PA Legislative Updates
Alert to PA SHRM Members - PHRC Proposed Guidance on Criminal Convictions
PHRC Policy Guidance
(H.B. 834) prohibits mandatory overtime for nurses, nurses' assistants, and other direct patient caregivers in the state's hospitals and other health care facilities.
The measure, which will take effect July 1, 2009, bars health care facilities from requiring an employee to work hours in excess of an agreed-to, predetermined, regularly-scheduled daily work shift or retaliating against a worker who refuses to work extra hours. (Click here for summary.) (Full Bill)
PA UC Victory - Harkness and Piunti
Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA Signed into Law
On June 10, 2009, Pennsylvania joined other states that mandate small employers to provide medical continuation coverage when Governor Ed Rendell signed the Mini-COBRA Small Employer Group Health Plan and Premium Assistance Act (“Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA”) into law. Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA ushers in a new era of healthcare in Pennsylvania and requires employers with less than twenty employees that sponsor group medical insurance (typically group medical policies that insure two or more employees) to offer employees and their dependents the opportunity to purchase up to nine months of medical continuation coverage upon a qualifying loss of employer-sponsored medical coverage. Moreover, this law is expressly designed to coordinate with premium assistance available through state continuation coverage programs under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (“ARRA”), as individuals who elect Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA may be eligible for ARRA premium assistance. It should be noted, however, that the availability of Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA, unlike ARRA premium assistance, is legislated as a permanent measure and will not expire at the end of 2009.
New Requirements for Small Employers
The enactment of Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA is a change in the status quo in healthcare provision in Pennsylvania; however, there are a few key distinctions between federal COBRA and Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA. Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA:
- applies to employers with less than twenty employees (unlike federal COBRA, which applies to employers with twenty or more employees);
- provides continuation coverage for a period of nine months (federal COBRA provides a minimum of 18 months); and
- applies only to insured group major medical policies (federal COBRA applies to all ERISA group health plans).
Similar to federal COBRA for large employers, however, a covered small employer will be required to provide a Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA election notice to a “Qualified Beneficiary” who experiences a “Qualifying Event.” This notice is currently required to contain information regarding the availability of the ARRA subsidy.
For purposes of Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA, a Qualified Beneficiary who is potentially eligible to elect this continuation coverage includes an enrolled employee or his or her dependent(s) who has been continuously enrolled under the employer’s insured group medical policy for three months prior to the Qualifying Event and who is not eligible for Medicare or covered by or enrolled in other private group health insurance. The Qualifying Events that trigger a right to Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA include the death of a covered employee, termination of employment or a reduction in an employee’s hours, employee entitlement to Medicare or a dependent ceasing to qualify as such.
ARRA Subsidy
Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA is expressly designed to coordinate with the COBRA subsidy provision under the ARRA. The ARRA provides that a premium-assistance subsidy be made available to individuals who are eligible for continuation coverage under a state law analogous to federal COBRA, as a result of an involuntary termination of employment. Under the ARRA, a Qualified Beneficiary may be eligible to elect to pay only thirty-five percent of the otherwise-applicable medical insurance premium, and employers providing the subsidy may seek a corresponding sixty-five percent premium-assistance credit for the nine month continuation period. This means that an individual who elects Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA may be able to receive the premium assistance benefit under the ARRA prior to the ARRA’s expiration at the end of 2009.
Action Items for Small Employers
- Covered small employers may want to take action now to comply with the new Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA and prepare for offering it in conjunction with the ARRA premium assistance. An employer may wish to:
- Consult with its legal counsel regarding the obligation to provide Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA;
- Contact its medical insurer and confirm that the insurer will offer Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA by July 10, 2009; and
- Prepare a COBRA election notice incorporating the required ARRA provisions. There are model ARRA notices available for state continuation coverage; however, these will need to be tailored to fit the provisions of the Pennsylvania Mini-COBRA law.
It should be noted that Pennsylvania is not the only state to enact legislation to extend the benefits of the ARRA premium-assistance subsidy to those participating in state Mini-COBRA programs. On June 18, 2009, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn signed a law that gives a new opportunity to those who became eligible for Illinois Mini-COBRA on or after September 1, 2009, and who declined enrollment, to enroll in this program now (and possibly receive the benefit of the ARRA premium-assistance subsidy).
Pardon the formality, but this alert should not be construed as establishing an attorney-client relationship or providing legal advice as to any factual situation.
Governor Signs Senator Corman's Health Care Measure
Bill extending insurance benefits for young adults approved by House, Senate
The Governor signed into law legislation introduced by Senator Jake Corman (R-34) to extend health care coverage for young adults under their parents' insurance plans.
Senate Bill 189 will extend health insurance coverage, at the expense of policyholders, to adult dependent children up to the age of 30 who are not married, have no dependents, are residents of the Commonwealth or enrolled as a full-time student at an institution of higher education and are not provided insurance coverage or eligible for government benefits. Insurers would be able to determine increases in the premiums to cover this additional benefit.
"Today is a great day for Pennsylvania families. Enactment of Senate Bill 189 provides a significant expansion of the health care options for Pennsylvania's young adults," Senator Corman said. "Young adults age 18 through 34 represent a significant portion of uninsured Pennsylvanians. Many of these young people are employed in jobs that don't provide benefits or they are required to pay extremely high premiums. This new law will provide those young people with an innovative and fiscally responsible option to receive health care coverage at a cost they and their families can afford."
Senator Corman's legislation is part of the Senate Republican HealthNET PA package, a blueprint that expands access to health care and medicine to uninsured and low-income working Pennsylvanians.

