I am shopping an article (update - it's up on SHRM.org) that looks at how small businesses that provide employees with health insurance are coping with the steady rise in costs -- slower since 2010 than in the five years preceding the passage of the ACA (coincidentally or not), but still relentless.
Below is an outtake. Two brokers spoke to me about their experiences helping individuals navigate the ACA exchanges or the off-exchange individual market after their employers stopped offering coverage . I decided that this topic didn't fit the scope of the main article, so here it is.
Roger Howell, president of Howell Benefit Services in Wilkes-Barre, PA, says that while most of his small group clients have renewed, a steady trickle drops coverage every year. When clients do drop coverage, they often hire his brokerage to help employees navigate the ACA exchange or the off-exchange individual market. He is troubled by the complexity of choices facing employees who are often accustomed to simply enrolling in their employer's plan.
Below is an outtake. Two brokers spoke to me about their experiences helping individuals navigate the ACA exchanges or the off-exchange individual market after their employers stopped offering coverage . I decided that this topic didn't fit the scope of the main article, so here it is.
Roger Howell, president of Howell Benefit Services in Wilkes-Barre, PA, says that while most of his small group clients have renewed, a steady trickle drops coverage every year. When clients do drop coverage, they often hire his brokerage to help employees navigate the ACA exchange or the off-exchange individual market. He is troubled by the complexity of choices facing employees who are often accustomed to simply enrolling in their employer's plan.