With more than half of U.S. workers leaving their current job in search of better pay and benefits, a compelling benefits package is a critical competitive advantage for small businesses. It allows them to stand apart from companies of similar sizes and better stack up against larger ones when competing for candidates or attempting to retain talented staffers. Unfortunately, the historical realities of running a small business and sometimes-burdensome health insurance requirements make those benefits packages all but unattainable for most companies.

That all changed this week. The new DOL change loosens restrictions so that beginning Sept. 1, 2018, small businesses are eligible to band together with others based on industry or geographic affinity to form collectives that can purchase large group health plans. This effectively opens the door for millions of small businesses to offer cost-effective health insurance benefits to millions of American workers.

Known as association health plans, these plans deliver big company benefits with the savings available through group purchasing — typically 10-30%. The move effectively widens the pool of available benefits to employers and employees while reducing administrative overhead for small businesses. The ability to tap AHPs can return the competitive HR advantage to smaller businesses and organizations.

And these businesses are ready to embrace this opportunity. We recently surveyed more than 700 small business and franchisee employers and uncovered strong demand for these benefits, with 84% of respondents expressing a desire to offer their own plans.

As Jack Calabrese from the Napa Insurance Center, a Decisely AHP client with more than 22,000 independent stores, observed: “Offering benefits gives our NAPA owners a competitive edge when trying to hire and hold on to great employees. The NAPA Insurance Center helps our owners offer benefits to their employee at lower rates than the owners could source themselves.”

An AHP can offer tremendous financial and operational benefits for a group of businesses. For example, in only the first 40 days of launching an AHP, one trust membership saved its owner-operators more than $1.5 Million. Additionally, the program realized cost savings of over 20% on medical insurance, averaging over $1,000 per full-time employee.

So, what should small businesses know about these rule changes, including their eligibility and how to effectively prepare for September 1?

The key provisions in DOL ruling include the following:

  • The rule expands the definition of “employer” allowing small-business owners, their employees, sole proprietors and other self-employed people to join to buy health insurance plans. The increased bargaining power can lead to lower prices and more cost-effective coverage — this can result in lower premiums for employees.
  • The DOL affirmed that “commonality of interest” is still the measurement used to determine eligibility, however that has been expanded to include geography within a state in addition to common business interest (same trade or business)
  • An association now can be formed for the sole purpose of offering an association health plan to its members
  • As Robert Cresanti, president and CEO of International Franchise Association, noted, “franchise small business owners will be exempt from any possible joint-employer liability that may have come about if they partnered with other franchisees operating under the same brand”.

 

How to prepare

An AHP or Trust can be sponsored by a group member association and overseen by members of this organization. The job of the AHP is to aggregate and manage member needs to secure coverage on behalf of its members. The AHP often contracts with a broker specializing in small business and program management to create a benefits portfolio for the members, negotiate with insurers on its behalf, and provide program management. The goal is a turnkey solution for the collective sourcing of small business benefits.

An AHP can be set up using three different structures for medical and other benefits:

  • Fully Insured Medical: This plan requires no initial capital reserves and does not share risk among the members. Instead, the insurer takes on all risk with little or no financial outlay from the AHP at startup. This is the easiest plan to administer and communicate.
  • Self-Funded Medical: This approach requires the AHP to fund some initial capital or financial reserves, meaning it assumes a collective financial risk for providing health care benefits to its members. While insurers prefer this approach, the advantage to the AHP is group-wide savings if the collective group has positive claims experience over time.
  • Hybrid Medical: This approach blends risk for all parties and allows dividends or gain sharing for members based on good loss performance. It is sometimes called a Minimum Premium Program.

We’ve found most clients opt for Fully Insured Medical plans. That said, each situation is different, so HR teams should be thoughtful about their choice.

In general, your brokerage team should plan for roughly six months from contracting with a program creator/administrator, through insurer negotiations, to the final launch of any group purchasing plan. This will include formalizing the association’s intended structure, including the formation of an AHP if one does not already exist. A qualified attorney can guide this formation process to ensure proper compliance and governance.

You should also consider sourcing an external program manager to help collect the appropriate data for underwriting AHP members, develop the benefits offering, negotiate with insurers, and implement the technology necessary to enroll small business on a massive scale. Once this plan is finalized, the program administrator can begin activating the strategies, tactics and program management required by AHP member, including call centers, website development, reporting, enrollment technology, and administration.

At this point, your new AHP will be ready for launch for members and employees.

 

Kevin Dunn

Kevin Dunn is CEO of Decisely, a platform that supports benefits, HR resources, and technology for small businesses in the U.S.

 

Originally published at Employee Benefits Advisor  & Employee Benefit News on June 26, 2018.

Decisely AHP is uniquely positioned to help the 84% of small businesses seeking large company, competitively priced group purchased benefits plan under newly expanded rules

 

ATLANTA, June 21, 2018 – Newly expanded Department of Labor (DOL) guidelines will now make it possible for small businesses to offer compelling, competitively priced employer-sponsored group benefits plans beginning September 1, 2018. New data from employee benefits brokerage and HR services company Decisely shows the enormous demand for this change. Decisely’s deep expertise in the Association Health Plan (AHP) market uniquely positions them to help businesses quickly and easily take advantage of these rule changes.

 

Small businesses and franchisees have historically been excluded from the employer-benefits market, forcing millions of employees to pay for their own healthcare and other related benefits. However, a new survey by Decisely of more than 700 small business and franchisee employers uncovered strong demand for these benefits with 84% of respondents expressing a desire to offer their own plans.

 

“These new rule changes make it possible for millions of small businesses to now qualify for these plans, potentially extending benefits to millions more American workers,” said Decisely CEO Kevin Dunn. “Our deep experience and long success in developing AHPs for companies makes us uniquely qualified to help these newly eligible companies quickly and easily design, launch and manage their own benefits programs.”

 

Decisely is a benefits brokerage and HR services firm specializing in integrated technology solutions for small businesses. The company is an established leader in building and administering AHPs with a turn-key benefits sourcing and technology platform that includes data collection, carrier marketing, call center and website development, marketing communications and host of integrated Human Resource services, including recruiting, on-boarding, payroll and retirement services.

 

An AHP can offer tremendous financial and operational benefits for a group of businesses. For example, in the first 40 days of launching an AHP for just one Trust Membership, Decisely saved its owner-operators over $1,500,000. Additionally, the program realized cost savings of over 20% on medical insurance, averaging over $1,000 per full-time employee.

 

“This is a game changer for American workers,” continued Dunn.

 

Decisely is the exclusive partner to NAPA Insurance Center with 22,000+ owner/operators, California Rental Association with 1,200+ members, and recently announced the launch of an AHP for Supercuts with 1,200+ stores.

 

For more insights on the new ruling and forming an AHP, please contact Decisely AHP solutions at (800) 976-7194. You can also learn more at Why SMB Benefits Trust Matter: An Argument for Association Health Plans.

 

 

About Decisely

Decisely improves the health of businesses and their employees. Decisely is a broker-friendly benefits brokerage and HR services firm specializing in integrated technology solutions for small businesses. With the right mix of recruiting, benefits, HR, compliance, payroll & licensed support, Decisely technology brings your most essential HR activities onto one platform.

 

 

Media Contact:

Michael Azzano

Cosmo PR

415/596-1978

michael@cosmo-pr.com

Our mission at Decisely is to help brokers, associations and franchises build a healthier small businesses and improve their employees lives. We do this in a number of expected ways: applying our decades of hard won personal experience and insights, leveraging our turnkey Benefits HR platform to optimize businesses, help associations and franchises collectively source benefits solutions, and partnering with experienced brokers from around the country. But we also look for unexpected ways to help advance our industry and the needs of our partners and customers. 

Despite the benefits industry making up 18% of the country’s GDP, there are no benefits specific degrees in the U.S., until now.

We are now proud to share that Decisely is helping to create and sponsor the first benefits degree program in the United States in partnership with Appalachian State in Boone, North Carolina. Having earned its designation as a Global Center of Insurance Excellence and being named a Top 10 Risk Management and Insurance Program in the U.S., Appalachian State is already a leader in insurance-related instruction and is committed to creating the next generation of insurance leaders. Together, we will fill a focused need in the marketplace while helping to create job opportunities for young professionals. 

Conceived as a “minor,” this program will allow students from any major at Appalachian State to learn about the benefits industry and prepare them for entry-level jobs at brokers, consultancies and insurance carriers. The employee benefits minor includes coursework in Employee Benefits, Group Benefits Management, Risk Management & Insurance, and Human Resource Management.  

More than 20 students declared for the program soon after it launched in the fall of 2017, and dozens more are participating now. In fact, Decisely will hire two “App State” graduates of the program in May, and will sponsor an intern from App this summer.  In addition to creating real opportunity for these students, our COO, Chris Duncan, serves on the Brantley Risk and Insurance Board of App State’s RMI program, and both he and Decisely corporately support the Benefit Minor program financially.   We’re “all in” and proud of it!

This effort is consistent with our leadership and innovation focus. As a #B-Corp, it’s also part of our commitment to give back to the communities we serve and our belief in using business as a force for good.    

We are fortunate to routinely change lives with our services, and aim to inspire others to enter a career in employee benefits and human resources. If you know individuals interesting in a rewarding Employee Benefits career check out the Brantley Risk & Insurance Center at Appalachian State University.  

We are honored to have our CEO, Kevin Dunn, featured in the latest installment of “CEO Monthly InsurTech Market Analysis.” Thank you FT Partners for giving us the opportunity to share our insights.

One of America’s fastest growing and most successful brands to benefit from employee benefits and HR solutions delivered on an easy to use platform