subgenius wrote:conveniently, you omit other "basics"
like
that employers with a certain amount of employees will have to offer coverage..or pay a penalty...and if any employee opts out of that coverage due to its costs then there is a penalty.
First of all, what you are talking about here isn't part of the
basic conceptual elements of the law. The basic conceptual element of the law is what I described and nothing more. Second, of course I did go on to describe some of these non-basic things.
Third, if you want to talk details rather than argue about whether any given provision is "basic", let's talk details. The way you describe the penalties is inaccurate. It’s important to understand that the penalties only kick in
if one of the employees who doesn’t get minimum coverage from work buys his own coverage in the individual market
and gets tax credits to help pay for it. So for example, if Jaybear’s law firm were to drop its health insurance coverage, the firm probably wouldn’t have to pay a penalty, because everybody who works there makes too much money to qualify for the government subsidy.
subgenius wrote:An employer will also have to provide vouchers for specific employee income levels.
That is false. The employer may choose to give vouchers so that the employee can purchase insurance on the exchange, but they don’t have to. Providing the voucher is the same cost as providing the insurance—no extra cost for the employer. It’s just a way that can help a poorly paid employee better-afford their contribution.
subgenius wrote:AND...should an employer offer what is determined to be a "low value" coverage....yes....a penalty....
False. Large employers need to pay an assessment if they don’t offer their employees an affordable level minimum coverage. It is simply false to divide that single requirement into multiple pieces and imply the single assessment represents multiple penalties.
subgenius wrote: …provide what is deemed a 'high value" plan and a tax is imposed...
Are you talking about the excise tax on Cadillac plans? Cry me a river.
subgenius wrote:.health plan "value" will be required to be reported on every employees W-2 form.
Reported, but not taxed. Allowing employees to see the full cost of their health insurance is a bad thing how?
subgenius wrote:Larger employers have to automatically enroll employees, while currently no guidelines exist for that...just the requirement and penalty.
False. The guidelines exist and can be found here:
http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/newsroom/tr12-01.htmlThere is no penalty. The details of the requirement haven’t been fully worked out yet. Until they are, there is no requirement.
subgenius wrote:Flex spending, Medical spending, and Health spending accounts will be capped....this government does not trust you to control that money.
This is nothing more than lowering the limit on tax deductions and tax-advantaged plans. You are free to do whatever you want with your money.
subgenius wrote:Employers can create wellness programs that qualify for discounts....but as they are determined by the Secy of Health/Human services.
Are you suggesting that the government should provide incentives for employers to create wellness programs, but that the government
shouldn’t determine what qualifies???
subgenius wrote: yep, done here...obvious that your posts are just going to be full of msnbc talking points and with little "basic" information about the actual issue.
It’s ironic that you equate factual information taken directly from official government sources as “msnbc talking points.”