Small businesses, franchises need to tread lightly with association health plans

 

 

By Chris Duncan

The insurance and broker industries have been abuzz about proposed Labor Department changes that could allow more businesses to offer employer-sponsored group benefits to their workers. While this opportunity is great, both franchisors and the roughly 800,000 franchisee small businesses need to be especially diligent that they don’t expose themselves to legal repercussions in pursuit of association or group sourcing benefits strategies.

To avoid missteps and reap the advantages of these expanding opportunities in collective sourcing options, franchisors, franchisee member associations, and their advisors should navigate these new waters carefully.

New AHP rules

Small business and franchise owners individually are not big enough to qualify for large group plan rates nor the expanded coverage in both medical and non-medical (life, disability, accident, etc.) benefits.  Traditionally, they pay more per employee than large employers and have more stringent “participation” requirements.  Group-based life insurance, disability (short and long term), and other benefits often have more narrow coverage and benefits than what a large company can obtain.

 

Large companies also have the advantage of HR and benefits professionals to navigate the complicated waters of benefits sourcing and delivery.  Small businesses do all this while juggling…well, a small business!  The net result is that many smaller companies either can’t afford benefits or, don’t not offer, leaving employees to fend for themselves on the individual market or through state and federal exchanges.   In fact, only 55% of small businesses nationally offer medical and other benefits to their employees.

Most small employers would like to offer benefits to employees – both because it’s the right thing to do, and because it gives them the ability to compete for talent with larger firms as well as retain the good talent they do have.  Remove the barriers of “not enough” time and “too costly” and small business owners would leap at the chance to add benefits for themselves, as owners, and their employees.  Fortunately, the Labor Department has proposed a rule change that would improve their opportunity to source group benefits.

At its most basic, this modification will use a broader definition of how businesses or franchises can band together to form an association for the purposes of collective sourcing of benefits. This newly expanded set of criteria – including industry, geographic, and professional interests – would enable many more small businesses and franchises to offer benefits through an Association Health Plan (AHP).

The proposed rules, which are expected to be finalized by the end of 2018, broaden and relax the business purpose and “common business interest” standards by allowing small business owners to join together to sponsor an association health plan if they have:  (1) a common industry, trade, or profession (similar to current law), or (2) a common geographic location (opening the doors for “chamber of commerce or geography-based groups). Associations would only have to meet one of the criteria, not both. Business associations whose members operate in the same trade or industry can sponsor group health plans, regardless of geographic distribution, while members in the same geographic area may work in entirely different industries.

Ultimately, the rule change could help extend workplace benefits to millions more Americans. In just one example of a Decisely AHP client of independent small business owners of a major national brand, over 35 percent of its members’ employees were able to secure employer-sponsored benefits for the first time.  Among those who currently offer benefits, the average savings on medical insurance alone was more than 20 percent (bringing benefits affordability more in reach), and 36 percent were able to offer additional benefits such as dental, vision, life and disability (broadening benefits offered to employees).

The joint-liability concept

 

A long-standing area of legal risk in the world of franchising is a legal concept known as joint liability.

Essentially, joint liability occurs when a franchisor is perceived to be in direct control of the employees of its franchises. If this is judged to be the case, then the franchisor is considered a single, joint employer and can be exposed to lawsuits, collective bargaining, and fines for wrongs committed by franchise employees.

In general, franchisor can reduce their exposure of being considered a “joint employer” by:

  • Making non-control clear – ensuring that within the franchisor/franchisee agreement, documentation, process and true business substance that the franchisor is not acting like the employer, and does not have the power to hire, promote, or fire franchisee employees. Staying true to franchise model – franchisors want to ensure product and service standards are at a high level (for example: product quality control standards, requiring uniforms or customer greetings to maintain the brand), but should not micromanage franchisee business operations, particularly those operations affecting employees.
  • Leaving HR functions to franchisees – in practice, franchisors should leave the typical human resources and employer functions like hiring and firing, pay and benefits determination, employee handbooks, HR policies, etc. to the individual franchisee.

 

Avoiding joint-liability in an AHP

 

If you’re a franchisor, how do you balance your desire and the opportunity to take advantage of Association Health Plans that reduce the cost of benefits for your Franchise ecosystem without creating joint liability exposure?

An AHP or trust can be sponsored by members of your franchisee group or association and overseen by members of this organization.  The AHP or Trust’s role is to aggregate and oversee member needs and to secure coverage on behalf of its members. To avoid joint liability missteps in setting up and managing this Trust, we generally recommend five things to clients:

  1. Leverage an existing association or trust. This should be an existing independent association or Trust to administer benefits. In many cases, though, there may not be an existing association, but you can set a dedicated AHP Trust up as long as you keep it arm’s length.
  2. The AHP/Trust must be SPONSORED by franchisees, not the franchisor.  When creating a new association or trust, the franchisor can help initiate the exploration of collective benefits sourcing through an AHP, but should leave the decision and its establishment to the franchise members. There should be a clear hand off from franchisor to franchisee before the start of the trust.
  3. The AHP/trust must be OVERSEEN by franchise members participating in the AHP/Trust.  All ongoing management and decisions of the Trust should fall to the trust leadership, not the franchisor. Further, a franchisor should not sit on the board of a trust or association health plan. If they do, it should be in an advisory and non-voting status.
  4. Hire a program administrator at the Trust level. A program administrator is usually an outside firm or organization that provides a turnkey offering for creating, launching and managing an AHP. This can be a broker or consultant, law firm, or professional management firm. In cases where Decisely provides program management, brokerage, marketing, or a technology platform for benefits delivery and client administration, we make sure to report directly to the trust board and remain independent from the franchisor.
  5. Choose a multi-faceted program administrator that can offer services other than just benefits. Associations and Trusts can further erode the issue of Joint Liability by offering other independent HR functions beyond just the AHP, such as payroll, recruiting, retirement plans, HR support services such employee handbooks, and more. This combined program helps substantiate the Trust and its services as independent of the franchisor.

Embrace the change

Ultimately, the potential of AHP’s will be a game changer in terms of potential savings and efficiencies. Today, six million small businesses buy benefits individually, company by company; while tomorrow, six million small businesses will buy benefits collectively.  Franchisors and their small business franchisees that seek to capitalize on this expanding opportunity can do so with careful planning for arm’s length creations and administration of AHPs.


Chris Duncan is the EVP & COO of Decisely, an insuretech  firms specializing in small business solutions for brokers, associations and franchises.

 

Originally published at Benefits Pro on March 30, 2018.

Decisely celebrates “Bolt Day” with lunch, movie & a whole lotta fun.

 

The Decisely family celebrated “Bolt Day”, a charity event dedicated to helping a member of our extended family, Austin Dunn.

Austin was struck by lightning on July 22nd and miraculously, he survived.  While Austin is still dealing with severe nerve damage and muscle spasms his spirits are up and he continues to work towards recovery.

 

Why Bolt?  In honor of the therapy dog Austin recently received, apparently the name Lightning was already taken.

The voluntary event raised over $2,100 to help with medical bills.

If you would like to help https://www.gofundme.com/4688rwo

Why Small Business Benefits Trust Plans Matter: Argument for Association Health Plans

By Chris Duncan, EVP/COO Decisely

The small business community is a non-partisan place–Democrats, Republicans, Independents, Libertarians, and any other flavor of political outlook all have a stake in small business success. Why so much interest? Because the six million small businesses (2-100 employees) in the U.S. provide over 40 million jobs, representing 34% of the entire U.S. workforce.1 Yet this engine of the U.S. economy and source of so much pride and progress in innovation and entrepreneurship has a major challenge: the ability to offer cost-effective, useful benefits to employees and their families.

Almost all (99%) large firms offer benefits to their employees; only 50% of small businesses offer benefits. This effectively means that over 20 million employees don’t have access to employer-based medical coverage, forcing them to either buy coverage in the largely dysfunctional individual medical insurance market, through the federal or state exchanges or worse, go without any insurance at all.

Beyond Healthcare

Access to healthcare is not the only problem for small businesses. Over 90% of disability insurance that covers loss of income if an employee becomes injured or ill, is purchased through an employer-provided benefits program. If the employer doesn’t offer disability insurance, studies show it is extremely unlikely that an employee will buy disability insurance on their own.2 Only 60% of small businesses offer disability insurance benefits, which means that at least 40% of 40 million small business employees are highly likely NOT to have any long-term disability coverage (as many as 16M employees). Yet, there is a 30% chance a 35- to 65-year-old will be disabled for at least 90 days during their prime working years. Even worse, an estimated 1 in 7 workers will be disabled for more than 5 years. So, a substantial percentage of workers in small businesses can’t protect their most important asset–their ability to work and maintain an income.

 

In addition to traditional benefits, small businesses are also disadvantaged in offering retirement savings options for their employees. Only 30% of small businesses offer any retirement savings programs (401k, IRA) for their employees; even those with access to retirement savings programs still are challenged—overall, over 70% of Americans aren’t saving enough for retirement.

We already know that even employees in businesses with work-provided retirement savings programs aren’t saving enough for retirementSome estimates suggest that as much as 70% of U.S. workers will retire with less than $10,000 in savings!3 A lack of employer-provided retirement options can make saving for retirement that much harder for 34% of the U.S. workforce.

 

There are lots of reasons why small firms struggle to offer benefits – while cost is a major factor, many times absence of viable options, the complexity associated with sourcing and managing benefits, or lack of time by the small business owner to manage the process can all be primary drivers.

Limited Purpose Trusts & AHP

Decisely, a specialty benefits and HR solutions technology firm, was founded on the principle that small businesses should have access to the same comprehensive benefit plans as large corporations. It is the reason we exist. Decisely supports small businesses in their efforts to keep healthy employees and a healthy bottom line.

One of the ways Decisely helps small businesses is through the formation of Limited Purpose Trusts for the sourcing of more cost-effective and expanded benefits across multiple small businesses. There has been buzz in the news about Association Health Plans and impending moves by the Department of Labor to expand the ability of Associations (and Franchisees) to band together in purchasing pools to source benefits. The idea of collective sourcing of benefits, however, is not new. The DOL allows today those Associations with strong common business interests to band together in trusts (Voluntary Employee Benefits Associations and Multiple Employer Welfare Associations) as long as they meet a few conditions:

Must Be Same Trade/Business Interests (ex. Business owner/operator not “Chamber of Commerce” unrelated entities)

For Employees only (not 1099 contractors)

Employer Members Control Business Decisions (not broker or insurer owned)

AHP/VEBA must be created for MORE than just group healthcare purchasing

New Association Health Plan regulations, when (and if) released, are expected to expand the ability of Associations (and Franchises) to include the aggregation of unrelated businesses (“Chamber of Commerce” programs) and contractors.

Why is this so exciting for small businesses? An example: Decisely, with a Property/Casualty broker partner, launched a Trust program for collective sourcing of medical benefits (including dental and vision), and paired this collective sourcing with other nationally negotiated non-medical benefits for a 10,000+ small business franchise operator. The positive impact on these small businesses is telling, and strikes at the heart of the strong business reasons why collective purchasing/aggregation of benefits sourcing is so good for small businesses and insurance carriers.

We surveyed the first big set of customers in this national Trust program, and here’s what we found:

Saved Big $: On average, these small businesses (average 18 full time employees each), saved over 23% in healthcare insurance versus what they had before. The cost savings per employee was over $1,000! In addition to real savings, the national insurer-partner on the program included more robust network coverage, additional wellness and pharmacy benefits versus typical small business insurance, adding additional savings to the Employers and broader benefits to their Employees.

More Companies Bought Benefits for the First Time: 35% of these small benefits obtained group benefits for the first time as the cost of the all-important health benefits dropped, and ability to access and administer the national program was made much simpler! That’s good news obviously for both the businesses buying, and the insurance carrier, who is essentially creating (and accessing) a new market of customers.

Expanded Benefit Offerings, with Broader Coverage: 36% of these businesses who previously had offered medical coverage added new benefits for their employees for the first time, including Dental, Vision, Life and Disability. Nationally, the trust was able to negotiate better “minimum participation” requirements than they would have been able to source on their own, both on Medical insurance and other non-medical insurance. For example, most of these small businesses were too small to qualify to offer disability, but under this national program, disability was offered to all companies with a minimum of 2 participants.

 In the first 40 days of the program, the trust program saved owners over $1.5 million dollars. That is a lot of money back in the pockets of employees, and to put back into the economy in other ways.

Small business truly is the backbone of the US economy, crossing every boundary of race, religion, politics and socio-economic status. We all want employees and their families to have cost-effective and helpful benefits. Banding small businesses together to source benefits makes our small business community stronger. It broadens access to benefits for employees thereby reducing the uninsured, it reduces stress and helps businesses both save time and money. Today six million small businesses buy individually, tomorrow they will buy collectively with Decisely.