Florida Senate - 2015                                     SB 968
       
       
        
       By Senator Detert
       
       
       
       
       
       28-01017-15                                            2015968__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to employee health care plans;
    3         amending s. 627.6699, F.S.; revising definitions;
    4         removing provisions requiring certain insurance
    5         carriers to provide semiannual reports to the Office
    6         of Insurance Regulation; repealing requirements that
    7         certain insurance carriers offer standard, basic, high
    8         deductible, and limited health benefit plans; making
    9         conforming changes; creating s. 627.66997, F.S.;
   10         authorizing certain small employer insurance policies
   11         to provide stop-loss coverage; providing requirements
   12         for such policies; amending ss. 627.642, 627.6475, and
   13         627.657, F.S.; conforming cross-references; amending
   14         ss. 627.6571, 627.6675, 641.31074, and 641.3922, F.S.;
   15         conforming provisions to changes made by the act;
   16         providing an effective date.
   17          
   18  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   19  
   20         Section 1. Subsection (2) of section 627.6699, Florida
   21  Statutes, is amended, present paragraphs (c) through (x) of
   22  subsection (3) are redesignated as paragraphs (b) through (w),
   23  respectively, and present paragraphs (b) and (o) of that
   24  subsection, subsection (5), paragraph (b) of subsection (6),
   25  paragraphs (g), (h), (j), and (l) through (o) of subsection
   26  (11), subsections (12) through (14), paragraph (k) of subsection
   27  (15), and subsections (16) through (18) of that section are
   28  amended, to read:
   29         627.6699 Employee Health Care Access Act.—
   30         (2) PURPOSE AND INTENT.—The purpose and intent of this
   31  section is to promote the availability of health insurance
   32  coverage to small employers regardless of their claims
   33  experience or their employees’ health status, to establish rules
   34  regarding renewability of that coverage, to establish
   35  limitations on the use of exclusions for preexisting conditions,
   36  to provide for development of a standard health benefit plan and
   37  a basic health benefit plan to be offered to all small
   38  employers, to provide for establishment of a reinsurance program
   39  for coverage of small employers, and to improve the overall
   40  fairness and efficiency of the small group health insurance
   41  market.
   42         (3) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
   43         (b) “Basic health benefit plan” and “standard health
   44  benefit plan” mean low-cost health care plans developed pursuant
   45  to subsection (12).
   46         (n)(o) “Modified community rating” means a method used to
   47  develop carrier premiums which spreads financial risk across a
   48  large population; allows the use of separate rating factors for
   49  age, gender, family composition, tobacco usage, and geographic
   50  area as determined under paragraph (5)(f) (5)(j); and allows
   51  adjustments for: claims experience, health status, or duration
   52  of coverage as permitted under subparagraph (6)(b)5.; and
   53  administrative and acquisition expenses as permitted under
   54  subparagraph (6)(b)5.
   55         (5) AVAILABILITY OF COVERAGE.—
   56         (a) Beginning January 1, 1993, every small employer carrier
   57  issuing new health benefit plans to small employers in this
   58  state must, as a condition of transacting business in this
   59  state, offer to eligible small employers a standard health
   60  benefit plan and a basic health benefit plan. Such a small
   61  employer carrier shall issue a standard health benefit plan or a
   62  basic health benefit plan to every eligible small employer that
   63  elects to be covered under such plan, agrees to make the
   64  required premium payments under such plan, and to satisfy the
   65  other provisions of the plan.
   66         (a)(b) In the case of A small employer carrier that which
   67  does not, on or after January 1, 1993, offer coverage but renews
   68  or continues which does, on or after January 1, 1993, renew or
   69  continue coverage in force must, such carrier shall be required
   70  to provide coverage to newly eligible employees and dependents
   71  on the same basis as small employer carriers that offer which
   72  are offering coverage on or after January 1, 1993.
   73         (b)(c) Every small employer carrier must, as a condition of
   74  transacting business in this state,:
   75         1. offer and issue all small employer health benefit plans
   76  on a guaranteed-issue basis to every eligible small employer,
   77  with 2 to 50 eligible employees, that elects to be covered under
   78  such plan, agrees to make the required premium payments, and
   79  satisfies the other provisions of the plan. A rider for
   80  additional or increased benefits may be medically underwritten
   81  and may only be added to the standard health benefit plan. The
   82  increased rate charged for the additional or increased benefit
   83  must be rated in accordance with this section.
   84         2. In the absence of enrollment availability in the Florida
   85  Health Insurance Plan, offer and issue basic and standard small
   86  employer health benefit plans and a high-deductible plan that
   87  meets the requirements of a health savings account plan or
   88  health reimbursement account as defined by federal law, on a
   89  guaranteed-issue basis, during a 31-day open enrollment period
   90  of August 1 through August 31 of each year, to every eligible
   91  small employer, with fewer than two eligible employees, which
   92  small employer is not formed primarily for the purpose of buying
   93  health insurance and which elects to be covered under such plan,
   94  agrees to make the required premium payments, and satisfies the
   95  other provisions of the plan. Coverage provided under this
   96  subparagraph shall begin on October 1 of the same year as the
   97  date of enrollment, unless the small employer carrier and the
   98  small employer agree to a different date. A rider for additional
   99  or increased benefits may be medically underwritten and may only
  100  be added to the standard health benefit plan. The increased rate
  101  charged for the additional or increased benefit must be rated in
  102  accordance with this section. For purposes of this subparagraph,
  103  a person, his or her spouse, and his or her dependent children
  104  constitute a single eligible employee if that person and spouse
  105  are employed by the same small employer and either that person
  106  or his or her spouse has a normal work week of less than 25
  107  hours. Any right to an open enrollment of health benefit
  108  coverage for groups of fewer than two employees, pursuant to
  109  this section, shall remain in full force and effect in the
  110  absence of the availability of new enrollment into the Florida
  111  Health Insurance Plan.
  112         3. This paragraph does not limit a carrier’s ability to
  113  offer other health benefit plans to small employers if the
  114  standard and basic health benefit plans are offered and
  115  rejected.
  116         (d) A small employer carrier must file with the office, in
  117  a format and manner prescribed by the committee, a standard
  118  health care plan, a high deductible plan that meets the federal
  119  requirements of a health savings account plan or a health
  120  reimbursement arrangement, and a basic health care plan to be
  121  used by the carrier. The provisions of this section requiring
  122  the filing of a high deductible plan are effective September 1,
  123  2004.
  124         (e) The office at any time may, after providing notice and
  125  an opportunity for a hearing, disapprove the continued use by
  126  the small employer carrier of the standard or basic health
  127  benefit plan on the grounds that such plan does not meet the
  128  requirements of this section.
  129         (c)(f) Except as provided in paragraph (d) (g), a health
  130  benefit plan covering small employers must comply with
  131  preexisting condition provisions specified in s. 627.6561 or,
  132  for health maintenance contracts, in s. 641.31071.
  133         (d)(g) A health benefit plan covering small employers,
  134  issued or renewed on or after January 1, 1994, must comply with
  135  the following conditions:
  136         1. All health benefit plans must be offered and issued on a
  137  guaranteed-issue basis, except that benefits purchased through
  138  riders as provided in paragraph (c) may be medically
  139  underwritten for the group, but may not be individually
  140  underwritten as to the employees or the dependents of such
  141  employees. Additional or increased benefits may only be offered
  142  by riders.
  143         2. The provisions of Paragraph (c) applies (f) apply to
  144  health benefit plans issued to a small employer who has two or
  145  more eligible employees, and to health benefit plans that are
  146  issued to a small employer who has fewer than two eligible
  147  employees and that cover an employee who has had creditable
  148  coverage continually to a date not more than 63 days before the
  149  effective date of the new coverage.
  150         3. For health benefit plans that are issued to a small
  151  employer who has fewer than two employees and that cover an
  152  employee who has not been continually covered by creditable
  153  coverage within 63 days before the effective date of the new
  154  coverage, preexisting condition provisions must not exclude
  155  coverage for a period beyond 24 months following the employee’s
  156  effective date of coverage and may relate only to:
  157         a. Conditions that, during the 24-month period immediately
  158  preceding the effective date of coverage, had manifested
  159  themselves in such a manner as would cause an ordinarily prudent
  160  person to seek medical advice, diagnosis, care, or treatment or
  161  for which medical advice, diagnosis, care, or treatment was
  162  recommended or received; or
  163         b. A pregnancy existing on the effective date of coverage.
  164         (e)(h) All health benefit plans issued under this section
  165  must comply with the following conditions:
  166         1. For employers who have fewer than two employees, a late
  167  enrollee may be excluded from coverage for no longer than 24
  168  months if he or she was not covered by creditable coverage
  169  continually to a date not more than 63 days before the effective
  170  date of his or her new coverage.
  171         2. Any requirement used by a small employer carrier in
  172  determining whether to provide coverage to a small employer
  173  group, including requirements for minimum participation of
  174  eligible employees and minimum employer contributions, must be
  175  applied uniformly among all small employer groups having the
  176  same number of eligible employees applying for coverage or
  177  receiving coverage from the small employer carrier, except that
  178  a small employer carrier that participates in, administers, or
  179  issues health benefits pursuant to s. 381.0406 which do not
  180  include a preexisting condition exclusion may require as a
  181  condition of offering such benefits that the employer has had no
  182  health insurance coverage for its employees for a period of at
  183  least 6 months. A small employer carrier may vary application of
  184  minimum participation requirements and minimum employer
  185  contribution requirements only by the size of the small employer
  186  group.
  187         3. In applying minimum participation requirements with
  188  respect to a small employer, a small employer carrier shall not
  189  consider as an eligible employee employees or dependents who
  190  have qualifying existing coverage in an employer-based group
  191  insurance plan or an ERISA qualified self-insurance plan in
  192  determining whether the applicable percentage of participation
  193  is met. However, a small employer carrier may count eligible
  194  employees and dependents who have coverage under another health
  195  plan that is sponsored by that employer.
  196         4. A small employer carrier shall not increase any
  197  requirement for minimum employee participation or any
  198  requirement for minimum employer contribution applicable to a
  199  small employer at any time after the small employer has been
  200  accepted for coverage, unless the employer size has changed, in
  201  which case the small employer carrier may apply the requirements
  202  that are applicable to the new group size.
  203         5. If a small employer carrier offers coverage to a small
  204  employer, it must offer coverage to all the small employer’s
  205  eligible employees and their dependents. A small employer
  206  carrier may not offer coverage limited to certain persons in a
  207  group or to part of a group, except with respect to late
  208  enrollees.
  209         6. A small employer carrier may not modify any health
  210  benefit plan issued to a small employer with respect to a small
  211  employer or any eligible employee or dependent through riders,
  212  endorsements, or otherwise to restrict or exclude coverage for
  213  certain diseases or medical conditions otherwise covered by the
  214  health benefit plan.
  215         7. An initial enrollment period of at least 30 days must be
  216  provided. An annual 30-day open enrollment period must be
  217  offered to each small employer’s eligible employees and their
  218  dependents. A small employer carrier must provide special
  219  enrollment periods as required by s. 627.65615.
  220         (i)1. A small employer carrier need not offer coverage or
  221  accept applications pursuant to paragraph (a):
  222         a. To a small employer if the small employer is not
  223  physically located in an established geographic service area of
  224  the small employer carrier, provided such geographic service
  225  area shall not be less than a county;
  226         b. To an employee if the employee does not work or reside
  227  within an established geographic service area of the small
  228  employer carrier; or
  229         c. To a small employer group within an area in which the
  230  small employer carrier reasonably anticipates, and demonstrates
  231  to the satisfaction of the office, that it cannot, within its
  232  network of providers, deliver service adequately to the members
  233  of such groups because of obligations to existing group contract
  234  holders and enrollees.
  235         2. A small employer carrier that cannot offer coverage
  236  pursuant to sub-subparagraph 1.c. may not offer coverage in the
  237  applicable area to new cases of employer groups having more than
  238  50 eligible employees or small employer groups until the later
  239  of 180 days following each such refusal or the date on which the
  240  carrier notifies the office that it has regained its ability to
  241  deliver services to small employer groups.
  242         3.a. A small employer carrier may deny health insurance
  243  coverage in the small-group market if the carrier has
  244  demonstrated to the office that:
  245         (I) It does not have the financial reserves necessary to
  246  underwrite additional coverage; and
  247         (II) It is applying this sub-subparagraph uniformly to all
  248  employers in the small-group market in this state consistent
  249  with this section and without regard to the claims experience of
  250  those employers and their employees and their dependents or any
  251  health-status-related factor that relates to such employees and
  252  dependents.
  253         b. A small employer carrier, upon denying health insurance
  254  coverage in connection with health benefit plans in accordance
  255  with sub-subparagraph a., may not offer coverage in connection
  256  with group health benefit plans in the small-group market in
  257  this state for a period of 180 days after the date such coverage
  258  is denied or until the insurer has demonstrated to the office
  259  that the insurer has sufficient financial reserves to underwrite
  260  additional coverage, whichever is later. The office may provide
  261  for the application of this sub-subparagraph on a service-area
  262  specific basis.
  263         4. The commission shall, by rule, require each small
  264  employer carrier to report, on or before March 1 of each year,
  265  its gross annual premiums for all health benefit plans issued to
  266  small employers during the previous calendar year, and also to
  267  report its gross annual premiums for new, but not renewal,
  268  standard and basic health benefit plans subject to this section
  269  issued during the previous calendar year. No later than May 1 of
  270  each year, the office shall calculate each carrier’s percentage
  271  of all small employer group health premiums for the previous
  272  calendar year and shall calculate the aggregate gross annual
  273  premiums for new, but not renewal, standard and basic health
  274  benefit plans for the previous calendar year.
  275         (f)(j) The boundaries of geographic areas used by a small
  276  employer carrier must coincide with county lines. A carrier may
  277  not apply different geographic rating factors to the rates of
  278  small employers located within the same county.
  279         (6) RESTRICTIONS RELATING TO PREMIUM RATES.—
  280         (b) For all small employer health benefit plans that are
  281  subject to this section and issued by small employer carriers on
  282  or after January 1, 1994, premium rates for health benefit plans
  283  are subject to the following:
  284         1. Small employer carriers must use a modified community
  285  rating methodology in which the premium for each small employer
  286  is determined solely on the basis of the eligible employee’s and
  287  eligible dependent’s gender, age, family composition, tobacco
  288  use, or geographic area as determined under paragraph (5)(f)
  289  (5)(j) and in which the premium may be adjusted as permitted by
  290  this paragraph. A small employer carrier is not required to use
  291  gender as a rating factor for a nongrandfathered health plan.
  292         2. Rating factors related to age, gender, family
  293  composition, tobacco use, or geographic location may be
  294  developed by each carrier to reflect the carrier’s experience.
  295  The factors used by carriers are subject to office review and
  296  approval.
  297         3. Small employer carriers may not modify the rate for a
  298  small employer for 12 months from the initial issue date or
  299  renewal date, unless the composition of the group changes or
  300  benefits are changed. However, a small employer carrier may
  301  modify the rate one time within the 12 months after the initial
  302  issue date for a small employer who enrolls under a previously
  303  issued group policy that has a common anniversary date for all
  304  employers covered under the policy if:
  305         a. The carrier discloses to the employer in a clear and
  306  conspicuous manner the date of the first renewal and the fact
  307  that the premium may increase on or after that date.
  308         b. The insurer demonstrates to the office that efficiencies
  309  in administration are achieved and reflected in the rates
  310  charged to small employers covered under the policy.
  311         4. A carrier may issue a group health insurance policy to a
  312  small employer health alliance or other group association with
  313  rates that reflect a premium credit for expense savings
  314  attributable to administrative activities being performed by the
  315  alliance or group association if such expense savings are
  316  specifically documented in the insurer’s rate filing and are
  317  approved by the office. Any such credit may not be based on
  318  different morbidity assumptions or on any other factor related
  319  to the health status or claims experience of any person covered
  320  under the policy. This subparagraph does not exempt an alliance
  321  or group association from licensure for activities that require
  322  licensure under the insurance code. A carrier issuing a group
  323  health insurance policy to a small employer health alliance or
  324  other group association shall allow any properly licensed and
  325  appointed agent of that carrier to market and sell the small
  326  employer health alliance or other group association policy. Such
  327  agent shall be paid the usual and customary commission paid to
  328  any agent selling the policy.
  329         5. Any adjustments in rates for claims experience, health
  330  status, or duration of coverage may not be charged to individual
  331  employees or dependents. For a small employer’s policy, such
  332  adjustments may not result in a rate for the small employer
  333  which deviates more than 15 percent from the carrier’s approved
  334  rate. Any such adjustment must be applied uniformly to the rates
  335  charged for all employees and dependents of the small employer.
  336  A small employer carrier may make an adjustment to a small
  337  employer’s renewal premium, up to 10 percent annually, due to
  338  the claims experience, health status, or duration of coverage of
  339  the employees or dependents of the small employer. Semiannually,
  340  small group carriers shall report information on forms adopted
  341  by rule by the commission, to enable the office to monitor the
  342  relationship of aggregate adjusted premiums actually charged
  343  policyholders by each carrier to the premiums that would have
  344  been charged by application of the carrier’s approved modified
  345  community rates. If the aggregate resulting from the application
  346  of such adjustment exceeds the premium that would have been
  347  charged by application of the approved modified community rate
  348  by 4 percent for the current policy term reporting period, the
  349  carrier shall limit the application of such adjustments only to
  350  minus adjustments beginning within 60 days after the report is
  351  sent to the office. For any subsequent policy term reporting
  352  period, if the total aggregate adjusted premium actually charged
  353  does not exceed the premium that would have been charged by
  354  application of the approved modified community rate by 4
  355  percent, the carrier may apply both plus and minus adjustments.
  356  A small employer carrier may provide a credit to a small
  357  employer’s premium based on administrative and acquisition
  358  expense differences resulting from the size of the group. Group
  359  size administrative and acquisition expense factors may be
  360  developed by each carrier to reflect the carrier’s experience
  361  and are subject to office review and approval.
  362         6. A small employer carrier rating methodology may include
  363  separate rating categories for one dependent child, for two
  364  dependent children, and for three or more dependent children for
  365  family coverage of employees having a spouse and dependent
  366  children or employees having dependent children only. A small
  367  employer carrier may have fewer, but not greater, numbers of
  368  categories for dependent children than those specified in this
  369  subparagraph.
  370         7. Small employer carriers may not use a composite rating
  371  methodology to rate a small employer with fewer than 10
  372  employees. For the purposes of this subparagraph, the term
  373  “composite rating methodology” means a rating methodology that
  374  averages the impact of the rating factors for age and gender in
  375  the premiums charged to all of the employees of a small
  376  employer.
  377         8. A carrier may separate the experience of small employer
  378  groups with fewer than 2 eligible employees from the experience
  379  of small employer groups with 2-50 eligible employees for
  380  purposes of determining an alternative modified community
  381  rating.
  382         a. If a carrier separates the experience of small employer
  383  groups, the rate to be charged to small employer groups of fewer
  384  than 2 eligible employees may not exceed 150 percent of the rate
  385  determined for small employer groups of 2-50 eligible employees.
  386  However, the carrier may charge excess losses of the experience
  387  pool consisting of small employer groups with less than 2
  388  eligible employees to the experience pool consisting of small
  389  employer groups with 2-50 eligible employees so that all losses
  390  are allocated and the 150-percent rate limit on the experience
  391  pool consisting of small employer groups with less than 2
  392  eligible employees is maintained.
  393         b. Notwithstanding s. 627.411(1), the rate to be charged to
  394  a small employer group of fewer than 2 eligible employees,
  395  insured as of July 1, 2002, may be up to 125 percent of the rate
  396  determined for small employer groups of 2-50 eligible employees
  397  for the first annual renewal and 150 percent for subsequent
  398  annual renewals.
  399         9. A carrier shall separate the experience of grandfathered
  400  health plans from nongrandfathered health plans for determining
  401  rates.
  402         (11) SMALL EMPLOYER HEALTH REINSURANCE PROGRAM.—
  403         (g) A reinsuring carrier may reinsure with the program
  404  coverage of an eligible employee of a small employer, or any
  405  dependent of such an employee, subject to each of the following
  406  provisions:
  407         1. With respect to a standard and basic health care plan,
  408  the program must reinsure the level of coverage provided; and,
  409  with respect to any other plan, the program must reinsure the
  410  coverage up to, but not exceeding, the level of coverage
  411  provided under the standard and basic health care plan.
  412         1.2. Except in the case of a late enrollee, a reinsuring
  413  carrier may reinsure an eligible employee or dependent within 60
  414  days after the commencement of the coverage of the small
  415  employer. A newly employed eligible employee or dependent of a
  416  small employer may be reinsured within 60 days after the
  417  commencement of his or her coverage.
  418         2.3. A small employer carrier may reinsure an entire
  419  employer group within 60 days after the commencement of the
  420  group’s coverage under the plan. The carrier may choose to
  421  reinsure newly eligible employees and dependents of the
  422  reinsured group pursuant to subparagraph 1.
  423         3.4. The program may not reimburse a participating carrier
  424  with respect to the claims of a reinsured employee or dependent
  425  until the carrier has paid incurred claims of at least $5,000 in
  426  a calendar year for benefits covered by the program. In
  427  addition, the reinsuring carrier shall be responsible for 10
  428  percent of the next $50,000 and 5 percent of the next $100,000
  429  of incurred claims during a calendar year and the program shall
  430  reinsure the remainder.
  431         4.5. The board annually shall adjust the initial level of
  432  claims and the maximum limit to be retained by the carrier to
  433  reflect increases in costs and utilization within the standard
  434  market for health benefit plans within the state. The adjustment
  435  shall not be less than the annual change in the medical
  436  component of the “Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers”
  437  of the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the Department of Labor,
  438  unless the board proposes and the office approves a lower
  439  adjustment factor.
  440         5.6. A small employer carrier may terminate reinsurance for
  441  all reinsured employees or dependents on any plan anniversary.
  442         6.7. The premium rate charged for reinsurance by the
  443  program to a health maintenance organization that is approved by
  444  the Secretary of Health and Human Services as a federally
  445  qualified health maintenance organization pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
  446  s. 300e(c)(2)(A) and that, as such, is subject to requirements
  447  that limit the amount of risk that may be ceded to the program,
  448  which requirements are more restrictive than subparagraph 3. 4.,
  449  shall be reduced by an amount equal to that portion of the risk,
  450  if any, which exceeds the amount set forth in subparagraph 3. 4.
  451  which may not be ceded to the program.
  452         7.8. The board may consider adjustments to the premium
  453  rates charged for reinsurance by the program for carriers that
  454  use effective cost containment measures, including high-cost
  455  case management, as defined by the board.
  456         8.9. A reinsuring carrier shall apply its case-management
  457  and claims-handling techniques, including, but not limited to,
  458  utilization review, individual case management, preferred
  459  provider provisions, other managed care provisions or methods of
  460  operation, consistently with both reinsured business and
  461  nonreinsured business.
  462         (h)1. The board, as part of the plan of operation, shall
  463  establish a methodology for determining premium rates to be
  464  charged by the program for reinsuring small employers and
  465  individuals pursuant to this section. The methodology shall
  466  include a system for classification of small employers that
  467  reflects the types of case characteristics commonly used by
  468  small employer carriers in the state. The methodology shall
  469  provide for the development of basic reinsurance premium rates,
  470  which shall be multiplied by the factors set for them in this
  471  paragraph to determine the premium rates for the program. The
  472  basic reinsurance premium rates shall be established by the
  473  board, subject to the approval of the office, and shall be set
  474  at levels which reasonably approximate gross premiums charged to
  475  small employers by small employer carriers for health benefit
  476  plans with benefits similar to the standard and basic health
  477  benefit plan. The premium rates set by the board may vary by
  478  geographical area, as determined under this section, to reflect
  479  differences in cost. The multiplying factors must be established
  480  as follows:
  481         a. The entire group may be reinsured for a rate that is 1.5
  482  times the rate established by the board.
  483         b. An eligible employee or dependent may be reinsured for a
  484  rate that is 5 times the rate established by the board.
  485         2. The board periodically shall review the methodology
  486  established, including the system of classification and any
  487  rating factors, to assure that it reasonably reflects the claims
  488  experience of the program. The board may propose changes to the
  489  rates which shall be subject to the approval of the office.
  490         (j)1. Before July 1 of each calendar year, the board shall
  491  determine and report to the office the program net loss for the
  492  previous year, including administrative expenses for that year,
  493  and the incurred losses for the year, taking into account
  494  investment income and other appropriate gains and losses.
  495         2. Any net loss for the year shall be recouped by
  496  assessment of the carriers, as follows:
  497         a. The operating losses of the program shall be assessed in
  498  the following order subject to the specified limitations. The
  499  first tier of assessments shall be made against reinsuring
  500  carriers in an amount which shall not exceed 5 percent of each
  501  reinsuring carrier’s premiums from health benefit plans covering
  502  small employers. If such assessments have been collected and
  503  additional moneys are needed, the board shall make a second tier
  504  of assessments in an amount which shall not exceed 0.5 percent
  505  of each carrier’s health benefit plan premiums. Except as
  506  provided in paragraph (m) (n), risk-assuming carriers are exempt
  507  from all assessments authorized pursuant to this section. The
  508  amount paid by a reinsuring carrier for the first tier of
  509  assessments shall be credited against any additional assessments
  510  made.
  511         b. The board shall equitably assess carriers for operating
  512  losses of the plan based on market share. The board shall
  513  annually assess each carrier a portion of the operating losses
  514  of the plan. The first tier of assessments shall be determined
  515  by multiplying the operating losses by a fraction, the numerator
  516  of which equals the reinsuring carrier’s earned premium
  517  pertaining to direct writings of small employer health benefit
  518  plans in the state during the calendar year for which the
  519  assessment is levied, and the denominator of which equals the
  520  total of all such premiums earned by reinsuring carriers in the
  521  state during that calendar year. The second tier of assessments
  522  shall be based on the premiums that all carriers, except risk
  523  assuming carriers, earned on all health benefit plans written in
  524  this state. The board may levy interim assessments against
  525  carriers to ensure the financial ability of the plan to cover
  526  claims expenses and administrative expenses paid or estimated to
  527  be paid in the operation of the plan for the calendar year prior
  528  to the association’s anticipated receipt of annual assessments
  529  for that calendar year. Any interim assessment is due and
  530  payable within 30 days after receipt by a carrier of the interim
  531  assessment notice. Interim assessment payments shall be credited
  532  against the carrier’s annual assessment. Health benefit plan
  533  premiums and benefits paid by a carrier that are less than an
  534  amount determined by the board to justify the cost of collection
  535  may not be considered for purposes of determining assessments.
  536         c. Subject to the approval of the office, the board shall
  537  make an adjustment to the assessment formula for reinsuring
  538  carriers that are approved as federally qualified health
  539  maintenance organizations by the Secretary of Health and Human
  540  Services pursuant to 42 U.S.C. s. 300e(c)(2)(A) to the extent,
  541  if any, that restrictions are placed on them that are not
  542  imposed on other small employer carriers.
  543         3. Before July 1 of each year, the board shall determine
  544  and file with the office an estimate of the assessments needed
  545  to fund the losses incurred by the program in the previous
  546  calendar year.
  547         4. If the board determines that the assessments needed to
  548  fund the losses incurred by the program in the previous calendar
  549  year will exceed the amount specified in subparagraph 2., the
  550  board shall evaluate the operation of the program and report its
  551  findings, including any recommendations for changes to the plan
  552  of operation, to the office within 180 days following the end of
  553  the calendar year in which the losses were incurred. The
  554  evaluation shall include an estimate of future assessments, the
  555  administrative costs of the program, the appropriateness of the
  556  premiums charged and the level of carrier retention under the
  557  program, and the costs of coverage for small employers. If the
  558  board fails to file a report with the office within 180 days
  559  following the end of the applicable calendar year, the office
  560  may evaluate the operations of the program and implement such
  561  amendments to the plan of operation the office deems necessary
  562  to reduce future losses and assessments.
  563         5. If assessments exceed the amount of the actual losses
  564  and administrative expenses of the program, the excess shall be
  565  held as interest and used by the board to offset future losses
  566  or to reduce program premiums. As used in this paragraph, the
  567  term “future losses” includes reserves for incurred but not
  568  reported claims.
  569         6. Each carrier’s proportion of the assessment shall be
  570  determined annually by the board, based on annual statements and
  571  other reports considered necessary by the board and filed by the
  572  carriers with the board.
  573         7. Provision shall be made in the plan of operation for the
  574  imposition of an interest penalty for late payment of an
  575  assessment.
  576         8. A carrier may seek, from the office, a deferment, in
  577  whole or in part, from any assessment made by the board. The
  578  office may defer, in whole or in part, the assessment of a
  579  carrier if, in the opinion of the office, the payment of the
  580  assessment would place the carrier in a financially impaired
  581  condition. If an assessment against a carrier is deferred, in
  582  whole or in part, the amount by which the assessment is deferred
  583  may be assessed against the other carriers in a manner
  584  consistent with the basis for assessment set forth in this
  585  section. The carrier receiving such deferment remains liable to
  586  the program for the amount deferred and is prohibited from
  587  reinsuring any individuals or groups in the program if it fails
  588  to pay assessments.
  589         (l) The board, as part of the plan of operation, shall
  590  develop standards setting forth the manner and levels of
  591  compensation to be paid to agents for the sale of basic and
  592  standard health benefit plans. In establishing such standards,
  593  the board shall take into consideration the need to assure the
  594  broad availability of coverages, the objectives of the program,
  595  the time and effort expended in placing the coverage, the need
  596  to provide ongoing service to the small employer, the levels of
  597  compensation currently used in the industry, and the overall
  598  costs of coverage to small employers selecting these plans.
  599         (l)(m) The board shall monitor compliance with this
  600  section, including the market conduct of small employer
  601  carriers, and shall report to the office any unfair trade
  602  practices and misleading or unfair conduct by a small employer
  603  carrier that has been reported to the board by agents,
  604  consumers, or any other person. The office shall investigate all
  605  reports and, upon a finding of noncompliance with this section
  606  or of unfair or misleading practices, shall take action against
  607  the small employer carrier as permitted under the insurance code
  608  or chapter 641. The board is not given investigatory or
  609  regulatory powers, but must forward all reports of cases or
  610  abuse or misrepresentation to the office.
  611         (m)(n) Notwithstanding paragraph (j), the administrative
  612  expenses of the program shall be recouped by assessment of risk
  613  assuming carriers and reinsuring carriers and such amounts shall
  614  not be considered part of the operating losses of the plan for
  615  the purposes of this paragraph. Each carrier’s portion of such
  616  administrative expenses shall be determined by multiplying the
  617  total of such administrative expenses by a fraction, the
  618  numerator of which equals the carrier’s earned premium
  619  pertaining to direct writing of small employer health benefit
  620  plans in the state during the calendar year for which the
  621  assessment is levied, and the denominator of which equals the
  622  total of such premiums earned by all carriers in the state
  623  during such calendar year.
  624         (n)(o) The board shall advise the office, the Agency for
  625  Health Care Administration, the department, other executive
  626  departments, and the Legislature on health insurance issues.
  627  Specifically, the board shall:
  628         1. Provide a forum for stakeholders, consisting of
  629  insurers, employers, agents, consumers, and regulators, in the
  630  private health insurance market in this state.
  631         2. Review and recommend strategies to improve the
  632  functioning of the health insurance markets in this state with a
  633  specific focus on market stability, access, and pricing.
  634         3. Make recommendations to the office for legislation
  635  addressing health insurance market issues and provide comments
  636  on health insurance legislation proposed by the office.
  637         4. Meet at least three times each year. One meeting shall
  638  be held to hear reports and to secure public comment on the
  639  health insurance market, to develop any legislation needed to
  640  address health insurance market issues, and to provide comments
  641  on health insurance legislation proposed by the office.
  642         5. Issue a report to the office on the state of the health
  643  insurance market by September 1 each year. The report shall
  644  include recommendations for changes in the health insurance
  645  market, results from implementation of previous recommendations,
  646  and information on health insurance markets.
  647         (12) STANDARD, BASIC, HIGH DEDUCTIBLE, AND LIMITED HEALTH
  648  BENEFIT PLANS.—
  649         (a)1. The Chief Financial Officer shall appoint a health
  650  benefit plan committee composed of four representatives of
  651  carriers which shall include at least two representatives of
  652  HMOs, at least one of which is a staff model HMO, two
  653  representatives of agents, four representatives of small
  654  employers, and one employee of a small employer. The carrier
  655  members shall be selected from a list of individuals recommended
  656  by the board. The Chief Financial Officer may require the board
  657  to submit additional recommendations of individuals for
  658  appointment.
  659         2. The plans shall comply with all of the requirements of
  660  this subsection.
  661         3. The plans must be filed with and approved by the office
  662  prior to issuance or delivery by any small employer carrier.
  663         4. After approval of the revised health benefit plans, if
  664  the office determines that modifications to a plan might be
  665  appropriate, the Chief Financial Officer shall appoint a new
  666  health benefit plan committee in the manner provided in
  667  subparagraph 1. to submit recommended modifications to the
  668  office for approval.
  669         (b)1. Each small employer carrier issuing new health
  670  benefit plans shall offer to any small employer, upon request, a
  671  standard health benefit plan, a basic health benefit plan, and a
  672  high deductible plan that meets the requirements of a health
  673  savings account plan as defined by federal law or a health
  674  reimbursement arrangement as authorized by the Internal Revenue
  675  Service, that meet the criteria set forth in this section.
  676         2. For purposes of this subsection, the terms “standard
  677  health benefit plan,” “basic health benefit plan,” and “high
  678  deductible plan” mean policies or contracts that a small
  679  employer carrier offers to eligible small employers that
  680  contain:
  681         a. An exclusion for services that are not medically
  682  necessary or that are not covered preventive health services;
  683  and
  684         b. A procedure for preauthorization by the small employer
  685  carrier, or its designees.
  686         3. A small employer carrier may include the following
  687  managed care provisions in the policy or contract to control
  688  costs:
  689         a. A preferred provider arrangement or exclusive provider
  690  organization or any combination thereof, in which a small
  691  employer carrier enters into a written agreement with the
  692  provider to provide services at specified levels of
  693  reimbursement or to provide reimbursement to specified
  694  providers. Any such written agreement between a provider and a
  695  small employer carrier must contain a provision under which the
  696  parties agree that the insured individual or covered member has
  697  no obligation to make payment for any medical service rendered
  698  by the provider which is determined not to be medically
  699  necessary. A carrier may use preferred provider arrangements or
  700  exclusive provider arrangements to the same extent as allowed in
  701  group products that are not issued to small employers.
  702         b. A procedure for utilization review by the small employer
  703  carrier or its designees.
  704  
  705  This subparagraph does not prohibit a small employer carrier
  706  from including in its policy or contract additional managed care
  707  and cost containment provisions, subject to the approval of the
  708  office, which have potential for controlling costs in a manner
  709  that does not result in inequitable treatment of insureds or
  710  subscribers. The carrier may use such provisions to the same
  711  extent as authorized for group products that are not issued to
  712  small employers.
  713         4. The standard health benefit plan shall include:
  714         a. Coverage for inpatient hospitalization;
  715         b. Coverage for outpatient services;
  716         c. Coverage for newborn children pursuant to s. 627.6575;
  717         d. Coverage for child care supervision services pursuant to
  718  s. 627.6579;
  719         e. Coverage for adopted children upon placement in the
  720  residence pursuant to s. 627.6578;
  721         f. Coverage for mammograms pursuant to s. 627.6613;
  722         g. Coverage for handicapped children pursuant to s.
  723  627.6615;
  724         h. Emergency or urgent care out of the geographic service
  725  area; and
  726         i. Coverage for services provided by a hospice licensed
  727  under s. 400.602 in cases where such coverage would be the most
  728  appropriate and the most cost-effective method for treating a
  729  covered illness.
  730         5. The standard health benefit plan and the basic health
  731  benefit plan may include a schedule of benefit limitations for
  732  specified services and procedures. If the committee develops
  733  such a schedule of benefits limitation for the standard health
  734  benefit plan or the basic health benefit plan, a small employer
  735  carrier offering the plan must offer the employer an option for
  736  increasing the benefit schedule amounts by 4 percent annually.
  737         6. The basic health benefit plan shall include all of the
  738  benefits specified in subparagraph 4.; however, the basic health
  739  benefit plan shall place additional restrictions on the benefits
  740  and utilization and may also impose additional cost containment
  741  measures.
  742         7. Sections 627.419(2), (3), and (4), 627.6574, 627.6612,
  743  627.66121, 627.66122, 627.6616, 627.6618, 627.668, and 627.66911
  744  apply to the standard health benefit plan and to the basic
  745  health benefit plan. However, notwithstanding said provisions,
  746  the plans may specify limits on the number of authorized
  747  treatments, if such limits are reasonable and do not
  748  discriminate against any type of provider.
  749         8. The high deductible plan associated with a health
  750  savings account or a health reimbursement arrangement shall
  751  include all the benefits specified in subparagraph 4.
  752         9. Each small employer carrier that provides for inpatient
  753  and outpatient services by allopathic hospitals may provide as
  754  an option of the insured similar inpatient and outpatient
  755  services by hospitals accredited by the American Osteopathic
  756  Association when such services are available and the osteopathic
  757  hospital agrees to provide the service.
  758         (c) If a small employer rejects, in writing, the standard
  759  health benefit plan, the basic health benefit plan, and the high
  760  deductible health savings account plan or a health reimbursement
  761  arrangement, the small employer carrier may offer the small
  762  employer a limited benefit policy or contract.
  763         (d)1. Upon offering coverage under a standard health
  764  benefit plan, a basic health benefit plan, or a limited benefit
  765  policy or contract for a small employer group, the small
  766  employer carrier shall provide such employer group with a
  767  written statement that contains, at a minimum:
  768         a. An explanation of those mandated benefits and providers
  769  that are not covered by the policy or contract;
  770         b. An explanation of the managed care and cost control
  771  features of the policy or contract, along with all appropriate
  772  mailing addresses and telephone numbers to be used by insureds
  773  in seeking information or authorization; and
  774         c. An explanation of the primary and preventive care
  775  features of the policy or contract.
  776  
  777  Such disclosure statement must be presented in a clear and
  778  understandable form and format and must be separate from the
  779  policy or certificate or evidence of coverage provided to the
  780  employer group.
  781         2. Before a small employer carrier issues a standard health
  782  benefit plan, a basic health benefit plan, or a limited benefit
  783  policy or contract, the carrier must obtain from the prospective
  784  policyholder a signed written statement in which the prospective
  785  policyholder:
  786         a. Certifies as to eligibility for coverage under the
  787  standard health benefit plan, basic health benefit plan, or
  788  limited benefit policy or contract;
  789         b. Acknowledges the limited nature of the coverage and an
  790  understanding of the managed care and cost control features of
  791  the policy or contract;
  792         c. Acknowledges that if misrepresentations are made
  793  regarding eligibility for coverage under a standard health
  794  benefit plan, a basic health benefit plan, or a limited benefit
  795  policy or contract, the person making such misrepresentations
  796  forfeits coverage provided by the policy or contract; and
  797         d. If a limited plan is requested, acknowledges that the
  798  prospective policyholder had been offered, at the time of
  799  application for the insurance policy or contract, the
  800  opportunity to purchase any health benefit plan offered by the
  801  carrier and that the prospective policyholder rejected that
  802  coverage.
  803  
  804  A copy of such written statement must be provided to the
  805  prospective policyholder by the time of delivery of the policy
  806  or contract, and the original of such written statement must be
  807  retained in the files of the small employer carrier for the
  808  period of time that the policy or contract remains in effect or
  809  for 5 years, whichever is longer.
  810         3. Any material statement made by an applicant for coverage
  811  under a health benefit plan which falsely certifies the
  812  applicant’s eligibility for coverage serves as the basis for
  813  terminating coverage under the policy or contract.
  814         (e) A small employer carrier may not use any policy,
  815  contract, form, or rate under this section, including
  816  applications, enrollment forms, policies, contracts,
  817  certificates, evidences of coverage, riders, amendments,
  818  endorsements, and disclosure forms, until the insurer has filed
  819  it with the office and the office has approved it under ss.
  820  627.410 and 627.411 and this section.
  821         (12)(13) STANDARDS TO ASSURE FAIR MARKETING.—
  822         (a) Each small employer carrier shall actively market
  823  health benefit plan coverage, including the basic and standard
  824  health benefit plans, including any subsequent modifications or
  825  additions to those plans, to eligible small employers in the
  826  state. Before January 1, 1994, if a small employer carrier
  827  denies coverage to a small employer on the basis of the health
  828  status or claims experience of the small employer or its
  829  employees or dependents, the small employer carrier shall offer
  830  the small employer the opportunity to purchase a basic health
  831  benefit plan and a standard health benefit plan. Beginning
  832  January 1, 1994, Small employer carriers must offer and issue
  833  all plans on a guaranteed-issue basis.
  834         (b) A No small employer carrier or agent shall not,
  835  directly or indirectly, engage in the following activities:
  836         1. Encouraging or directing small employers to refrain from
  837  filing an application for coverage with the small employer
  838  carrier because of the health status, claims experience,
  839  industry, occupation, or geographic location of the small
  840  employer.
  841         2. Encouraging or directing small employers to seek
  842  coverage from another carrier because of the health status,
  843  claims experience, industry, occupation, or geographic location
  844  of the small employer.
  845         (c) The provisions of Paragraph (a) does shall not apply
  846  with respect to information provided by a small employer carrier
  847  or agent to a small employer regarding the established
  848  geographic service area or a restricted network provision of a
  849  small employer carrier.
  850         (d) A No small employer carrier shall not, directly or
  851  indirectly, enter into any contract, agreement, or arrangement
  852  with an agent that provides for or results in the compensation
  853  paid to an agent for the sale of a health benefit plan to be
  854  varied because of the health status, claims experience,
  855  industry, occupation, or geographic location of the small
  856  employer except if the compensation arrangement provides
  857  compensation to an agent on the basis of percentage of premium,
  858  provided that the percentage shall not vary because of the
  859  health status, claims experience, industry, occupation, or
  860  geographic area of the small employer.
  861         (e) A small employer carrier shall provide reasonable
  862  compensation, as provided under the plan of operation of the
  863  program, to an agent, if any, for the sale of a basic or
  864  standard health benefit plan.
  865         (e)(f)A No small employer carrier shall not terminate,
  866  fail to renew, or limit its contract or agreement of
  867  representation with an agent for any reason related to the
  868  health status, claims experience, occupation, or geographic
  869  location of the small employers placed by the agent with the
  870  small employer carrier unless the agent consistently engages in
  871  practices that violate this section or s. 626.9541.
  872         (f)(g)A No small employer carrier or agent shall not
  873  induce or otherwise encourage a small employer to separate or
  874  otherwise exclude an employee from health coverage or benefits
  875  provided in connection with the employee’s employment.
  876         (g)(h) Denial by a small employer carrier of an application
  877  for coverage from a small employer shall be in writing and shall
  878  state the reason or reasons for the denial.
  879         (h)(i) The commission may establish regulations setting
  880  forth additional standards to provide for the fair marketing and
  881  broad availability of health benefit plans to small employers in
  882  this state.
  883         (i)(j) A violation of this section by a small employer
  884  carrier or an agent is shall be an unfair trade practice under
  885  s. 626.9541 or ss. 641.3903 and 641.3907.
  886         (j)(k) If a small employer carrier enters into a contract,
  887  agreement, or other arrangement with a third-party administrator
  888  to provide administrative, marketing, or other services relating
  889  to the offering of health benefit plans to small employers in
  890  this state, the third-party administrator shall be subject to
  891  this section.
  892         (13)(14) DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION.—
  893         (a) In connection with the offering of a health benefit
  894  plan to a small employer, a small employer carrier:
  895         1. Shall make a reasonable disclosure to such employer, as
  896  part of its solicitation and sales materials, of the
  897  availability of information described in paragraph (b); and
  898         2. Upon request of the small employer, provide such
  899  information.
  900         (b)1. Subject to subparagraph 3., with respect to a small
  901  employer carrier that offers a health benefit plan to a small
  902  employer, information described in this paragraph is information
  903  that concerns:
  904         a. The provisions of such coverage concerning an insurer’s
  905  right to change premium rates and the factors that may affect
  906  changes in premium rates;
  907         b. The provisions of such coverage that relate to
  908  renewability of coverage;
  909         c. The provisions of such coverage that relate to any
  910  preexisting condition exclusions; and
  911         d. The benefits and premiums available under all health
  912  insurance coverage for which the employer is qualified.
  913         2. Information required under this subsection shall be
  914  provided to small employers in a manner determined to be
  915  understandable by the average small employer, and shall be
  916  sufficient to reasonably inform small employers of their rights
  917  and obligations under the health insurance coverage.
  918         3. An insurer is not required under this subsection to
  919  disclose any information that is proprietary or a trade secret
  920  under state law.
  921         (14)(15) SMALL EMPLOYERS ACCESS PROGRAM.—
  922         (k) Benefits.The benefits provided by the plan shall be
  923  the same as the coverage required for small employers under
  924  subsection (12). Upon the approval of the office, the insurer
  925  may also establish an optional mutually supported benefit plan
  926  that which is an alternative plan developed within a defined
  927  geographic region of this state or any other such alternative
  928  plan that which will carry out the intent of this subsection.
  929  Any small employer carrier issuing new health benefit plans may
  930  offer a benefit plan with coverages similar to, but not less
  931  than, any alternative coverage plan developed pursuant to this
  932  subsection.
  933         (15)(16) APPLICABILITY OF OTHER STATE LAWS.—
  934         (a) Except as expressly provided in this section, a law
  935  requiring coverage for a specific health care service or
  936  benefit, or a law requiring reimbursement, utilization, or
  937  consideration of a specific category of licensed health care
  938  practitioner, does not apply to a standard or basic health
  939  benefit plan policy or contract or a limited benefit policy or
  940  contract offered or delivered to a small employer unless that
  941  law is made expressly applicable to such policies or contracts.
  942  A law restricting or limiting deductibles, coinsurance,
  943  copayments, or annual or lifetime maximum payments does not
  944  apply to any health plan policy, including a standard or basic
  945  health benefit plan policy or contract, offered or delivered to
  946  a small employer unless such law is made expressly applicable to
  947  such policy or contract. However, every small employer carrier
  948  must offer to eligible small employers the standard benefit plan
  949  and the basic benefit plan, as required by subsection (5), as
  950  such plans have been approved by the office pursuant to
  951  subsection (12).
  952         (b) Except as provided in this section, a standard or basic
  953  health benefit plan policy or contract or limited benefit policy
  954  or contract offered to a small employer is not subject to any
  955  provision of this code which:
  956         1. Inhibits a small employer carrier from contracting with
  957  providers or groups of providers with respect to health care
  958  services or benefits;
  959         2. Imposes any restriction on a small employer carrier’s
  960  ability to negotiate with providers regarding the level or
  961  method of reimbursing care or services provided under a health
  962  benefit plan; or
  963         3. Requires a small employer carrier to either include a
  964  specific provider or class of providers when contracting for
  965  health care services or benefits or to exclude any class of
  966  providers that is generally authorized by statute to provide
  967  such care.
  968         (b)(c) Any second tier assessment paid by a carrier
  969  pursuant to paragraph (11)(j) may be credited against
  970  assessments levied against the carrier pursuant to s. 627.6494.
  971         (c)(d) Notwithstanding chapter 641, a health maintenance
  972  organization may is authorized to issue contracts providing
  973  benefits equal to the standard health benefit plan, the basic
  974  health benefit plan, and the limited benefit policy authorized
  975  by this section.
  976         (16)(17) RESTRICTIONS ON COVERAGE.—
  977         (a) A plan under which coverage is purchased in whole or in
  978  part with any state or federal funds through an exchange created
  979  pursuant to the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care
  980  Act, Pub. L. No. 111-148, may not provide coverage for an
  981  abortion, as defined in s. 390.011(1), except if the pregnancy
  982  is the result of an act of rape or incest, or in the case where
  983  a woman suffers from a physical disorder, physical injury, or
  984  physical illness, including a life-endangering physical
  985  condition caused by or arising from the pregnancy itself, which
  986  would, as certified by a physician, place the woman in danger of
  987  death unless an abortion is performed. Coverage is deemed to be
  988  purchased with state or federal funds if any tax credit or cost
  989  sharing credit is applied toward the plan.
  990         (b) This subsection does not prohibit a plan from providing
  991  any person or entity with separate coverage for an abortion if
  992  such coverage is not purchased in whole or in part with state or
  993  federal funds.
  994         (c) As used in this section, the term “state” means this
  995  state or any political subdivision of the state.
  996         (17)(18) RULEMAKING AUTHORITY.—The commission may adopt
  997  rules to administer this section, including rules governing
  998  compliance by small employer carriers and small employers.
  999         Section 2. Section 627.66997, Florida Statutes, is created
 1000  to read:
 1001         627.66997 Stop-loss insurance.—
 1002         (1) A plan established or maintained by an individual small
 1003  employer in accordance with the Employee Retirement Income
 1004  Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), Pub. L. No. 93-406, may provide a
 1005  policy of stop–loss coverage, as defined in s. 627.6482, in lieu
 1006  of the requirements of s. 627.6699 if the policy has an
 1007  aggregate attachment point that is lower than the greatest of:
 1008         (a) Two thousand dollars times the number of employees;
 1009         (b) One hundred twenty percent of expected claims; or
 1010         (c) Ten thousand dollars.
 1011         (2) Health insurance providers shall use a consistent
 1012  method of determining the number of covered employees of an
 1013  employer. Such method may include, but is not limited to, the
 1014  average number of employees employed on an annual basis or the
 1015  number of employees employed on a uniform annual date.
 1016         Section 3. Subsection (3) of section 627.642, Florida
 1017  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1018         627.642 Outline of coverage.—
 1019         (3) In addition to the outline of coverage, a policy as
 1020  specified in s. 627.6699(3)(k) 627.6699(3)(l) must be
 1021  accompanied by an identification card that contains, at a
 1022  minimum:
 1023         (a) The name of the organization issuing the policy or the
 1024  name of the organization administering the policy, whichever
 1025  applies.
 1026         (b) The name of the contract holder.
 1027         (c) The type of plan only if the plan is filed in the
 1028  state, an indication that the plan is self-funded, or the name
 1029  of the network.
 1030         (d) The member identification number, contract number, and
 1031  policy or group number, if applicable.
 1032         (e) A contact phone number or electronic address for
 1033  authorizations and admission certifications.
 1034         (f) A phone number or electronic address whereby the
 1035  covered person or hospital, physician, or other person rendering
 1036  services covered by the policy may obtain benefits verification
 1037  and information in order to estimate patient financial
 1038  responsibility, in compliance with privacy rules under the
 1039  Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
 1040         (g) The national plan identifier, in accordance with the
 1041  compliance date set forth by the federal Department of Health
 1042  and Human Services.
 1043  
 1044  The identification card must present the information in a
 1045  readily identifiable manner or, alternatively, the information
 1046  may be embedded on the card and available through magnetic
 1047  stripe or smart card. The information may also be provided
 1048  through other electronic technology. 
 1049         Section 4. Paragraph (g) of subsection (7) and paragraph
 1050  (a) of subsection (8) of section 627.6475, Florida Statutes, are
 1051  amended to read:
 1052         627.6475 Individual reinsurance pool.—
 1053         (7) INDIVIDUAL HEALTH REINSURANCE PROGRAM.—
 1054         (g) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the board
 1055  and the office shall have all powers, duties, and
 1056  responsibilities with respect to carriers that issue and
 1057  reinsure individual health insurance, as specified for the board
 1058  and the office in s. 627.6699(11) with respect to small employer
 1059  carriers, including, but not limited to, the provisions of s.
 1060  627.6699(11) relating to:
 1061         1. Use of assessments that exceed the amount of actual
 1062  losses and expenses.
 1063         2. The annual determination of each carrier’s proportion of
 1064  the assessment.
 1065         3. Interest for late payment of assessments.
 1066         4. Authority for the office to approve deferment of an
 1067  assessment against a carrier.
 1068         5. Limited immunity from legal actions or carriers.
 1069         6. Development of standards for compensation to be paid to
 1070  agents. Such standards shall be limited to those specifically
 1071  enumerated in s. 627.6699(12)(d) 627.6699(13)(d).
 1072         7. Monitoring compliance by carriers with this section.
 1073         (8) STANDARDS TO ASSURE FAIR MARKETING.—
 1074         (a) Each health insurance issuer that offers individual
 1075  health insurance shall actively market coverage to eligible
 1076  individuals in the state. The provisions of s. 627.6699(12)
 1077  627.6699(13) that apply to small employer carriers that market
 1078  policies to small employers shall also apply to health insurance
 1079  issuers that offer individual health insurance with respect to
 1080  marketing policies to individuals.
 1081         Section 5. Subsection (2) of section 627.657, Florida
 1082  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1083         627.657 Provisions of group health insurance policies.—
 1084         (2) The medical policy as specified in s. 627.6699(3)(k)
 1085  627.6699(3)(l) must be accompanied by an identification card
 1086  that contains, at a minimum:
 1087         (a) The name of the organization issuing the policy or name
 1088  of the organization administering the policy, whichever applies.
 1089         (b) The name of the certificateholder.
 1090         (c) The type of plan only if the plan is filed in the
 1091  state, an indication that the plan is self-funded, or the name
 1092  of the network.
 1093         (d) The member identification number, contract number, and
 1094  policy or group number, if applicable.
 1095         (e) A contact phone number or electronic address for
 1096  authorizations and admission certifications.
 1097         (f) A phone number or electronic address whereby the
 1098  covered person or hospital, physician, or other person rendering
 1099  services covered by the policy may obtain benefits verification
 1100  and information in order to estimate patient financial
 1101  responsibility, in compliance with privacy rules under the
 1102  Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
 1103         (g) The national plan identifier, in accordance with the
 1104  compliance date set forth by the federal Department of Health
 1105  and Human Services.
 1106  
 1107  The identification card must present the information in a
 1108  readily identifiable manner or, alternatively, the information
 1109  may be embedded on the card and available through magnetic
 1110  stripe or smart card. The information may also be provided
 1111  through other electronic technology.
 1112         Section 6. Paragraph (e) of subsection (2) of section
 1113  627.6571, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1114         627.6571 Guaranteed renewability of coverage.—
 1115         (2) An insurer may nonrenew or discontinue a group health
 1116  insurance policy based only on one or more of the following
 1117  conditions:
 1118         (e) In the case of an insurer that offers health insurance
 1119  coverage through a network plan, there is no longer any enrollee
 1120  in connection with such plan who lives, resides, or works in the
 1121  service area of the insurer or in the area in which the insurer
 1122  is authorized to do business and, in the case of the small-group
 1123  market, the insurer would deny enrollment with respect to such
 1124  plan under s. 627.6699(5)(i).
 1125         Section 7. Subsection (11) of section 627.6675, Florida
 1126  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1127         627.6675 Conversion on termination of eligibility.—Subject
 1128  to all of the provisions of this section, a group policy
 1129  delivered or issued for delivery in this state by an insurer or
 1130  nonprofit health care services plan that provides, on an
 1131  expense-incurred basis, hospital, surgical, or major medical
 1132  expense insurance, or any combination of these coverages, shall
 1133  provide that an employee or member whose insurance under the
 1134  group policy has been terminated for any reason, including
 1135  discontinuance of the group policy in its entirety or with
 1136  respect to an insured class, and who has been continuously
 1137  insured under the group policy, and under any group policy
 1138  providing similar benefits that the terminated group policy
 1139  replaced, for at least 3 months immediately prior to
 1140  termination, shall be entitled to have issued to him or her by
 1141  the insurer a policy or certificate of health insurance,
 1142  referred to in this section as a “converted policy.” A group
 1143  insurer may meet the requirements of this section by contracting
 1144  with another insurer, authorized in this state, to issue an
 1145  individual converted policy, which policy has been approved by
 1146  the office under s. 627.410. An employee or member shall not be
 1147  entitled to a converted policy if termination of his or her
 1148  insurance under the group policy occurred because he or she
 1149  failed to pay any required contribution, or because any
 1150  discontinued group coverage was replaced by similar group
 1151  coverage within 31 days after discontinuance.
 1152         (11) ALTERNATIVE PLANS.—The insurer shall, in addition to
 1153  the option required by subsection (10), offer the standard
 1154  health benefit plan, as established pursuant to s. 627.6699(12).
 1155  The insurer may, at its option, also offer alternative plans for
 1156  group health conversion in addition to the plans required by
 1157  this section.
 1158         Section 8. Paragraph (e) of subsection (2) of section
 1159  641.31074, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1160         641.31074 Guaranteed renewability of coverage.—
 1161         (2) A health maintenance organization may nonrenew or
 1162  discontinue a contract based only on one or more of the
 1163  following conditions:
 1164         (e) There is no longer any enrollee in connection with such
 1165  plan who lives, resides, or works in the service area of the
 1166  health maintenance organization or in the area in which the
 1167  health maintenance organization is authorized to do business
 1168  and, in the case of the small group market, the organization
 1169  would deny enrollment with respect to such plan under s.
 1170  627.6699(5)(i).
 1171         Section 9. Subsection (10) of section 641.3922, Florida
 1172  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1173         641.3922 Conversion contracts; conditions.—Issuance of a
 1174  converted contract shall be subject to the following conditions:
 1175         (10) ALTERNATE PLANS.—The health maintenance organization
 1176  shall offer a standard health benefit plan as established
 1177  pursuant to s. 627.6699(12). The health maintenance organization
 1178  may, at its option, also offer alternative plans for group
 1179  health conversion in addition to those required by this section,
 1180  provided any alternative plan is approved by the office or is a
 1181  converted policy, approved under s. 627.6675 and issued by an
 1182  insurance company authorized to transact insurance in this
 1183  state. Approval by the office of an alternative plan shall be
 1184  based on compliance by the alternative plan with the provisions
 1185  of this part and the rules promulgated thereunder, applicable
 1186  provisions of the Florida Insurance Code and rules promulgated
 1187  thereunder, and any other applicable law.
 1188         Section 10. This act shall take effect July 1, 2015.