use it for anything other than routine check ups - I would come out ahead if I were to drop the insurance and pay as I go. The only conforting thought about me insurance is the IF I get cancer or need some catastrophic care I am covered. Been paying for 20 years with no realized benefit as of yet.


39 posted on 07/13/2009 10:09:06 AM PDT by Cyclone59 (Everything that hits the fan is not evenly distributed)
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To: RightFighter
Businesses with 25 employees or more would be required to offer health insurance or pay $750 a year per full-time worker to the federal government, under health care reform legislation being considered in the Senate. ... A "play or pay" employer mandate..
Idiots. A bunch of IDIOTS. That's what these professional politicians are are. If I'm an employer with 25 (or more) employees I'm paying the $750 fine you beltway morons.

But would I really be "paying" it?.. no way, the employee(s) would. It would come right out of his pay and/or any future wage increase. And the best thing is, they would hardly even know it!

For a *typical* non-union employee there's six (6) 'paid' Federal Holidays, normally five (5) 'paid' sick days and after a couple years, a two (2) week 'paid' vacation, that amounts to 168 'paid' non working hours per year.

Based on a typical eight (8) hour day that brings down the total in-house working hours to 1912 hours per year. Dividing that $750.00 'fine' by 1912 hours = $0.392 an hour. So that amount, or rounded to $0.40 an hour is what I deduct from his pay ($0.40 x 1912 = $764.80). From the day this thing goes into effect he gets a pay 'decrease'. That's *only* $16.00 a week from his gross, he won't even miss it. (1)

And when annual 'Raise Time' comes around, same thing. Instead of say a $2.00/hr raise, he gets a $1.60 an hour raise. And if he doesn't like these new terms -- see ya Francis, here's a box and there's the door.

And when he gets home and after he tells his wife, who will be jumping with joy (ha-ha-ha), he can call Nancy Pelosi and thank her for his new lower salary.

That fact is 'employers' will pay this $750.00 fine when pigs fly.

(1) For the 1912 hours the employer comes out slightly ahead. But you have to recover something for added overhead costs. And at 2080 'paid' yrs a year, it would only be $0.36 an hour deducted, $14.42 less a week, but that just breaks even.

no offense to idiots.

40 posted on 07/13/2009 10:23:46 AM PDT by Condor51 (The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits)
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