Florida Regulations 69O-149.041: Marketing Communication Material and Marketing Guidelines
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(1) Any marketing communication shall comply with the requirements of rule Chapter 69O-150, Part III, F.A.C.
(2) Any insurer marketing small group health plans shall comply with the following guidelines:
(a) The small group health history or size shall not be used to direct the small group to a particular small group plan except as permitted by the provisions of Florida Statutes § 627.6699
(b)1. In determining eligibility for small group coverage an employer/employee income may not be used.
2. A carrier may request information and documentation to determine whether an individual qualifies as an active business that is eligible for coverage.
3. The following information, records, or documents may be requested or considered in determining whether an employer meets the definition of small employer pursuant to Section 627.6699(3)(v), F.S. If the employer was required by applicable law to maintain the information, record or documents or to file the document with a local, state or federal governmental agency or authority; maintains the information in the normal course of business; or was issued the information, records, or documents by a local, state, or deferral agency or authority:
a. IRS form 1040, Schedule C or F.
b. IRS 941 (quarterly wage and tax form).
c. IRS 1065 (for partnership income).
d. IRS 1120 (corporate income).
e. IRS 1099 (which may include payments to independent contractors).
f. IRS 2106 (employee business expenses).
g. IRS 990 (for non-profits with annual receipts over $25,000).
h. Occupational Licenses.
i. State Licenses.
j. Florida UT 6 (unemployment compensation tax form).
k. Articles of incorporation.
l. Partnership agreements.
m. Affidavits from the customers or suppliers of the small employer.
n. Auditable personal records of receipts, expenditures, invoices.
o. Leases and other contracts.
4.a. Refusal to insure an eligible small employer because of the employer’s refusal or unwillingness to provide information, records or documents which are not necessary to reasonably establish that the employer meets the definition of Section 627.6699(3)(v), F.S., violates Section 627.6699(5)(a), F.S.
b. Any statement that requires information not necessary for determining eligibility be provided for coverage to be issued shall constitute an unfair method of competition in violation of Section 626.9541(1)(b), F.S.
(c) In the instance where a company splits to become two or more corporations, with each corporation employing less than 50 employees, they are considered an eligible small employer if:
1. The group is not splitting solely with the intent of providing health insurance coverage to a separate class of employees;
2. The new company can produce signed documentation (i.e., articles of incorporation) that substantiates that there is a legitimate business with business activity;
3. All eligible employees are working 25 hours or more per week.
(d) New and renewal policies for the Basic and Standard policies issued on or after May 1, 1995, must include the 1995 Basic and Standard Health Benefit Plans (OIR-B2-95) pursuant to Florida Statutes § 627.6699(12), which is incorporated herein by reference and can be obtained from the Bureau of Life and Health Forms and Rates.
(e)1. Pursuant to Florida Statutes § 626.9611, the Office identifies the following as being prohibited by Section 626.9541(1)(b), F.S., for a small employer carrier in reflecting any of the permitted rate adjustments in subsection 69O-149.037(6), F.A.C.:
a. To quote a rate which does not reflect the actual characteristics of the individual group; or
b. Where necessary underwriting information has not been analyzed, to quote a rate other than the approved community rate. Any such quote of the community rate shall include a disclosure that the rate will be affected by the results of underwriting by up to 15 percent up or down for new groups, or up to a 10 percent increase for renewal groups.
2. This does not restrict carriers from quoting rates to groups based on estimated enrollment or demographics provided by the employer.
(f) Any practice that results in the declination of an application from an eligible small employer, other than for statutorily permitted reasons, constitutes a failure to comply with the guaranteed-issue requirements of Florida Statutes § 627.6699(5); for example, imposing standards for eligibility that are not required by law, such as:
1. Requiring the small employer to be a domestic entity; or
2. Requiring the group to have prior group coverage; or
3. Requiring payment of premiums with business checks instead of personal checks.
Rulemaking Authority 626.9611, 627.6699(13)(i), (17) FS. Law Implemented 626.9541(1)(b), (g)2., (x)3., 627.6699(3)(g), (v), (5)(a), (7), (12), (12)(c), (13), (13)(b) FS. History-New 3-1-93, Amended 11-7-93, 4-23-95, 8-4-02, 6-19-03, Formerly 4-149.041.
Terms Used In Florida Regulations 69O-149.041
- Corporation: A legal entity owned by the holders of shares of stock that have been issued, and that can own, receive, and transfer property, and carry on business in its own name.
- Partnership: A voluntary contract between two or more persons to pool some or all of their assets into a business, with the agreement that there will be a proportional sharing of profits and losses.
(a) The small group health history or size shall not be used to direct the small group to a particular small group plan except as permitted by the provisions of Florida Statutes § 627.6699
(b)1. In determining eligibility for small group coverage an employer/employee income may not be used.
2. A carrier may request information and documentation to determine whether an individual qualifies as an active business that is eligible for coverage.
3. The following information, records, or documents may be requested or considered in determining whether an employer meets the definition of small employer pursuant to Section 627.6699(3)(v), F.S. If the employer was required by applicable law to maintain the information, record or documents or to file the document with a local, state or federal governmental agency or authority; maintains the information in the normal course of business; or was issued the information, records, or documents by a local, state, or deferral agency or authority:
a. IRS form 1040, Schedule C or F.
b. IRS 941 (quarterly wage and tax form).
c. IRS 1065 (for partnership income).
d. IRS 1120 (corporate income).
e. IRS 1099 (which may include payments to independent contractors).
f. IRS 2106 (employee business expenses).
g. IRS 990 (for non-profits with annual receipts over $25,000).
h. Occupational Licenses.
i. State Licenses.
j. Florida UT 6 (unemployment compensation tax form).
k. Articles of incorporation.
l. Partnership agreements.
m. Affidavits from the customers or suppliers of the small employer.
n. Auditable personal records of receipts, expenditures, invoices.
o. Leases and other contracts.
4.a. Refusal to insure an eligible small employer because of the employer’s refusal or unwillingness to provide information, records or documents which are not necessary to reasonably establish that the employer meets the definition of Section 627.6699(3)(v), F.S., violates Section 627.6699(5)(a), F.S.
b. Any statement that requires information not necessary for determining eligibility be provided for coverage to be issued shall constitute an unfair method of competition in violation of Section 626.9541(1)(b), F.S.
(c) In the instance where a company splits to become two or more corporations, with each corporation employing less than 50 employees, they are considered an eligible small employer if:
1. The group is not splitting solely with the intent of providing health insurance coverage to a separate class of employees;
2. The new company can produce signed documentation (i.e., articles of incorporation) that substantiates that there is a legitimate business with business activity;
3. All eligible employees are working 25 hours or more per week.
(d) New and renewal policies for the Basic and Standard policies issued on or after May 1, 1995, must include the 1995 Basic and Standard Health Benefit Plans (OIR-B2-95) pursuant to Florida Statutes § 627.6699(12), which is incorporated herein by reference and can be obtained from the Bureau of Life and Health Forms and Rates.
(e)1. Pursuant to Florida Statutes § 626.9611, the Office identifies the following as being prohibited by Section 626.9541(1)(b), F.S., for a small employer carrier in reflecting any of the permitted rate adjustments in subsection 69O-149.037(6), F.A.C.:
a. To quote a rate which does not reflect the actual characteristics of the individual group; or
b. Where necessary underwriting information has not been analyzed, to quote a rate other than the approved community rate. Any such quote of the community rate shall include a disclosure that the rate will be affected by the results of underwriting by up to 15 percent up or down for new groups, or up to a 10 percent increase for renewal groups.
2. This does not restrict carriers from quoting rates to groups based on estimated enrollment or demographics provided by the employer.
(f) Any practice that results in the declination of an application from an eligible small employer, other than for statutorily permitted reasons, constitutes a failure to comply with the guaranteed-issue requirements of Florida Statutes § 627.6699(5); for example, imposing standards for eligibility that are not required by law, such as:
1. Requiring the small employer to be a domestic entity; or
2. Requiring the group to have prior group coverage; or
3. Requiring payment of premiums with business checks instead of personal checks.
Rulemaking Authority 626.9611, 627.6699(13)(i), (17) FS. Law Implemented 626.9541(1)(b), (g)2., (x)3., 627.6699(3)(g), (v), (5)(a), (7), (12), (12)(c), (13), (13)(b) FS. History-New 3-1-93, Amended 11-7-93, 4-23-95, 8-4-02, 6-19-03, Formerly 4-149.041.