ERISA requires group health plans to have a written plan document in place, and provide a summary plan description (SPD) to plan participants upon enrollment in the plan, among other things. The written plan document is the instrument by which the plan administrator must operate the plan. The SPD is the instrument by which the plan notifies the participants of the plan’s terms, such as plan eligibility, funding, contributions and benefits. While the plan document and the SPD should be consistent, they are two separate documents and are both separately required by ERISA.
ERISA places the burden of satisfying the plan document and the SPD requirements on the plan administrator, which is generally the employer. Fully insured plans may think the insurance carrier’s contract, policy or certificate booklet (collectively, the certificates) with the plan sponsor satisfy the SPD requirement; however, most certificates will not likely satisfy the SPD requirement.
A Wrap document essentially “wraps” around the insurance carrier’s certificate of coverage creating a fully compliant plan document and SPD. A Wrap document can also combine or bundle multiple employee-sponsored plans into a single document which helps to simplify 5500 filings.
While carrier contracts, policies and certificate booklets may function as the written plan document, such documents will usually not include required ERISA language and specifics about the plan itself. Adding a wrap document will be necessary for compliance with the written plan document and SPD requirements under ERISA.
Health savings account caps rise $50 for self-only plans, $150 for family coverage
03/20/2018
Health insurance may not be the sexiest New Year's resolutions subject, but thinking about it could be just as important as vowing to drop a few pounds or quit smoking.
01/06/2016
2016 may well be the year of the consumer in healthcare.
12/31/2015
2015 Health IT Leadership Summit to Focus on Consumer-Driven Healthcare in a Digital Age
10/22/2015