A new twist worth reporting on is the fact that the
Department of Labor has apparently decided to take a more hands-on (political) role
in shaping the evolving legal landscape, positioning the agency as a powerful
accomplice in the effort to make self-insurance a more challenging risk
management strategy.
The purpose of these requirements is to enable the state to build a comprehensive database it believes is necessary in order to effectively carry out health care administration functions. Liberty Mutual, a self-insured employer, refused to provide the requested data. The company subsequently sued the state, arguing that the collection and reporting of the requested data created administrative burdens for the plans, therefore triggering ERISA preemption.
Siding with the state, a federal trial court judge
granted summary judgment, finding that the Vermont law did not affect ERISA
plan administration and further concluding that it was appropriate for the
state to regulate in this area.
Admittedly, ERISA preemption law can be complicated
and highly technical in many cases. In this
regard, to be charitable, we suppose that a good faith argument could be made
the requirements set forth in this
stature do not, in fact, affect plan administration so criticism of the state
should be put in proper context – a disagreement on legal and policy grounds.
The DOL’s participation is another matter. By putting its large thumb on the scale, an
ambitious political agenda is exposed for those who care to notice.
As the agency primarily responsible for administrating
and enforcing ERISA, DOL has historically defended the law’s broad federal preemption
provisions. But with its provocative
interpretation that Vermont is essentially regulating the business of insurance
(the key exception to ERISA preemption), DOL has clearly signaled it has
changed course, presumably to support the Administration’s implicit objective
of squeezing the private health care marketplace when possible and where few
people are watching.
We commented recently that Tom Perez’s nomination as
secretary of DOL portended a more political agency. Given that he was subsequently confirmed
after this Amicus brief was filed, his fingerprints aren’t on this one but it
can be reasonably concluded that under his watch the DOL will continue to back
Vermont if the case is ultimately heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.
And so it goes. A
huge federal bureaucracy quietly imposes the Administration’s political will in
ways too nuanced to attract attention. But
that’s where the real action is.