A San Francisco-area restaurant trade association intends to file a
petition next week with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to review a 2008
federal appeals court decision upholding the legality of San Francisco’s health
care spending law.
Golden Gate Restaurant Association executive director Kevin Westlye said the
petition likely will be submitted Monday, June 8, or Tuesday, June 9.
This year, employers in San Francisco with at least 100 employees must make
health care expenditures of $1.85 per hour for every eligible employee working
at least eight hours per week, and those with 20 to 99 employees must pay $1.23
per hour.
Employers with fewer than 20 employees are exempt from the spending mandate.
Expenditures can include payment of group health insurance premiums,
contributions to health savings accounts and health reimbursement arrangements,
or payments to the city.
The outcome of the litigation is important not just to employers in San
Francisco.
The case also is being watched by employers nationwide who fear if the San
Francisco law—which went into effect in January 2008—is upheld, it would open
the floodgates to a wave of new health care spending laws by other cities and
states looking for ways to expand coverage at no or little cost to
themselves.
Benefits experts say that would result in higher health care and
administrative costs for employers as they try to keep on top of new benefit
mandate after benefit mandate, as well as making it impossible for multistate
employers to offer uniform health care benefit plans.
The Supreme Court will decide whether to take up the case during its next
term, which begins in October.
Filed by Jerry Geisel of
Business
Insurance, a sister publication of
Workforce Management