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The Role of ERISA Preemption in Health Reform: Opportunities and Limits

Executive Summary

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Extract

It should come as no surprise to any observer of health policy debates that the preemption provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) will play a major role in determining the contours of any health reform initiative. For the past few years, many states have been aggressively pursuing health reform experiments, while congressional action has essentially been deadlocked along partisan political lines. Yet after the 2008 election results, there is reason to expect considerable congressional attention to health reform. President Obama has made health reform a priority of his administration, and several members of Congress have long been waiting for an opportunity to pursue health reform legislation.

Type
JLME Supplement
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2009

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References

In the same way, states can impede local jurisdictions from enacting ordinances or regulations (i.e., tobacco control).Google Scholar
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ERISA covers self-funded (or self-insured plans where the employer provides health benefits directly to employees (plan participants). It does not cover health insurance that an individual employee purchases in the commercial market. Generally, small employers (with under 100 employees) do not offer self-funded plans. See, e.g., Stayman, J., “Regulation of Health Benefits Under ERISA: An Outline,” Congressional Research Service, Order Code RS22643, April 12, 2007, available at <http://opencrs.com/document/RS22643> (last visited June 19, 2009).+(last+visited+June+19,+2009).>Google Scholar
Nealy v. U.S. Healthcare, 711 N.E.2d 621 (N.Y. 1999). In deciding ERISA preemption cases, courts interpret two sections of the law: 514 and 502(a). A case could be preempted under either section. Section 514 has been labeled as field preemption in the judicial opinions. Basically, it amounts to the interaction between the “relates to,” savings, and deemer clauses. If the state law conflicts with these provisions, it will be preempted. Section 502(a) is called complete preemption. This section allows an insurer to remove the case to federal court even if the plaintiff has not mentioned ERISA in the complaint. Section 502(a) also limits the available remedies to the amount of the benefit. No punitive or consequential damages can be recovered.Google Scholar
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This is not to suggest that the cases are necessarily mutually reinforcing. Instead, as Elizabeth Weeks notes, Art. 514 (the three preemption provisions) operates separately from Art. 502 (the limited remedies section), but they both may apply or overlap in some cases. Personal communication from Elizabeth Weeks to author, November 12, 2008.Google Scholar
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Along with many others, I have been harshly critical of how these cases were resolved. Now is not the time to revisit those arguments, but the reader can review the arguments in Jacobson, P. D. and Pomfret, S. D., “Form, Function, and Managed Care Torts: Achieving Fairness and Equity in ERISA Jurisprudence,” Houston Law Review 35 (1998): 9851078. Among similar analyses cited in that article, see Butler, K. L., “Securing Health Benefits through ERISA and the ADA,” Emory Law Journal 43 no. 4, (1993): 1197-1243; Fisk, C. L., “The Last Articles About the Language of ERISA Preemption? A Case Study of the Failure of Textualism,” Harvard Journal on Legislation 33 (1996): 35-104; Farrell, M. G., “ERISA Preemption and Regulation of Managed Health Care: The Case for Managed Federalism,” American Journal of Law & Medicine 23 (1997): 251-290.Google Scholar
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A third issue of potential interest is whether ERISA preemption would affect laws permitting the purchase of health insurance across state lines. Stephanie Kanwit is addressing these issues in another “Legal Solutions in Health Reform” paper in “Purchasing Insurance Across State Lines in the Individual Market.”Google Scholar
475 F.3d 180 (4th Cir. 2007). In this case, the court preempted Pennsylvania's bad faith insurance law because it provided a remedy outside of Section 502 and did not affect the risk-pooling arrangement that Miller requires.Google Scholar
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See also, Fisk, C. L. and Oswalt, M. M., “Preemption and Civic democracy in the Battle Over Wal-Mart,” Minnesota Law Review 92 (2008): 15021538. Fisk and Oswalt agree with Butler's analysis and argue that ERISA preemption undermines the democratic debate over appropriate health reform legislation; Butler, P. A., ERISA Implications for State Health Care Access Initiatives: Impact of the Maryland “Fair Share Act” Court Decision, National Academy for State Health Policy, 2006, available at <http://www.nashp.org/Files/ERISA_Implications.pdf> (last visited June 19, 2009).Google Scholar
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Personal communication from Pat Butler to author, September 25, 2008.Google Scholar
See, e.g., Grimo v. Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Vermont, 34 F.3d 148, 151 (2nd Cir. 1994); International Resources Inc. v. New York Life Ins. Co., 950 F.2d 294, 297 (6th Cir. 1991). As Polvino et al. note in a different context, the ERISA plans remain the purchasers of services, not the individuals subject to the mandate (at p. 113). See also, Fort Halifax Packing Co., Inc. v. Coyne, 482 U.S. 1 (1987); and Massachusetts v. Morash, 490 U.S. 107 (1989).Google Scholar
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For more elaboration of these themes, see Jacobson, P. D. and Selvin, E., “Health, Inequality, and the Courts,” in Morone, J. A., Jacobs, L. R., eds., Healthy, Wealthy & Fair: Health Care and the Good Society (Oxford University Press, 2005): 235264.Google Scholar
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My hypothesis is that this is a major cause of current physician liability exposure and hence rising physician medical insurance liability premiums.Google Scholar
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Professor Korobkin proposes that the Supreme Court reverse its decision to include MCOs as plan benefits and rule instead that ERISA was not intended to “govern the relationships between employees and third parties, such as MCOs.” See Korobkin, supra note 30, at 60.Google Scholar
For instance, Elizabeth Weeks argues that a better way to analyze the cases is to distinguish whether the case raises Art. 514 or Art. 502 issues (or both). Professor Weeks argues that the consistency in the litigation is that 502 always trumps 514. Even if, therefore, a state law would be saved from preemption under 514, it is still preempted if 502 applies. One problem with this analysis is the inherent subjectivity of when 502 should apply. Personal Communication from Elizabeth Weeks to author, November 12, 2008.Google Scholar