Starting September 23, 2012, insurance companies must provide a Summary of Benefits Coverage (SBC) form to individual policy holders and to their insured employer plans. Employer plans (self-funded and insured) must provide a SBC for open enrollment periods on or after that date (open enrollment in the 4th quarter of 2012 for calendar year plans.). Also, employer medical plans must provide employees and beneficiaries with a uniform glossary of terms commonly used in health insurance coverage (such as co-payment, deductible, home health care, etc.). In addition, the regulations include a new requirement to provide a 60-day advance notice of material plan modifications.
Recent Posts
- ACA Penalties Going Up in 2023
- NLRB GC Guidance on NLRB Decision Invalidating Confidentiality, Non-Disparagement Provisions in Severance Agreements
- April is Workplace Conflict Awareness Month
- Websites: A Growing Compliance Concern – CCPA, HIPAA, Accessibility, State Laws
- HR Compliance Update | April 7, 2023
Topics
- ACA
- Agile Workplace
- Announcements
- art
- Asure Partners
- Automation
- Benefits
- Blog
- Change Management
- Company Culture
- COVID-19
- Digital Workplace
- Employee management
- Employment
- Executive Series
- fraud
- GDPR
- green
- Guest Posts
- HCM
- HR Management
- HR Services
- Human Resource Articles
- Meeting Room Scheduling
- Millennials
- Mobile Technology
- move management
- News
- Payroll & Tax
- Payroll Articles
- Performance Management
- Remote Employees
- Small Business
- Talent Management
- Tax Articles
- Telework
- The Cloud
- Time & Attendance
- Uncategorized
- work
- Workspace Design
- Workspace Management