Title: HR Best practices:
1Employer Services Presentation
- HR Best practices
- From HIRING TO FIRING AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN
- David W. thomas, esq. Daryl russell
2- Topics for today
- ARRA update
- Employee Termination and Leave Issues
- Updating your Employer Handbook
- Creditable Coverage Requirements for Employers
- Good Hiring Tips
3American Recovery Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
- COBRA subsidy extended through February 28, 2010
- Extension may have created a notice requirement
for any previously terminated employees that they
are eligible for six more months of reduced-cost
coverage - http//www.dol.gov/ebsa/newsroom/fsCOBRApremiumred
uction.html - Also created a few notification headaches for
COBRA covered employers - Made almost no changes for continuation-coverage
employers
4ARRA update COBRA extension
- Individuals whose COBRA subsidy period expired
prior to Dec. 17, 2009 are eligible to
retroactively reinstate their COBRA coverage at
the reduced premiums. - To retroactively reinstate and continue their
coverage they must pay the 35 of their premium
costs by the later of (i) February 17, 2010 or
(ii) 30 days after the notice of the extension is
provided by their plan administrator. - The same refund and credit rules under ARRA apply
to any assistance-eligible individual whose
subsidy expired in November and who has since
paid the full COBRA premium.
5ARRA Update COBRA extension
- Need to make sure that your health plan
administrators act promptly and send an updated
notice describing the new subsidy rules to all
individuals who were assistance-eligible
individuals as of October 31, 2009, or who have
been terminated from employment on or after
October 31, 2009.
6ARRA Update COBRA extension
- Additionally, the DOD Act requires that a special
notice be sent to those assistance-eligible
individuals who either dropped COBRA or paid the
full premium for it when their nine-month subsidy
ended, explaining that they are now eligible
either to reinstate their coverage retroactively
at the subsidized rate or to receive a credit or
refund if they paid more than the DOD Act would
have required.
7Employee Termination and Leave Issues
- Health Care continuation coverage
COBRA/Virginia state law requirements - FMLA (large employers)
- Unemployment taxation (very briefly)
- At-Will Employment and employees of a protected
class
8COBRA subsidy The Basics
- Workers can qualify for a 65 subsidy for their
COBRA health insurance premiums. - Worker must have involuntarily separated.
- Lawyer-speak for laid-off or fired
- Employee must have been terminated on or before
Feb. 28, 2010. - Clears up confusion under previous law regarding
termination versus eligibility for coverage.
9COBRA Subsidy Eligibility
- Employee must have been terminated between Sept.
1, 2008 and Feb. 28, 2010. - Income limits phase out
- Individuals 125K to 145K
- Couples 250K to 290K
- If you anticipate that might apply (due to
severance), obtain a waiver. - If employee becomes ineligible, IRS will
recapture - Only applies to 15 months of coverage!
10COBRA subsidy How it works
- Eligible former employees may continue to pay
premiums as before, only at 35 of the total.
They may also choose to take out an individual
policy under an insurer of their choice. - Employer pays 65 of the premium.
- Even if premiums are sent to a third-party
administrator. - Employer claims a credit for those payments on
Form 941 Employers Quarterly Federal Tax
Return (or similar). - Subsidy is treated as a credit toward payroll tax
liability. - Counted at the time the former employees premium
payment is received.
11COBRA Subsidy To Do List
- Update COBRA materials (or ensure plan
administrator has done so). - Notice to previously terminated employees of
additional 6 months of coverage - If you offer multiple plans, determine whether to
permit individuals to elect a different plan once
they COBRA. - Review severance policies and severance
agreements to revisit the issue of any employer
COBRA premium contributions. - Develop process and procedures for the
administration of the COBRA subsidy.
12FMLA
- Applies to companies with 50 employees in a 75
mile radius who have worked 20 or more workweeks
in the current or previous calendar year. - Only applies to employees who have worked for you
for the previous 12 months - Includes paid and unpaid leave
- AND 1250 hours in the previous 12 months
13FMLA
- Must grant a total of 12 work weeks of unpaid
leave - for the birth and care of a newborn child of the
employee - for placement with the employee of a son or
daughter for adoption or foster care - to care for a spouse, son, daughter, or parent
with a serious health condition - to take medical leave when the employee is unable
to work because of a serious health condition or
- for qualifying exigencies arising out of the fact
that the employees spouse, son, daughter, or
parent is on active duty or call to active duty
status as a member of the National Guard or
Reserves in support of a contingency operation. - 12 weeks does not have to be consecutive!
14Changes to FMLA
- Primarily apply to notice requirements
- Employee must provide 30-days advance notice
where foreseeable and practicable. - Or as soon as foreseeable/practicable
- Employee must provide sufficient information
for employer to determine if FMLA applies
15FMLA
- Employer must post approved notice of FMLA
rights. - Failure to do so is subject to fine
- Must also include notice in employee handbooks or
through other written guidance. - Employer must affirmatively notify employee that
leave designated as FMLA leave. - http//www.dol.gov/esa/whd/fmla/finalrule/whdfs28.
pdf
16Unemployment Benefits
- Some experts are predicting a 10-fold increase in
the state unemployment tax - As a result, more employers are contesting claims
for benefits - 30 days of employment
- Fired for cause
17At-Will Employment Doctrine
- Virginia law provides for a presumption of
at-will employment - This means that absent some affirmative act,
usually in writing, an employee would bear the
burden of proving an employment contract for some
definite length. - An at-will employee can be fired for any lawful
reason, or no reason at all. - But cant be fired for a bad (unlawful) reason.
- Number one bad reason -- discrimination
18At-Will Employment Doctrine
- Avoid creating any inference that employees will
only be terminated for just cause - Common ways to waive at-will presumption
- Statements made during hiring or at reviews
- Just dont promise them continued employment
- Statements in the offer letter
- Your salary for the next year will be
- Statements in the employee handbook
19Updating Your Employee Handbook
- Should you have an employee handbook?
- With very few exceptions, the answer is yes, but
only if you follow the written policies - Just depends on how extensive it should be
- Some necessary policies
- Equal Employment / Non-discrimination policy
- Sexual Harassment policy
- COBRA / FMLA policy (where appropriate)
- Workplace Safety and Prevention of Violence
- Workplace Monitoring Policy
- Leave policy
20Updating your Employee Handbook
- Equal Employment / Nondiscrimination Policy
- Posting is required in the workplace
- First thing EEOC will do in the event of an
investigation is ask for the company policy on
nondiscrimination - Sexual Harassment
- Must both lay out policy AND inform employees of
how to report harassment - If policy is published and employees informed,
company can rely on non-reporting as a defense to
knowledge of superiors - Must address both quid pro quo and hostile work
environment - Must assure employees of no retaliation for
good-faith report
21Updating your Employee Handbook
- COBRA policy
- Employers required to give notice to all new
employees of COBRA benefits - FMLA policy
- Employers required to notify workers of rights
under FMLA - Workplace Safety
- Lay out zero tolerance for workplace violence
- Require prompt reporting and ensure no
retaliation for good faith report
22Updating your Employee Handbook
- Workplace Monitoring Policy
- Can only monitor if work-related or with consent
- Can cover telephones and computers
- Policy should allow employer monitoring, but make
clear that company is not obligated to monitor - Emphasize that company computers and telephones
are property of the company - Leave policies
- Sick leave
- Unpaid leave (medical or otherwise)
- PTO
23Updating your Employee Handbook
- Number 1 issue Waiving at-will employment based
on your handbook - continued employment is contingent upon
compliance with company policies. - employees can be terminated for just cause
- How to avoid waiving at-will presumption
- Disclaimer of contract rights or affirmation of
at-will status - Use of merger clause (supersedes prior policies
oral or written) - Acknowledgement of receipt with at-will language
- Reservation of rights to change policy at will
- Do not sign the handbook
24Creditable Coverage Requirements
- What is creditable coverage?
- Provides drug coverage that is at least as good
as Medicare Part D program - Allows employees to sign-up for Medicare Part D
coverage later if they maintain creditable
coverage in the meantime - How do you determine if coverage is creditable
- If the actuarial value of the coverage equals or
exceeds the actuarial value of standard
prescription drug coverage under Medicare Part D - In general, the actuarial equivalence test
measures whether the expected amount of paid
claims under the entity's prescription drug
coverage is at least as much as the expected
amount of paid claims under the standard Part D
benefit.
25Creditable Coverage Requirements
- A prescription drug plan is deemed to be
creditable if it - Provides coverage for brand and generic
prescriptions - Provides reasonable access to retail providers
- The plan is designed to pay on average at least
60 of participants prescription drug expenses
and - The plan has no more than a250 deductible per
year, has no annual benefit maximum or a maximum
annual benefit payable by the plan of at least
25,000 and has no less than a 1,000,000
lifetime combined benefit maximum.
26Creditable Coverage Requirements
- Employer Requirements
- An entity is required to provide a disclosure to
CMS through completion of the Disclosure to CMS
Form (Form CMS-10198) posted on the CMS
Creditable Coverage Web Page athttp//www.cms.hhs.
gov/CreditableCoverage/45_CCDisclosureForm.aspTop
OfPage. - For plan years that end in 2007 and beyond, the
Disclosure to CMS Form must be provided within 60
days after the beginning date of the plan year
for which the entity is providing the Disclosure
to CMS Form - Within 30 days after the termination of the
prescription drug plan and Within 30 days after
any change in the creditable coverage status of
the prescription drug plan. - Disclose to all Medicare eligible individuals
with prescription drug coverage under the plan
whether such coverage is "creditable."
27Good Hiring Tips
- Be very careful of doing Internet research
- There is some information you dont want to have
- Review Facebook and MySpace at your own risk
- You dont want to know how old someone is or
their sexual orientation - Depending on how you access their page, could
open yourself up to an invasion of privacy claim
28Good Hiring Tips
- During the interview, think about the information
you are soliciting - Do you want to know when they graduated from high
school? - Do you want to know if they are married? The name
of their spouse? - How much they weigh?
- Background and credit checks
- Be aware of FCRA requirements if you consider any
information gained from a background check
29- Davids practice is comprised primarily of
employment law and commercial litigation. His
experience includes employee benefits and
compensation, employment discrimination,
commercial litigation, employment law,
construction law and criminal defense. A native
of Virginia, David attended Thomas Jefferson High
School for Science and Technology in Alexandria
before matriculating to Swarthmore College and
the University of Virginia Law School. During law
school, David worked for the Greene County
Commonwealth's Attorney's office, where he
prosecuted a broad range of criminal cases. - Following graduation, David clerked for the Hon.
Danny C. Reeves in federal district court in
Kentucky, where he was exposed to a broad range
of federal litigation as well as appellate
litigation before the Sixth Circuit. David then
moved to Washington, D.C. to practice with a
large national firm based out of Palo Alto,
California, representing technology companies in
commercial, securities and antitrust litigation.
David then moved to a regional litigation firm,
where he practiced in the area of products
liability before getting the opportunity to
return to Charlottesville. - Education
- Swarthmore College (B.A., magna cum laude, 2002)
- University of Virginia School of Law (J.D.,
2005) -
- Professional Activities
- Admitted in Virginia and the District of
Columbia - Admitted to practice before the United States
Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals and the - United States District Courts for the Eastern
and Western Districts of Virginia - Virginia State Bar, Children and the Law
Committee, Young Lawyers Division - Charlottesville-Albemarle Bar Association,
SecretaryTreasurer 2009-10 - Thomas Jefferson American Inn of Court
- Legal Aid Justice Center Unemployment Panel
- Community Activities
- Albemarle County Service Authority, Board of
Directors 2010- - Leadership Charlottesville, Class of 2010
30Bankers Insurance LLC
Bankers Insurance Client Portal
- Employee Handbook Template
- Looking for quick answers to tough COBRA, HIPAA,
FMLA and Section 125 questions? Our client
portal has resources to help! - When you need to resource information fast, you
have instant access to a library of downloadable
health, wellness, HR and compliance articles.
Walt Lyons or your Account Manger can help you
access them.
COBRA Administration
- Turn Key Administration through Flexible Benefit
Administrators - Free to Bankers Insurance Clients
- Partnership with Flexible Benefit Administrators
allows us to provide access to cost effective
Section 125 plans (FSAs and POP Plans), HRAs,
and HSAs.
31Addenda
- Sample Creditable Coverage Notice
- ARRA Continuation Coverage Notice
- 90-Day Term Notice