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Small Business Health
Benefit Challenges… And Solutions
Summary After pay, health insurance is the most important inducement
small businesses use to recruit and keep employees motivated. Yet many
employers are finding the ability to provide cost effective health insurance
more challenging as premiums continue to rise and the options available
continue to decrease. Employers are
looking at new ways to offer their employees benefit programs, and to keep them
motivated. One of these ways is through a Professional Employer Organization Article
After pay, health insurance is the most important inducement
small businesses use to recruit and keep employees motivated. Yet many
employers are finding the ability to provide cost effective health insurance
more challenging as premiums continue to rise and the options available
continue to decrease. Employers are beginning to think “out of the box” and are
looking at new ways to offer their employees benefit programs, and to keep them
motivated.
NAPEO, the National Association of Professional Employer
Organizations, conducted an employee benefits survey in November, 2007 of its
members’ clients to understand the concerns of small and medium-sized
employers. NAPEO is an organization that represents firms, PEOs, which
specialize in providing human resources support and employee benefit packages
to small and mid-sized employers nationwide. Mirroring the sentiment across the
country, the trade association found that health care costs were their
second-biggest worry after attracting workers.
The survey also revealed that more than half of the 365 small
businesses surveyed said their premiums rose as much as 10 percent this year,
and almost one in 10 told NAPEO they would dump their health coverage next year
or are unsure about it. Many of these companies said they will pass at least
some costs along to employees next year. One in five said they would raise
co-payments for office visits or deductibles; one in four said they’d raise
premiums.
California
Employers Feel The Squeeze
The survey was conducted nationally, but employers in specific
states, such as California,
are being hit the hardest. Michael Holmes,
Client Services Director of CPEhr, a Los Angeles-based PEO, is not surprised. “This
is another wake-up call,” says Holmes. “Soaring health insurance costs in California are hitting small
businesses especially hard and these businesses employ the vast majority of
workers. This is an extremely troubling
development, not just for small businesses and their workers, but for the
entire economy.”
A report recently released by the California State Library,
entitled, “Ninety Years of Health Insurance Reform Efforts in California” by
Michael Dimmitt, Ph.D of the California Research Bureau, reviews the history of
health insurance in California dating back to 1918. It reveals some startling
facts, and reasons for even greater concern in California:
• Between 1961 and 2002, health care costs
increased almost without interruption. No effort to contain them has proven successful
over the long term.
• Federal programs provide health care coverage to
over 7.4 million Californians. If the programs were not in place, the number of
uninsured in the state would double.
• More than 20 percent of Californians, 6.6 million
people, currently lack health care coverage over the course of the year
according to research conducted for the California Healthcare Foundation.
• Of those without health insurance, an estimated
75 percent are working people and their families.
• As a consequence of the growth in premiums, the
number of people covered by health insurance in California decreased from 64.6 percent to
54.7 percent between 1987 and 2005.
Some employers are content to continue along the traditional health coverage
path for their staff. While premiums rise, most just consider it a cost of
doing business. However, many California
employers are now turning to the PEOs to provide relief for their employee
insurance woes.
What is a Professional Employer Organization?
Professional employer organizations, or PEOs, pool thousands
of employees under one roof and provide cost effective management of small
employers’ health insurance plans. Additionally, PEOs help small businesses
outsource their time-consuming human resources chores, such as payroll, HR
policies and risk management, so owners can focus on making a profit. The PEO acts
like an offsite human resource department, so even small employers can gain
access to expertise typically reserved for larger, more established
organizations. Particularly in California, where
complex employment rules and difficult insurance guidelines weigh heavily on
small businesses, it is highly beneficial for small California employers to connect with an
expert PEO in the state, such as CPEhr.
Like most PEOs, CPEhr creates a "co-employment"
relationship with its clients, thereby sharing the risks and responsibilities
of being an employer. CPEhr assumes the role of the Administrative Employer,
whereby it pays the employees, files payroll taxes, provides health insurance,
issues the workers' compensation insurance, and manages most aspects of
employment. The client maintains the role as the Administrative Employer and
continues to manage and oversee all day-to-day functions relating to their
internal operations. This includes hiring, firing, establishing wages, and
directing the workforce.
Through this co-employment relationship, small organizations access the
economies of scale enjoyed by large corporations. CPEhr’s clients can offer
premium benefit packages and retirement plans to their staff, typically
provided by their larger competitors. They can maintain a simple in-house HR
infrastructure or none at all by relying on the PEO. The client also can reduce
hiring overhead. Costs related to monitoring of, and compliance with,
employment laws are reduced, as are the often significant costs of failure to
comply with such laws. In addition, the PEO provides time savings by handling
routine and redundant tasks for its clients. This enables the business owner to
focus on the company's core competency and grow its bottom line.
Creative and Affordable Insurance Options
According to NAPEO, the PEO industry grew over 15% in 2007, to
$61 billion in gross revenues. PEOs currently provide access to employee
benefits for 2-3 million working Americans. This number continues to grow as
the economies of scale offered by PEOs make them an attractive solution for
small employers looking to offer a wider range of benefits to their staff,
without the need to shop, administer or oversee these plans.
CPEhr maintains a fully staffed employee benefits department
which is focused on finding cost effective and comprehensive benefits to make
available to its clients. Because CPEhr has the manpower to tackle this
daunting task, the small employer merely has to join the PEO program, and enjoy
access to the benefits without the responsibility to administer the plans.
Like most employers, CPEhr offers its clients standard major
medical insurances with the large insurance carriers. However, due to the size
of the pool of employees, CPEhr enjoys a stronger relationship with the
insurance companies which enables them to offer a wider range of plans and
coverage options, with greater flexibility on enrollments and improved customer
service. While a small business independently may secure a benefit plan with
one or two co-pay options, a CPEhr offers as many as 8-10 options for the same
employer.
In addition to major medical, a wide range of supplemental
benefits, such as dental, vision, life, and disability insurances are available.
CPEhr also extends its benefit offering to include additional employee programs
such as such as travel, cancer and alternative health care insurances, credit
unions, Flexible Spending Accounts, and robust 401 (k) plans. The Small
Business Administration estimates that merely nineteen percent of employees
working in a small business have access to a 401 (k). That number skyrockets to
an estimated 95% in a PEO arrangement.
While it is obvious that not every small business will need,
or even want, to offer this wide range of benefits to its staff, it should be
comforting for them to know that alternatives exist. At the least, the small
employer should recognize the extraordinary opportunity PEOs offer to help
level the playing field in the complex and tough employee benefits environment.
Conclusion
Rising health insurance
premiums, complex employment and benefit administration, and a weak economy are
all making the task of procuring affordable, manageable health insurance more
daunting for the typical small employer. Particularly in California, where 75% of the uninsured population
is in the workforce, these challenges are reaching critical limits. More and
more employers are turning towards alternative health insurance solutions, such
as joining a PEO for their employee benefit coverages. One such firm, CPEhr, is
a leader in the California
marketplace and can provide these solutions efficiently and cost effectively
for state-based businesses.
About CPEhr
Founded in 1982, CPEhr is one of the
largest, privately owned human resources and professional employer outsourcing
(PEO) firms in California.
With 25 years experience in the California
market, CPEhr has an advantage in its knowledge of statewide employment
challenges. CPEhr provides a personalized service that extends to 35 states.
CPEhr offers an array of integrated human resources services that includes:
Employee administration, human resources and labor law compliance, payroll and
tax administration, benefits administration and compliance, workers’
compensation administration, risk management, training and development and
recruitment.
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