Posted by David Hyman:
Health Reform: ERISA and Pay or Play II
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_03_15-2009_03_21.shtml#1237391541


   San Francisco is not the only place to adopt a pay or play initiative.
   In the past few years, Maryland, Massachusetts, and Suffolk County,
   New York have all adopted such statutes. California adopted a pay or
   play statute in 2003, but it was [1]overturned by Proposition 72 in
   the 2004 election. These statutes required employers to spend at least
   a specified percentage of their payroll (Maryland) or a specific
   amount per worker per hour (Suffolk County) or their �fair share� of
   the cost of coverage (Massachusetts).

   The Maryland statute was enjoined by the 4th Circuit in Retail
   Industry Leaders Association v. Fiedler, 475 F.3d 180 (4th Cir. 2007).
   The Suffolk County ordinance was also enjoined by the District Court
   and was not appealed to the 2nd Circuit. The Massachusetts statute has
   not yet been challenged, and the (comparatively) modest imposition on
   employers makes it less likely it will be preempted under ERISA. For a
   detailed examination of that issue, see [2]this paper by Professor Amy
   Monahan of Minnesota.

   The Maryland statute and Suffolk County ordinance, although facially
   neutral, were nonetheless carefully targeted: the Maryland statute was
   widely known as the �Wal-Mart bill,� since it was drafted so as to
   exclude every other company in the state, and the Suffolk County
   ordinance targeted non-unionized retail stores selling groceries. Both
   were strongly backed by local and national unions. Public choice,
   anyone?

   Finally, pay or play strategies dovetail nicely with the widespread
   perception that employers are paying for health insurance for their
   employees � and employers who fail to contribute are shirking their
   responsibility. In reality, employer contributions toward health
   coverage for their employees are simply another form of compensation �
   meaning that it is workers who bear the costs of coverage � whether it
   is provided voluntarily, or as the result of a �pay or play� mandate.

References

   1. http://www.smartvoter.org/2004/11/02/ca/state/prop/72/
   2. http://ssrn.com/abstract=960554

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