The city of San Francisco can enforce its law that requires employers to
spend a certain amount of money on health care coverage or pay a fee to help
fund coverage for uninsured city residents, a federal appeals court panel
ruled.
The unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals stays enforcement of a December decision by a federal judge that the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act pre-empts the San Francisco law.
In the January 9 ruling, Appeals Court Judge William Fletcher said the city
has a “strong likelihood in prevailing in its argument that the law is not
pre-empted by ERISA.
“The ordinance does not require any employer to adopt an ERISA or other
health plan,” Fletcher wrote.
Because the city is likely to win its appeal of U.S. District Judge Jeffrey
White’s ruling, the city should be allowed to enforce the employer spending
requirement while the case remains before the appeals court, Judge Fletcher
said.
The 2006 law, challenged by the Golden Gate Restaurant Assn., requires
employers with at least 20 employees to spend either a certain amount of money
on health insurance coverage or pay that amount to the city.
Employers with at least 100 employees must make minimum health care
expenditures of $1.76 per hour on behalf of each covered employee, while
employers with 20 to 99 employees must pay $1.17 per hour.
About 90 percent of employers with 20 or more employees already spend at
least the required amount on health care coverage for their employees, according
to court papers filed by the city.
It isn’t known when the appeals court will rule on the legality of the health
care spending law.
Filed by Jerry Geisel of Business Insurance, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com