HEALTH COVERAGE TAX CREDIT -- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Administration
Question: Which
federal agency is responsible for administering the HCTC program?
Answer: The IRS is responsible for the HCTC program and has established an
HCTC office. The IRS web site found at www.irs.gov
addresses questions related to the administration of the HCTC. While the IRS is responsible for
the HCTC, it is being implemented through the cooperative efforts of the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC), the Department of the Treasury and the Department of Labor
in conjunction with the State Workforce Agencies (SWAs).
Question: What are the
responsibilities of the SWAs with regard to the advance HCTC program?
Answer: The responsibilities of the SWAs are: 1) to provide general
information to claimants concerning the HCTC program together with information
on TAA services and 2) to identify eligible TAA recipients as defined in the
Act (i.e., individuals who are eligible to receive trade readjustment
allowances (TRA) or who would be eligible for TRA except that they have not
exhausted their unemployment compensation), and report certain information
about those individuals to the HCTC office. Unemployment Insurance Program
Letter (UIPL) No. 24-03 provided instructions to the SWAs about their responsibilities
related to the advance HCTC. (Responsibilities of those states that are
operating a state "bridge" National Emergency Grant (NEG) are not addressed in
this UIPL.
Note: The SWAs are required to report Alternative Trade Adjustment
Assistance (ATAA) recipients who may qualify for the credit when the ATAA
program becomes operational in August 2003. The PBGC will submit its own list
of potentially eligible PBGC recipients who may qualify for the credit to the
HCTC office.
Question: Which office
in the U.S. Department of Labor (the Department) has responsibility for the
HCTC?
Answer: Two offices within the Department's Employment and Training
Administration (ETA) share responsibility for the HCTC program coordination
with the IRS HCTC office:
The ETA Office of National Response has responsibility for
the TAA program and National Emergency Grants, which provide funding for HCTC-related
activity.
The ETA Office of Workforce Security, which has
responsibility for the UI program, is responsible for the UI/TRA program
activity related to the transmission of information the SWAs are required to provide
to the IRS HCTC office.
Administrative Costs
Question: How will SWAs
pay for costs they incur related to the HCTC?
Answer: National Emergency Grants (NEGs) are available to fund HCTC administrative
activities, and SWAs should request funding through the established NEG process
to cover all costs related to the HCTC program. Unemployment Insurance (UI) grant funds may not be
used to cover non-UI activities, and all states must request NEG funds to cover
costs related to their responsibilities involving the HCTC.
Question: May penalty
mail be used to mail HCTC information such as IRS Form 8887 or special letters
advising UI claimants, as appropriate, to report to a UI office or One-Stop Center to enroll in training or request a waiver?
Answer: Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 10-02 advised
states incorrectly that they could use penalty mail for the HCTC program.
A change to the TEGL will be issued. However, states should immediately cease
use of penalty mail for HCTC activities and pay for future postage costs from
NEG funds.
Advance Credit
Question:
When is the advance HCTC effective?
Answer: The statute requires that the advance option be available by August 1, 2003.
End-of-Year Credit
Question: What is the
SWAs' responsibility for the end-of-year credit in future years?
Answer: A UIPL will be issued to communicate the SWA responsibilities and
provide instructions for any future issuances of the IRS Form 8887 when final
decisions are reached and information is provided to DOL by the IRS.
Note: To provide for the end-of-year credit for 2002,
SWAs provided information about eligible TAA recipients to the IRS during
November 2002. SWAs also issued IRS Form 8887 in February 2003, to
individuals who received TRA (or would have been eligible to receive TRA had
their UI been exhausted) during December 2002. UIPL No. 02-03, which
provided instructions to SWAs for this process, furnished a reporting format
for the IRS Form 8887 for 2002.
Eligibility Certificates
Question: What is the "eligibility certificate?"
Answer: The Internal Revenue Code (IRC), section 7527(d) prescribes that,
before the IRS can make advance payment of the credit on behalf of an eligible TAA
or ATAA recipient, the Secretary of Labor or any other person or entity
designated by the Secretary, must issue an eligibility certificate, i.e.,
written verification that the individual is an eligible TAA recipient or an ATAA
recipient. The SWAs' transmittal of the appropriate information (via the UI
Interstate Connection (ICON) network) will identify individuals as eligible TAA
or ATAA recipients and provide the IRS' contractor the needed information for
this purpose. The IRS determines whether an individual is actually entitled to
the HCTC.
Question: Will the TAA
and ATAA eligibility information sent to the HCTC office be kept confidential?
Answer: Yes. Section 6103 of the IRC provides as a general rule that "returns"
and return information must be kept confidential. This applies to all
taxpayers and must be extended to eligible TAA and ATAA recipients who are
potentially eligible for the HCTC. Section 6103 allows for disclosure of a
taxpayer name and insurance policy information to providers of health insurance
to the extent necessary to remit payments on behalf of the eligible TAA and
ATAA recipient to carry out the advance HCTC program. All TAA and ATAA information
obtained from SWAs shall be considered information that is for "official use
only" and will be kept confidential.
Listings of Eligible TAA and ATAA Recipients
Question: How often do
the SWAs need to submit information, i.e., the lists of eligible TAA and ATAA recipients,
to the HCTC office?
Answer: SWAs are required to submit daily listings of eligible TAA and ATAA
recipients to the IRS' HCTC office so that it can quickly enroll individuals in
the HCTC program. However, an individual's information needs to be submitted
only once a month unless there is a reversal of eligibility.
Question:
What is the monthly file?
Answer: The IRS HCTC office will create a monthly file based on the daily
listings that SWAs provide to the HCTC office. These daily listings, which the
SWA provides, will identify individuals eligible to receive TRA or ATAA
(including UI claimants eligible for TRA except for exhaustion of UI). From
these data the IRS HCTC office creates a monthly file for its use to enroll
individuals in the HCTC program. Each month, the HCTC office needs information
about these claimants/recipients so that it can issue payments to health
providers on their behalf. This is why states must report the same individuals
each month if they continue to be eligible to receive TRA (including UI
claimants that are eligible for TRA except for exhaustion of UI) or ATAA.
Question:
What is the programming schedule that states must meet?
Answer: The law requires that the advance option be available to eligible
TAA recipients no later than August 1, 2003.
Each state must have completed its program by July 21 and must have submitted
the required files to the HCTC office to meet the legal requirements. In
addition, the HCTC office requested a "Start-up List" from each state that
contains data on all individuals who were determined TAA eligible between January 1, 2003, and the start-up list run date,
to initialize the advance HCTC program. If states cannot submit a start-up
list with data back to January 1, 2003, they are asked to submit a list
beginning July 1, 2003, and to submit a January - June list as soon as
possible.
Receipt of TRA and HCTC Eligibility Issues
Question: Which TRA (and UI) claimants are
eligible for the HCTC?
Answer: An individual who receives TRA for any day of a month or who would receive
TRA but for the fact that he/she has not exhausted UI entitlement is an
eligible TAA recipient and is potentially eligible for the HCTC for that
month. Individuals are also eligible for the HCTC for one additional month
after they cease being an eligible TAA recipient.
Question: Why are eligible
TAA and ATAA recipients who are reported to the IRS HCTC office by SWAs only
considered potentially eligible for the HCTC, rather than eligible for HCTC?
Answer: In addition to meeting the criteria of an eligible TAA or ATAA recipient,
a claimant must meet other HCTC criteria. The HCTC office will determine if
those individuals who are included in the SWA transmission of eligible TAA and
ATAA recipients also meet the other HCTC eligibility criteria. For example,
they must have qualified health insurance coverage as of the first day of the
month, and they must not be in prison.
Question: What
constitutes receipt of UI and/or TRA? Does "receiving TRA" mean receiving for
the eligibility period for which an individual is determined eligible, the date
the check is issued, or the date the check is received by the individual?
Answer: Receipt of UI and/or TRA is interpreted to mean the eligibility
period for which the benefit is payable. When a SWA determines that a claimant
has met the TRA eligibility requirements for a given week, it is determined
payable and received. In most states, this period begins on Sunday and ends on
Saturday within a given week(s). It is not the actual date that a check is
received or negotiated.
Note: Although some states issue biweekly payments, UI or TRA eligibility is
determined on a weekly basis.
Question:
How long does the individual remain HCTC eligible?
Answer: An individual will remain eligible for the HCTC as long as he/she
is an eligible TAA or ATAA recipient and is meeting the other HCTC
eligibility criteria. Individuals are also eligible for the HCTC for one additional
month after they cease being an eligible TAA recipient. SWAs are responsible for determining
if the individual is an eligible TAA or ATAA recipient each month. The IRS
HCTC office will determine if the individual is eligible for the HCTC.
Question: There is no
payment issued for the waiting week. Is an individual potentially eligible for
HCTC based on this waiting week?
Answer: Yes, provided such individual would receive payment but for the
waiting week requirement. However, the individual would also have to meet all
the other applicable TRA eligibility criteria to be potentially eligible.
Question: If a claimant
is disqualified for a week because he/she is not meeting the able and available
requirements provided in the state employment security law, is he/she
potentially HCTC eligible for that month?
Answer: If a claimant is not eligible for UI or TRA for a given week due to
a disqualification issued under state UI law then he/she is not an eligible TAA
recipient for that week. However, the claimant may still be eligible
for HCTC if he/she is eligible for any other single day of that month - meaning
he/she is eligible and is in payable status for a week within the same month. Once
a claimant is eligible for any week, the SWA will report the claimant as an
eligible TAA recipient and the IRS will then determine if the individual is
eligible for the HCTC. The claimant would have to be ineligible for UI/TRA
during the entire month to not be potentially eligible for the HCTC for that month.
Question: During any
week, if the claimant is receiving a pension that disqualifies the individual
from receiving any UI/TRA and/or is working for wages that are determined as
excessive earnings under the applicable state UI law, is he/she potentially
eligible for the HCTC for the week?
Answer: No, the claimant would not be potentially HCTC eligible for the
given week if no UI/TRA is payable and should not be reported by the SWA as an
eligible TAA recipient for that week. Pensions are usually a fixed amount, but
earnings may vary on a weekly basis; thus, the claimant may be potentially
eligible for the HCTC if during any other given week of the month the claimant
receives a UI/TRA payment due to lesser earnings. Accordingly, if the disqualifying
conditions remain for the entire month, the claimant would not be reported as
an eligible TAA recipient for that month.
Question: If the
claimant is receiving a UI and/or TRA payment that is being intercepted for tax
liabilities, child support payments, overpayment offset, or for the
satisfaction of other indebtedness as provided under state law, should the
claimant be reported as an eligible TAA recipient, and is the claimant
potentially HCTC eligible?
Answer: Yes, the claimant will be reported as an eligible TAA recipient and
is potentially eligible for the HCTC. Unlike the case in which the individual
is disqualified from receiving a payment during a given week, in this case, the
individual was eligible to receive a payment that is being diverted to satisfy
other liabilities or indebtedness.
Question: The claimant
was disqualified during the first week of the month and did not receive a UI or
TRA payment. During the second week of the month, the claimant did receive a
payment. Will the SWA report the claimant during the second week, and is the
claimant potentially eligible for the HCTC for the month?
Answer: Yes, the claimant is an eligible TAA recipient for the month. The
eligibility established and the fact that the claimant is in payable status during
the second week establishes potential HCTC eligibility. The Act provides that
an individual meets the definition of an eligible TAA recipient by receiving a
payment for any day of the month. The IRS will determine if the individual is
HCTC eligible.
Question: What is the
60-day requirement that affects the first week of TRA entitlement, thus the
initial establishment of potential HCTC eligibility?
Answer: Under section 231(a) of the Trade Act, the first week of potential
TRA entitlement is the first week of unemployment that begins more than 60 days
after the filing date of a petition that is later certified. This will impact
the initial eligibility for the HCTC.
Transmission of Data and Programming
Question: There are
three different report codes (1, 2 and 3) in the daily ICON transmission. Will
the SWAs have to transmit all three daily, or are all three included in one
transmission, or must we transmit separately?
Answer: SWAs will only use code 1 (TAA
data) or code 2 (ATAA data). Code 3 is for the PBGC's use only and will not be
used by the SWAs. If a state has TAA and ATAA recipients that are eligible on
the same day for a particular month, it will send the TAA and ATAA data in the
same data transmission. The header for the TAA data must be coded as "01" and
the detail data sent along with that header; the header for the ATAA data must
be coded as "02" and the detail data sent along with that header.
Question:
Which eligible TAA recipients do SWAs include for the first transmission?
Would it be acceptable to identify all TRA claimants paid in July 2003, and
report them via the ICON?
Answer: The HCTC advance option begins August 1, 2003. The
IRS HCTC office will begin paying health premiums for individuals that have met
all of the HCTC eligibility requirements for the month of August for any
eligible TAA recipient entitled to a TRA payment for any day of the month of
August. SWAs will report individuals at the point in time that they determine
the individual is an eligible TAA recipient. The determination of eligibility
is based on entitlement to receive a benefit for any day of a particular month,
not based on when the check is received.
Note: The HCTC office requested a "Start-up List" from
each state via ICON that contains data on all individuals who were determined
TAA eligible between January 1, 2003, and the start-up list "run" date in order
to initialize the advance HCTC program. If states cannot submit a start-up list with data back to
January 1, 2003, they are asked to submit a list beginning July 1, 2003, and to
submit a January - June list as soon as possible.
Question:
Is the current status of our IB13 program sufficient to cover the new criteria
of creating and maintaining an IB13 log and its process?
Answer: The current system is capable of
handling the HCTC data and related tasks as outlined in the Program Logic
Document. The requirements of the IB13 are being developed by Lockheed Martin
and the HCTC office. Once all the issues have been addressed, the SWAs will be
notified of how the system will work.
Question:
What is needed in the message ID field on both the header record and the
candidate data record?
Answer: A unique 6 digit number.
Question:
Will the file contain just the claimant record or claimant/family member
information (1 record for each member)?
Answer: Claimant information only.
Once the HCTC office receives the claimant record it will send a Program Kit to
the eligible individual explaining what the individual should do to determine
if he/she and his/her family are eligible. The Program Kit will have a
telephone number so that the individual can call the HCTC office for additional
information.
Question:
Does the SWA send one master batch file on August 1 that includes all eligible
participants in the TAA program?
Answer: No. By August 1, most SWAs
should have sent their start-up lists in a prior transmission to the HCTC
office. Therefore, on August 1, SWAs will send their daily transmission for
that day identifying those claimants eligible to receive a TRA/UI (TRA
eligible) payment that was processed for that day/week (the week which includes
August 1). See Answer to Question 2.
Question:
Does the SWA send a new record for an individual only when his/her status
changes on its files?
Answer: No. Each month is considered a
"New Month," and a record will be submitted each new month on all eligible TAA
or ATAA recipients when the SWA determines an individual first meets the
criteria stated in Attachment C to UIPL No. 24-03 for any given month. In
other words, when an individual is first determined to be eligible for benefits
and a week determined payable for a particular month, the individual's record
will be sent to the HCTC office for that month. The SWA will send a status
change record only if one of the conditions listed in Attachment B to UIPL No.
24-03 exists under the "Eligible Adjustment Code." Code "00" or "10" is used
to report an eligible individual when such individual first becomes eligible
within a given month; code "20"- "24" is used to notify that an individual has
lost the eligibility status as previously reported and is not eligible during
that time as reported. Note: If an individual is eligible for one day of a
particular month, that individual is considered an eligible TAA recipient for
the entire month.
Question: In addition to the start-up
list, does the SWA transmit a complete master file August 1 or anytime
thereafter?
Answer: No (see answer to question
number 6 above). Effective August 1, SWAs will begin sending their daily
records and will not send any records until the individual claimants have met
the criteria for an eligible TAA recipient. August 1, 2003, is the start of
the advance HCTC option. Eligible TAA recipients must certify for a
TRA/applicable UI payable week, thus becoming eligible for a TRA/applicable UI
benefit for the month of August before a record is transmitted to the HCTC
office. Records are sent in daily transmissions from that point forward.
There are no monthly transmissions.
Question: Does
the SWA send claimant "demographic" updates - such as address changes, or a
change in name after an individual gets married?
Answer: SWAs will provide the most
current information on file for address and name when they transmit any record
in the routine daily transmission.
Question:
Is there any reason SWAs could not send one complete file at the month's end
for the entire month and empty daily files as required?
Answer: For the HCTC office to pay the advance
HCTC timely, it must receive daily records in a timely manner. If a SWA waits
until the end of the month to supply the records to the HCTC office, there may not
be sufficient time to process the data and make the 65 percent payment to the
insurance provider.
Question: May
the SWA listing be sent other than on a daily schedule?
Answer: The SWAs need to submit the
daily records as described in the Program Logic Document and UIPL No. 24-03.
Question:
If a record is sent one month and the next month the SWA determines the
individual was not eligible because of an error, appeal reversal, etc., how does
it rescind the prior month?
Answer: If it is determined that a record
was submitted and the individual was not an eligible TAA or ATAA recipient, the
SWA will submit a record and provide a code (if information is available to the
SWA electronically) on why the prior record was changed. In the daily record
file, the SWA will enter the "Eligibility Month/Year" that the SWA is amending
and enter the correct "Eligibility Adjustment Code" (e.g., 20, 21, 22, 23, or
24).
Note: Attachment B to UIPL No. 24-03,
page 1, under "Eligibility Adjustment Code" list the codes as 00, 10, 20, 21,
22, 23, 25, and 99. Please note that there is no code 25. The correct code is
24. Code 99 is for PBGC use only.
Question:
Who is the correct contact person at the SWA for whom information should be
provided in the two fields, # 6 and # 7, in the Header record.
Answer: We suggest that the state
select someone who understands the eligibility requirements of the TAA program
(e.g., TAA Coordinator) rather than an information technology specialist, but
the SWA can best determine the appropriate contact point based on its
circumstances.
Question:
Is it accurate to indicate that when the SWA submits data on the first day of
the month, the file will include all TAA/ATAA qualifying recipients who still
qualify, plus any new ones for that day? The first day will include a large
group from the previous month, minus those that dropped off for the new month,
plus the new individuals for that day.
Answer: No. The SWA will send a
record each month only when an individual is determined to be an eligible TAA
or ATAA recipient and a week is payable for the first time within the month.
Question:
What does MMDDCCYY stand for in the file format in Attachment B to UIPL No.
24-03 and the PLD?
Answer: MM is for the "Month"
two
digits DD is for the "Day" of the month
two digits
CC is for the "Century" (20) -- do
not put 21 for the century, (Note: The HCTC office used this naming convention
because of HIPAA standards.)
YY is for the "Year" (03)
Example: On August 6, 2003, the SWA creates a record for the
month of August because the individual met the requirements outlined in
Attachment C to UIPL 24-03. The SWA will enter 082003 as the "Eligibility
Month/Year" in the individual's record that will be submitted to the HCTC
office.
Question:
What is the difference between the file date and file creation date?
Answer: The file date is the date to
which the data is referring. For example, if your state uses an Interactive
Voice Response (IVR) system, and you determine the person is eligible on
Sunday, then the file date would be Sunday. If on Monday the SWA extracts the
data and creates the file, then Monday would be the file creation date. In
most cases, however, these dates will be the same.
Question:
What is meant by "each month is a new month?"
Answer: "Each month is a new month" means that when a new month begins, the
states will submit records of all individuals who are eligible TAA or ATAA recipients
during the month regardless of that individual's eligibility status for any
prior months. The SWA will create and send a record for an individual when it
first recognizes in its system that a payable week has been processed.
Note: The states will submit only one record for new eligibility (code
"00" or "10") per individual per month. In other words, if an individual meets
the TRA eligibility requirements for a week in August that results in creation
and submission of a code "00" record, then the HCTC office recognizes that the individual
is an eligible TAA recipient for the entire month of August. For any
additional weeks of TRA that become payable in August, the SWA is not required
to create and submit additional code "00" records for the month of August.
If this same individual meets the TAA eligibility criteria
for September (considered a new month) for week ending September 6, 2003, the
SWA will submit a record for September on the TAA eligible individual, i.e., a
record with "092003" in the "Eligibility Month/Year" field.
Question: In
Attachment B to UIPL No. 24-03, the eligibility adjustment code is indicated as
2 digits in length, but a 3-digit position is indicated. Also, the chart does
not indicate it is required data.
Answer: This is a two (2) length field. The position number is 339-340,
and it is a required field.
Question: If an
individual in a compensable status becomes disqualified and is no longer a TAA
eligible recipient reversing the claimant's eligibility entirely, will code(s)
20 - 24 be used by the SWA to correct the record?
Answer: Yes, states will submit a new record (using codes 20-24) to correct
or reverse previously reported information.
Example: A state submitted a record on an eligible TAA
individual for the month of August because the individual met the eligibility
criteria for the first week in August. The individual continued to receive
benefits through the first week in December. Then, during mid-December, the
individual was determined not to be an eligible TAA recipient because of an
appeal reversing the previous determination of eligibility.
The state would submit a record with the "Eligibility
Adjustment Code" shown as "24" for each of the months that the individual was
determined not to be an eligible TAA recipient; in this case, the months of
August, September, October, November, and December. These records will reverse
the prior eligibility records sent for these months.
Question: If an
individual in a compensable status becomes disqualified and is no longer a TAA
eligible recipient subsequent to the initial period of eligibility, will code(s)
20 - 24 be used by the SWA to report the claimant's ineligibility status?
Answer: States will not submit a record to report ineligibility status for
an individual unless it is needed to correct or reverse prior eligibility information.
Example: A state submitted a record on an eligible TAA
individual for the month of August because the individual met the eligibility
criteria for the first week in August. The individual continued to receive
benefits through the first week in December. Then, during mid-December, the
individual was determined not to be an eligible TAA recipient effective
December 14 due to a disqualification.
The state would not submit a record to correct or reverse
the eligibility status since the individual continues to remain eligible for
August through the first two weeks of December. Provided the individual
remains ineligible indefinitely once the December ineligibility
disqualification is imposed, no further records would be sent to the HCTC
office.
Note: When an individual is determined eligible for a day that falls
within the first week of a month, yet is determined not to be eligible for the
remaining portion of the month due to adjudication of some issue, a correction
record would not be sent since it is not reversing the record of eligibility
during the first week of that month, and the individual is potentially eligible
for the HCTC based on that first week.
If an individual is determined to be an eligible TAA
individual for just one day in a given month, he/she is an eligible TAA
individual for the entire month for purposes of the HCTC. Only when a
determination reverses the record previously sent will a state submit a
corrected record.