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CRS Updates Report on Efforts to Block ACA Via Appropriations

JAN. 5, 2016

R44100

DATED JAN. 5, 2016
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
Citations: R44100

 

C. Stephen Redhead

 

Specialist in Health Policy

 

 

Ada S. Cornell

 

Information Research Specialist

 

 

January 5, 2016

 

 

Congressional Research Service

 

7-5700

 

www.crs.gov

 

R44100

 

 

Summary

Congress remains deeply divided over implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), the health reform law enacted in March 2010. Since the ACA's enactment, lawmakers opposed to specific provisions in the ACA or the entire law have repeatedly debated its implementation and considered bills to repeal, defund, delay, or otherwise amend the law.

In addition to considering ACA repeal or amendment in authorizing legislation, some lawmakers have used the annual appropriations process in an effort to eliminate funding for the ACA's implementation and address other aspects of the law. ACA-related provisions have been included in enacted appropriations acts each year since the ACA became law. In October 2013, disagreement between the Republican-led House and Democratic-controlled Senate over the inclusion of ACA language in a temporary spending bill for the new fiscal year (i.e., FY2014) resulted in a partial shutdown of government operations that lasted 16 days.

The House Appropriations Committee has added numerous ACA-related provisions to annual appropriations acts since the Republicans regained control of the House in 2011. Most of these provisions were included in the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies ("Labor-HHS-ED") Appropriations Act, which funds the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). A few were incorporated in the Financial Services and General Government ("Financial Services") Appropriations Act, which funds the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). By comparison, the Labor-HHS-ED and Financial Services appropriations bills drafted by the Senate Appropriations Committee were largely free of any ACA-related provisions while the committee remained under Democratic control through 2014.

Congressional appropriators have used a number of legislative options available to them through the appropriations process in an effort to defund, delay, or otherwise address implementation of the ACA. First, they have denied CMS and the IRS any new funding to cover the administrative costs of ACA implementation. Second, House appropriators repeatedly have added limitations (often referred to as riders) to the Labor-HHS-ED and Financial Services appropriations bills to prohibit CMS and the IRS from using discretionary funds provided in the bills for ACA implementation activities. To date, the ACA limitation provisions added by House appropriators have been removed during negotiations with the Senate. None of them have been included in any of the enacted appropriations acts.

Third, House appropriators have incorporated ACA-related legislative language in the Labor- HHS-ED appropriations bills. For example, appropriators have included language to rescind (i.e., cancel) certain mandatory funding provided by the ACA.

Finally, congressional appropriators have added to recent Labor-HHS-ED appropriations acts several reporting and other administrative requirements regarding implementation of the ACA. These include instructing the HHS Secretary to establish a website with information on the allocation of funding from the Prevention and Public Health Fund and to provide an accounting of administrative spending on ACA implementation.

                                Contents

 

 

 Introduction

 

 

 A Brief Overview of the ACA

 

 

 ACA's Impact on Federal Spending

 

 

      Mandatory Spending on Expanding Insurance Coverage

 

 

      Mandatory Spending on Other Programs

 

 

      Discretionary Spending

 

 

 ACA Provisions in Enacted Appropriations Acts

 

 

 Government Shutdown

 

 

 ACA Provisions in the FY2016 Appropriations Bills

 

 

 Tables

 

 

 Table 1. ACA-Related Provisions in Appropriations Acts,

 

          FY2011-FY2016

 

 

 Contacts

 

 

 Author Contact Information

 

 

Introduction

Congress remains deeply divided over implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which President Obama signed into law in March 2010.1 Since the ACA's enactment, lawmakers opposed to specific provisions in the ACA or the entire law have repeatedly debated its implementation and considered bills to repeal, defund, delay, or otherwise amend the law.

To date, most of this legislative activity has taken place in the House, which reverted to Republican control in 2011. Over the past five years, the Republican-led House has passed numerous ACA-related bills, including legislation that would repeal the entire law. There has been far less debate in the Senate, which remained under Democratic control through 2014. Most of the ACA legislation passed by the House during that period was not taken up by the Senate. However, a few bills to amend specific elements of the ACA that attracted sufficiently broad and bipartisan support were approved by both the House and the Senate and signed into law. Now that Republicans control both chambers of Congress, opponents of the ACA see new opportunities to pass and send to the President legislation that would change the law.

In addition to these attempts to repeal or amend the ACA through authorizing legislation, some lawmakers have used the annual appropriations process in an effort to eliminate funding for the ACA's implementation and address other concerns they have with the law. ACA-related provisions have been included in enacted appropriations acts each year since the ACA became law. In October 2013, disagreement between the House and Senate over the inclusion of ACA language in a temporary spending bill for the new fiscal year (i.e., FY2014) resulted in a partial shutdown of government operations that lasted 16 days.

This report summarizes the ACA-related language added to annual appropriations legislation by congressional appropriators since the ACA was signed into law. The information is presented in Table 1. While a detailed examination of the ACA itself is beyond the scope of this report, a brief overview of the ACA's core provisions and its impact on federal spending is provided as context for the material in the table.2 This report will be updated to reflect key developments in the annual appropriations process.

A companion report, CRS Report R43289, Legislative Actions to Repeal, Defund, or Delay the Affordable Care Act, summarizes the authorizing legislation to amend the ACA that has been enacted since 2010. It also reviews all the ACA legislation taken up and passed by the House during this period.

A Brief Overview of the ACA

The ACA made significant changes to the way U.S. health care is financed, organized, and delivered. Its primary goal is to increase access to affordable health care for the medically uninsured and underinsured. To that end, the law included a complex set of interconnected provisions that address the private health insurance market.

First, the ACA requires health insurers to comply with a set of federal standards ("market reforms") to ensure that individuals may purchase, keep, and renew coverage that provides a minimum level of benefits and consumer protections, with some limits on costs. Second, the law establishes competitive private health insurance exchanges (also known as marketplaces) through which individuals and small employers are able to compare and enroll in qualified health plans.

Exchanges operate in every state and the District of Columbia. They are administered by states or by the federal government, or through a partnership between the state and federal governments. Qualified individuals who enroll in exchange plans may receive financial assistance if they meet income and certain other requirements. Refundable tax credits are available to individuals and families with incomes between 100% and 400% of the federal poverty level (FPL) to help pay the insurance premium. The premium tax credits are available upon enrollment so that eligible individuals and families can choose to receive the subsidy immediately rather than wait until they file taxes the following year. In addition, certain individuals and families receiving the tax credit may be eligible for cost-sharing subsidies to reduce their out-of-pocket costs (e.g., deductibles, copays) when receiving health services. Small employers with fewer than 25 full-time equivalent employees (FTEs) may also use the exchanges to purchase insurance coverage for their employees and may qualify for a tax credit to help cover the cost of providing that coverage.

In June 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court in King v. Burwell ruled that the premium tax credits are available to all qualified individuals who enroll in exchange plans and meet the necessary income and other requirements, regardless of whether the exchange is administered by the state or the federal government.3

Third, the ACA's "individual mandate" requires most U.S. citizens and legal residents to obtain coverage. Those who remain uninsured may have to pay a penalty unless they qualify for an exemption. The individual mandate is intended to encourage healthy individuals to participate in the insurance market and not wait until they get sick to buy coverage. Finally, the law requires larger employers with 50 or more FTEs to offer health coverage that meets affordability and adequacy standards for their full-time employees and those workers' dependents. Employers who do not comply with these requirements may be subject to a tax if one or more of their employees purchase coverage through an exchange and receive a subsidy. The purpose of the ACA's employer requirements is to encourage larger firms to maintain affordable and adequate coverage for their employees.

The ACA coupled its private insurance provisions with the requirement that states expand their Medicaid programs to cover all nonelderly individuals with incomes up to 138% FPL. Those with higher incomes, up to 400% FPL, may be eligible to get subsidized coverage through an exchange. In June 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court in NFIB v. Sebelius found the Medicaid expansion to be unconstitutionally coercive and prohibited the federal government from enforcing it.4 The Court's decision made Medicaid expansion optional for states.

In addition to expanding access to insurance coverage, the ACA contains hundreds of other provisions that address health care access, costs, and quality. They include new programs to test alternative ways of delivering and paying for health care. The law also includes new taxes and fees as well as adjustments to Medicare payments to hospitals and other health care providers. These provisions are designed to offset the federal spending on exchange subsidies and Medicaid expansion.

ACA's Impact on Federal Spending

Implementation of the ACA is affecting both mandatory and discretionary spending. Mandatory spending -- also referred to as direct spending -- is controlled through authorizing laws.5 It includes spending on entitlement programs such as Medicare and Social Security. Authorizing laws may provide permanent or temporary appropriations or other forms of budget authority for such spending. When the authorizing law contains no appropriations, mandatory programs may be funded through the annual appropriations process. This is sometimes referred to as "appropriated mandatory" or "appropriated entitlement" spending.6Discretionary spending is both controlled and funded through the annual appropriations process. It typically covers the routine costs of running federal agencies and offices, including wages and salaries.7

Federal spending on ACA implementation can be grouped into three categories: (1) mandatory spending on expanding insurance coverage, (2) mandatory spending on other programs, and (3) discretionary spending. Each of these categories is briefly discussed below.

Mandatory Spending on Expanding Insurance Coverage

This category accounts for most of the federal spending under the ACA. It includes the exchange subsidies (i.e., premium tax credits and cost-sharing subsidies), the federal government's share of the costs of Medicaid expansion, and tax credits for small employers. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) projected that this and other ACA mandatory spending (discussed in the second category, below) would be more than offset by (1) revenues from the ACA's new taxes and fees, and (2) savings from the law's adjustments to Medicare provider payments that are projected to slow the rate of growth of Medicare spending.8

Mandatory Spending on Other Programs

The ACA authorized new Medicare and Medicaid spending. For example, it phased out the Medicare prescription drug benefit "donut hole" through a combination of subsidies and manufacturer discounts, and it increased Medicare payments for primary care services and medical education. The ACA also included numerous appropriations that are providing billions of dollars of mandatory funding to support grant programs and other activities authorized by the law.9 For example, the law funded temporary insurance programs for targeted groups prior to the exchanges becoming operational, and it provided funding for grants to states to plan and establish health insurance exchanges. The ACA included a permanent appropriation, available for 10-year periods, for the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMMI), within the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), to test and implement innovative health care payment and service delivery models.

In addition, the ACA created four special funds and appropriated amounts to each one. First, the Community Health Center Fund (CHCF) has provided almost $11 billion over five years (FY2011-FY2015) for the federal health centers program and the National Health Service Corps.10 Second, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (PCORTF) is supporting patient-centered comparative clinical effectiveness research through FY2019 with a mix of appropriations, fees on health plans, and transfers from the Medicare trust funds. Third, the Prevention and Public Health Fund (PPHF), for which the ACA provided a permanent annual appropriation, is supporting prevention, wellness, and other public health-related programs and activities. Finally, the Health Insurance Reform Implementation Fund (HIRIF), for which the ACA appropriated $1 billion, helped pay for the initial administrative costs of implementing the law.

Discretionary Spending

The ACA is affecting discretionary spending in two ways. First, the law created numerous new discretionary grant programs and provided each of them with an authorization of appropriations. To date, however, few of these programs have received discretionary funding through annual appropriations acts, though several of them have been supported with mandatory funds from the PPHF.11 Second, the two agencies primarily responsible for implementing the ACA's provisions to expand insurance coverage -- CMS's Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight (CCIIO) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) -- are incurring significant costs in connection with administering and enforcing the law. Both agencies requested increases in funding in each of their past four budget submissions (i.e., FY2013-FY2016) to help pay for ACA implementation. But congressional appropriators have not provided either agency with any additional discretionary funds. CMS instead has relied on funding from other sources to support the federal health insurance exchange (Healthcare.gov) and other ACA implementation activities. Those sources include discretionary fund transfers from other accounts, amounts from the Nonrecurring Expenses Fund (NEF),12 ACA mandatory funds (i.e., HIRIF, PPHF), and, more recently, user fees assessed on health insurers that participate in the federal exchange.13

ACA Provisions in Enacted Appropriations Acts

The House Appropriations Committee has added numerous ACA-related provisions to annual appropriations acts since the Republicans regained control of the House in 2011. Most of these provisions were included in the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies ("Labor-HHS-ED") Appropriations Act, which funds CMS. A few were incorporated in the Financial Services and General Government ("Financial Services") Appropriations Act, which funds the IRS. By comparison, the Labor-HHS-ED and Financial Services appropriations bills drafted by the Senate Appropriations Committee were largely free of ACA-related provisions while the committee remained under Democratic control, with one key exception. Each year, the Senate Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bill included instructions on the allocation of PPHF funding.

Congressional appropriators have used a number of legislative options available to them through the appropriations process in an effort to defund, delay, or otherwise address implementation of the ACA. First, they have denied CMS and the IRS new funding to cover the administrative costs of ACA implementation. CMS requested substantial increases in funding for its Program Management account in each of the last four budgets (i.e., FY2013-FY2016). Those new funds were to help support operation of the federally facilitated exchange and other ACA-related activities. Congress, however, did not provide any additional discretionary funds for CMS in the enacted Labor-HHS-ED appropriations acts for FY2013-FY2016. Similarly, the IRS requested additional discretionary funds for each of those four years to support administration and enforcement of the ACA's tax provisions, including the premium tax credits and the individual mandate penalties. Again, congressional appropriators did not give the IRS the extra funds it requested.14

Second, House appropriators repeatedly have added limitations (often referred to as riders) to the Labor-HHS-ED and Financial Services appropriations bills. Limitation provisions within appropriations measures are provisions that restrict the use of funds provided by the bill. They do this either by capping the amount of funding that may be used for a particular purpose or by prohibiting the use of any funds for a specific purpose. For example, House appropriators on multiple occasions added language prohibiting an agency from using any of the funds in its appropriations bill for ACA implementation activities. Limitation provisions also may be used to restrict the availability of funds for transfer.15 During the FY2011-FY2016 appropriations cycles the ACA limitation provisions added by House appropriators were removed during negotiations with the Senate. None of the provisions were incorporated into the final appropriations legislation agreed to by both chambers and signed into law.

Third, House appropriators have incorporated ACA-related legislative language in the Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bills. Unlike limitations, legislative provisions have the effect of making new law or changing existing law.16 As an example, appropriators included language to rescind (i.e., cancel) certain mandatory funding provided by the ACA. House rules prohibit legislative provisions in appropriations acts, while the rules of the Senate allow exceptions under some circumstances. However, special rules in the House (approved by the Rules Committee) and unanimous consent agreements in the Senate can be used to set aside each chamber's rules, including those that relate to legislating in appropriations measures.

Finally, congressional appropriators have added to recent Labor-HHS-ED appropriations acts several reporting and other administrative requirements regarding implementation of the ACA. These include instructing the HHS Secretary to establish a website with information on the allocation of PPHF funds and to provide an accounting of administrative spending on ACA implementation.

Table 1 summarizes the ACA-related legislative and other provisions that were incorporated in the enacted Labor-HHS-ED and Financial Services appropriations acts for each of FY2011-FY2016. For each fiscal year, the table also provides a brief overview of any legislative action taken by the House and Senate Appropriations Committees on their respective versions of the two appropriations bills prior to the two chambers reaching agreement on the final version of the legislation. This discussion lists all the ACA language added to the bills by the committees. As already noted, none of the ACA limitations added by the House appropriators were included in the enacted Labor-HHS-ED and Financial Services appropriations acts.

Government Shutdown

Disagreement between the Republican-controlled House and the Democrat-led Senate on whether to include ACA provisions in the FY2014 continuing resolution (CR) shut down programs and activities across the federal government in October 2013.

Congress took up consideration of the FY2014 CR to ensure continued funding for the government at the start of the new fiscal year (i.e., October 1, 2013) after lawmakers failed to complete legislative action on any of the FY2014 annual appropriations acts. The House tried three times to attach provisions to the CR to defund or delay ACA implementation. Each time the Senate rejected the House language. With no agreement in place at the start of FY2014, the resulting lapse in discretionary funding led to a partial shutdown of government operations.

Lawmakers finally reached agreement on legislative language on October 16, and the President signed the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2014, the following day to reopen the government.17 The measure funded the federal government through January 15, 2014, and did not include any provisions to defund or delay ACA implementation. Instead, it required the HHS Secretary to certify to Congress that the ACA health insurance exchanges were verifying the eligibility of individuals applying for subsidies to help cover the cost of purchasing insurance coverage. In January 2014, Congress completed action on the FY2014 appropriations process by approving the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, which included all 12 annual appropriations acts for FY2014.18

ACA Provisions in the FY2016 Appropriations Bills

With Republicans in control of both chambers in the 114th Congress, House and Senate appropriators are able to coordinate their efforts to include ACA-related provisions in appropriations bills. The FY2016 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bills reported by the House and Senate Appropriations Committees included multiple overlapping ACA limitations, legislative provisions, and reporting requirements. The bills incorporated most of the ACA language that was in the enacted FY2015 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations act. The House bill also included other ACA funding rescissions, as well as limitation provisions that would have prohibited the use of any of the funds appropriated by the bill for ACA implementation.

The limitation provisions would have prohibited HHS (and the Labor Department) from using any discretionary funding to enforce the ACA's market reforms, operate the federal exchange, or administer other ACA programs. The provisions also would have banned the use of other funding made available by the appropriations act to implement the ACA. For example, CMS would be prohibited from funding the Medicaid expansion. In addition, the House bill would have prohibited CMS from collecting user fees from health insurers to help cover the costs of operating the federal exchange, and it would have rescinded $6.8 billion of the ACA's $10 billion appropriation for CMMI for the period FY2011-FY2019.

None of these limitation provisions were included in the final version of the FY2016 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations act, which was part of the FY2016 omnibus spending bill. That measure, which the President signed into law on December 18, 2015, included a temporary moratorium on the ACA's medical device tax and the annual fee on health insurance providers, as well as a two-year delay of the Cadillac tax (i.e., the ACA's excise tax on high-cost employer-sponsored health plans); see Table 1.

     Table 1. ACA-Related Provisions in Appropriations Acts, FY2011-FY2016

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Public Law

 

 and Date of

 

 Enactment                              Summary of Provisions

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                     FY2011

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 P.L. 112-10      Department of Defense and Full-Year Continuing

 

 Apr. 15, 2011    Appropriations Act, 2011. Division B, Title VIII of P.L.

 

                  112-10 provided full-year continuing appropriations for

 

                  Labor-HHS-ED for FY2011 generally at FY2010 levels, but with

 

                  numerous spending reductions for specified agencies and

 

                  programs. It included the following ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                  o Rescinded $2.2 billion of the $6 billion appropriation for

 

                    the Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP) program,

 

                    which was established and funded by ACA Section 1322.

 

 

                  o Repealed the free choice voucher program, established by

 

                    ACA Section 10108, which would have required certain

 

                    employers to provide vouchers to qualified employees for

 

                    purchasing coverage through a health insurance exchange.

 

 

                  o Prohibited transfers from the Public Health and Social

 

                    Services Emergency Fund to support the U.S. Public Health

 

                    Sciences Track, pursuant to ACA Section 5315.

 

 

                  o Removed the maintenance of effort requirement for use of

 

                    monies in the Community Health Center Fund (CHCF), which

 

                    was established and funded by ACA Section 10503 (as amended

 

                    by HCERA Section 2303).

 

 

                  o Mandated a Government Accountability Office (GAO) study of

 

                    the costs and processes of ACA implementation, and a

 

                    Medicare actuarial analysis of the impact of the ACA's

 

                    private insurance reforms on employer-sponsored health

 

                    insurance premiums.

 

 

                  Note: After it passed the Department of Defense and Full-Year

 

                  Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011 (H.R. 1473) on April 14,

 

                  2011, the House approved an accompanying concurrent

 

                  resolution (H.Con.Res. 35). The resolution instructed the

 

                  House clerk, during enrollment of the bill, to insert a

 

                  provision that would have prohibited using any of the funds

 

                  provided by H.R. 1473 or any previous Act to implement the

 

                  ACA. The Senate rejected H.Con.Res. 35.

 

 

 Legislative activity prior to enactment of P.L. 112-10. The Senate

 

 Appropriations Committee reported its version of the FY2011 Labor-HHS-ED

 

 appropriations bill (S.3686) on August 2, 2010. The measure would have

 

 instructed the HHS Secretary to allocate the Prevention and Public Health Fund

 

 (PPHF) funds for FY2011 to the accounts specified, in the amounts specified,

 

 and for the activities specified in a table included in the accompanying

 

 committee report (S.Rept. 111-243). The House Appropriations Subcommittee on

 

 Labor-HHS-ED also approved a draft (unnumbered) FY2011 bill, but the full

 

 committee took no further action on it.

 

 

 On February 19, 2011, the House by a vote of 235-189 passed H.R. 1, a bill

 

 that included the FY2011 Department of Defense Appropriations Act as well as

 

 full-year continuing appropriations for FY2011 for Labor-HHS-ED and all the

 

 other nondefense appropriations acts. H.R. 1, as passed, included nine

 

 separate but overlapping provisions that would have prohibited using any of

 

 the funds provided in the bill to implement specific ACA provisions or the

 

 entire law. The Senate subsequently rejected H.R. 1 by a vote of 44-56 on

 

 March 9, 2011.

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                     FY2012

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 P.L. 112-74      Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2012. Division F of

 

 Dec. 23, 2011    P.L. 112-74 -- the FY2012 Labor-HHS-ED Appropriations Act --

 

                  included the following ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                  o Rescinded $400 million of the remaining $3.8 billion for

 

                    the CO-OP program; see P.L. 112-10, above.

 

 

                  o Rescinded $10 million of the FY2012 appropriation for the

 

                    Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB), which was

 

                    authorized and funded by ACA Section 3403.

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to establish a website with

 

                    detailed information on the allocation and use of PPHF

 

                    funds.

 

 

                  o Prohibited the use of PPHF funds for lobbying, publicity,

 

                    or propaganda purposes.

 

 

 Legislative activity prior to enactment of P.L. 112-74. The chairman of

 

 the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor-HHS-Education introduced a

 

 chairman's bill(H.R. 3070) on September 29, 2011, but the subcommittee did not

 

 mark up or report the measure to the full committee. The bill received no full

 

 committee action. H.R. 3070, as introduced, would have (1) rescinded the

 

 entire FY2012 appropriations for the CHCF, PPHF, IPAB, the pregnancy

 

 assistance grants, the home visitation program, state Aging and Disability

 

 Resource Centers (ADRCs), and the health workforce demonstration grants; (2)

 

 rescinded all the remaining CO-OP funds (i.e., $3.8 billion); (3) rescinded

 

 $1.862 billion of the $10 billion appropriation for the Center for Medicare

 

 and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) for the period FY2011-FY2019; and (4)

 

 prohibited using any of the funds provided in the bill to implement and

 

 administer the ACA until 90 days after all ACA legal challenges are complete.

 

 

 The House Appropriations Committee reported the FY2012 Financial Services

 

 appropriations bill (H.R. 2434, H.Rept. 112-136) on July 7, 2011. It would

 

 have (1) prohibited the IRS from using any of the funds provided in the bill

 

 to implement the ACA individual mandate; and (2) prohibited the transfer of

 

 any ACA funds to the IRS.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Committee reported its version of the FY2012

 

 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bill (S. 1599) on September 22, 2011. Similar to

 

 the previous year's bill, S. 1599 would have instructed the HHS Secretary to

 

 allocate the PPHF funds for FY2012 to the accounts specified, in the amounts

 

 specified, and for the activities specified in a table included in the

 

 accompanying committee report (S.Rept. 112-84). In addition, S.Rept. 112-84

 

 included language directing the HHS Secretary to submit a detailed report on

 

 all the recipients of PPHF funding.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Committee reported its FY2012 Financial Services

 

 appropriations bill (S. 1573) on September 15, 2011. The measure did not

 

 include any ACA provisions. However, the accompanying committee report

 

 (S.Rept. 112-79) directed the IRS to submit a detailed table itemizing each

 

 fund transfer from HHS to the IRS for the purpose of ACA implementation.

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                     FY2013

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 P.L. 113-6       Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act,

 

 Mar. 26, 2013    2013. Division F, Title V of P.L. 113-6 provided full-year

 

                  continuing appropriations for Labor-HHS-ED for FY2013

 

                  generally at FY2012 levels, but with some spending

 

                  adjustments -- reductions and increases -- for specified

 

                  programs. It included the following ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                  o Rescinded $200 million of the $500 million transfer from

 

                    the Medicare Part A and Part B trust funds for the 5-year

 

                    Community-Based Care Transition Program, which was

 

                    established and funded by ACA Section 3026.

 

 

                  o Rescinded $10 million of IPAB's FY2013 appropriation.

 

                    [Note: A similar rescission was included in the FY2012

 

                    appropriations act; see above.]

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to establish a website with

 

                    detailed information on the allocation and use of PPHF

 

                    funds. [Note: This provision first appeared in the FY2012

 

                    appropriations act and remained in effect in FY2013 under

 

                    P.L. 113-6; see above.]

 

 

                  o Prohibited the use of PPHF funds for lobbying, publicity,

 

                    or propaganda purposes. [Note: This provision first

 

                    appeared in the FY2012 appropriations act and remained in

 

                    effect in FY2013 under P.L. 113-6; see above.]

 

 

 Legislative activity prior to enactment of P.L. 113-6. The House

 

 Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor-HHS-ED approved an unnumbered draft bill

 

 for FY2013 on July18, 2012, but no further action was taken. The measure did

 

 not provide CMS with any of the requested $1.0 billion increase in funding for

 

 FY2013 to help pay for ACA implementation and related activities, and it would

 

 have prohibited using any of the funding provided in the bill to support CMS's

 

 Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight (CCIIO). The draft

 

 bill also would have (1) rescinded the entire FY2013 appropriations for the

 

 PPHF and IPAB, and rescinded the FY2013 base appropriation of $150 million for

 

 the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (PCORTF); (2) rescinded $3

 

 billion of the remaining $3.4 billion for the CO-OP funds (see P.L. 112-74,

 

 above); (3) rescinded $1.590 billion of the $10 billion appropriation for CMMI

 

 for the period FY2011-FY2019; (4) rescinded $300 million of the $1.5 billion

 

 appropriation to the CHCF in FY2013 for community health centers; (5)

 

 prohibited using any of the funds provided in the bill to implement and

 

 administer the ACA; (6) instructed the HHS Secretary to establish a website

 

 with detailed information on the allocation and use of FY2013 PPHF funds; and

 

 (7) prohibited the use of PPHF funds for lobbying, publicity, or propaganda

 

 purposes.

 

 

 The House Appropriations Committee reported its FY2013 Financial Services

 

 appropriations bill (H.R. 6020, H.Rept. 112-550) on June 26, 2012. The measure

 

 did not include the IRS's requested funding increase of $360 million for

 

 FY2013 for ACA implementation. Moreover, H.R. 6020 would have prohibited the

 

 IRS from using any of the funds provided in the bill to carry out the transfer

 

 of ACA funds to the agency.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Committee reported its version of the FY2013

 

 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bill (S. 3295) on June 14, 2012. The measure

 

 included about half of the funding increase requested by CMS for ACA

 

 implementation. As with the Senate's Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bills for the

 

 previous two fiscal years, S. 3295 would have instructed the HHS Secretary to

 

 allocate the PPHF funds for FY2013 to the accounts specified, in the amounts

 

 specified, and for the activities specified in a table included in the

 

 accompanying committee report (S.Rept. 112-176). In addition, the bill would

 

 have directed the HHS Secretary to establish a website with detailed

 

 information on the allocation and use of PPHF funds.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Committee reported the FY2013 Financial Services

 

 appropriations bill (S. 3301) on June 14, 2012. The measure did not include

 

 any ACA-related provisions. However, the accompanying committee report

 

 (S.Rept. 112-177) directed the IRS to submit a detailed table itemizing each

 

 fund transfer from the Health Insurance Reform Implementation Fund (HIRIF) to

 

 the IRS for the purpose of ACA implementation.

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                     FY2014

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 P.L. 113-76

 

 Jan. 17, 2014    Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014. Division H of

 

                  P.L. 113-76 -- the FY2014 Labor-HHS-ED Appropriations Act --

 

                  included the following ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                  o Rescinded $10 million of IPAB's FY2014 appropriation.

 

                    [Note: A similar rescission was included in both the FY2012

 

                    and FY2013 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations acts; see above.]

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to transfer the FY2014 PPHF

 

                    funds to the accounts specified, in the amounts specified,

 

                    and for the activities specified in a table included in the

 

                    explanatory statement to accompany P.L. 113-76

 

                    (Congressional Record, January 15, 2014, p. H1041).

 

                    Prohibited the Secretary from making further transfers.

 

                    [Note: The requirement to transfer PPHF funds in accordance

 

                    with the allocations specified by the committee was

 

                    included in each of the FY2011, FY2012, and FY2013

 

                    Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bills reported by the Senate

 

                    Appropriations Committee, but the provision was not

 

                    included in the final enacted appropriations legislation

 

                    for those years; see above.]

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to establish a website with

 

                    detailed information on the allocation and use of PPHF

 

                    funds, organized by program or by state. [Note: A similar,

 

                    but less detailed, provision was included in the FY2012

 

                    appropriations act and remained in effect in FY2013 under

 

                    P.L. 113-6; see above.]

 

 

                  o Prohibited the use of PPHF funds for lobbying, publicity,

 

                    or propaganda purposes. [Note: This provision first

 

                    appeared in the FY2012 appropriations act and remained in

 

                    effect in FY2013 under P.L. 113-6; see above.]

 

 

                  o Authorized the HHS Secretary to transfer up to $305 million

 

                    from the Medicare trust funds to the CMS Program Management

 

                    account for Medicare operations, but prohibited the use of

 

                    such transferred funds for ACA implementation.

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2015 budget

 

                    justification and on the HHS website a detailed breakdown

 

                    of the ACA programs and activities receiving funds

 

                    appropriated to implement the law, including the number of

 

                    full-time equivalents (FTEs), for FY2014 and for each of

 

                    the past four fiscal years (i.e., FY2010-FY2013).

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2015 budget

 

                    justification a detailed breakdown of all funds used to

 

                    date by CMS for the exchanges, including the proposed use

 

                    of such funds in FY2015.

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2016 budget

 

                    justification an analysis of how the ACA requirement that

 

                    health plans cover recommended immunizations and other

 

                    preventive services without any cost-sharing will impact

 

                    eligibility for HHS discretionary programs.

 

 

                  The explanatory statement to accompany P.L. 113-76, submitted

 

                  by the House Appropriations Committee Chairman and published

 

                  in the January 15, 2014, Congressional Record, instructed HHS

 

                  to include in the FY2015 budget justification the amount of

 

                  expired unobligated balances available for transfer to the

 

                  Nonrecurring Expenses Fund (NEF), and the amount of any such

 

                  balances transferred to the NEF. [Note: Section 4 of P.L.

 

                  113-76 stated that the explanatory statement was to be

 

                  treated as if it were a joint explanatory statement of the

 

                  conference committee.]

 

 

                  Division E of P.L. 113-76 -- the FY2014 Financial Services

 

                  Appropriations Act -- included the following ACA-related

 

                  provision:

 

 

                  o Required the IRS Commissioner to allocate $92 million in

 

                    general program funds among the agency's appropriations

 

                    accounts for various specified activities (e.g., improve

 

                    delivery of services to taxpayers), but prohibited the use

 

                    of such funds for ACA implementation.

 

 

 P.L. 113-46      Continuing Appropriations Act, 2014. P.L. 113-46

 

 Oct. 17, 2013    provided continuing appropriations for the federal government

 

                  through January 15, 2014, generally at FY2013

 

                  post-sequestration funding levels. It included the following

 

                  ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to certify in a report to

 

                    Congress, due by January 1, 2014, that the health exchanges

 

                    are verifying the eligibility of individuals applying for

 

                    premium tax credits and cost-sharing subsidies consistent

 

                    with the requirements of the ACA.

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) to

 

                    report to Congress not later than July 1, 2014, on the

 

                    effectiveness of procedures and safeguards provided under

 

                    the ACA for preventing exchange applicants from submitting

 

                    inaccurate or fraudulent information.

 

 

 Legislative activity prior to enactment of P.L. 113-46. On September

 

 20, 2013, in the absence of any enacted appropriations bills for FY2014, the

 

 House approved a continuing resolution (CR; H.J.Res 59) to provide temporary

 

 funding for the federal government through December 15. H.J.Res 59, as passed

 

 by the House, incorporated language that would have prohibited the use of any

 

 federal funds -- mandatory or discretionary -- to carry out the ACA. The

 

 Senate amendment to H.J.Res 59 did not incorporate the House ACA defunding

 

 language. On September 29, the House amended the Senate amendment with

 

 language that would have (1) repealed the ACA's medical device tax, and (2)

 

 delayed the law's implementation by one year, but the Senate tabled both of

 

 these amendments. On September 30, the House further amended the Senate

 

 amendment by adding language to (1) delay the ACA's individual insurance

 

 mandate by one year; and (2) expand the ACA's requirement for Members of

 

 Congress and their staff to obtain health coverage through the exchanges by

 

 including the President, Vice President, and political appointees, and

 

 prohibit any premium contribution by the government. Once again, the Senate

 

 tabled the House amendments. With the House and Senate unable to agree on the

 

 FY2014 CR, the Administration on October 1, 2013, commenced a partial shutdown

 

 of the federal government. The government resumed full operations on October

 

 17, 2013, after House and Senate lawmakers reached an agreement on a temporary

 

 funding measure, and the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2014 was signed into

 

 law (see above).

 

 

 Earlier in the summer of 2013, the House and Senate Appropriations Committees

 

 took the following actions on FY2014 appropriations. The Senate Appropriations

 

 Committee reported its FY2014 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bill (S. 1284) on

 

 July 11, 2013. For the fourth year in a row, the Senate's Labor-HHS-ED

 

 appropriations bill would have instructed the HHS Secretary to allocate the

 

 PPHF funds to the accounts specified, in the amounts specified, and for the

 

 activities specified in a table included in the accompanying committee report

 

 (S.Rept. 113-71). S. 1284 also would have prohibited the Secretary from making

 

 any further transfers of PPHF funds. In addition, the bill would have required

 

 the HHS Secretary to establish a website with detailed information on the

 

 allocation and use of PPHF funds. S. 1284 would have provided CMS with its

 

 requested $1.4 billion increase in discretionary funds for ACA implementation

 

 in FY2014.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Committee reported its FY2014 Financial Services

 

 appropriations bill (S. 1371, S.Rept. 113-80) on July 25, 2013. S. 1371 would

 

 have provided some but not all of the requested $440 million increase in IRS

 

 funding for ACA implementation.

 

 

 The House Appropriations Committee reported its version of the FY2014

 

 Financial Services appropriations bill (H.R. 2786, H.Rept. 113-172) on July

 

 23, 2013. The measure did not provide any of the new IRS funds requested in

 

 the President's FY2014 budget for ACA implementation. H.R. 2786, as reported,

 

 would have prohibited the IRS from using any of the funds provided in the bill

 

 to implement the individual mandate, and would have prohibited transfers from

 

 HHS to the IRS to implement the ACA. The House Appropriations Subcommittee on

 

 Labor-HHS-ED did not introduce or report a FY2014 appropriations bill.

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                     FY2015

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 P.L. 113-235     Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act,

 

 Dec. 16, 2014    2015. Division G of P.L. 113-235 -- the FY2015

 

                  Labor-HHS-ED Appropriations Act -- included the following

 

                  ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                  o Rescinded $10 million of IPAB's FY2015 appropriation.

 

                    [Note: A similar rescission was included in the

 

                    Labor-HHS-ED appropriations acts for each of the past

 

                    three fiscal years (FY2012-FY2014); see above.]

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to transfer the FY2015 PPHF

 

                    funds to the accounts specified, in the amounts specified,

 

                    and for the activities specified in a table included in the

 

                    explanatory statement to accompany P.L. 113-235

 

                    (Congressional Record, December 11, 2014, p. H9839).

 

                    Prohibited the Secretary from making further transfers.

 

                    [Note: The requirement to transfer PPHF funds in accordance

 

                    with the allocations specified by the committee has been

 

                    included in each Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bill reported

 

                    by the Senate Appropriations Committee since FY2011;

 

                    however, the provision did not get included in the final

 

                    enacted appropriations legislation until FY2014.]

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to establish a website with

 

                    detailed information on the allocation and use of PPHF

 

                    funds, organized by program or by state. [Note: The same

 

                    provision was included in the FY2014 appropriations act;

 

                    see above.]

 

 

                  o Prohibited the use of PPHF funds for lobbying, publicity,

 

                    or propaganda purposes. [Note: The same provision was

 

                    included in the FY2014 appropriations act; see above.]

 

 

                  o Authorized the HHS Secretary to transfer up to $305 million

 

                    from the Medicare trust funds to the CMS Program Management

 

                    account for Medicare operations, but prohibited the use of

 

                    such transferred funds for ACA implementation. [Note: The

 

                    same provision was included in the FY2014 appropriations

 

                    act; see above.]

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2016 budget

 

                    justification and on the HHS website a detailed breakdown

 

                    of the ACA programs and activities receiving funds

 

                    appropriated to implement the law, including the number of

 

                    FTEs, for FY2015 and for each of the past four fiscal years

 

                    (i.e., FY2011-FY2014). [Note: The same provision was

 

                    included in the FY2014 appropriations act; see above.]

 

 

                  o Required the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2016 budget

 

                    justification a detailed breakdown of all funds used to

 

                    date by CMS for the exchanges, including the proposed use

 

                    of such funds in FY2016. Funding details must be provided

 

                    for all the activities specified under the heading "Health

 

                    Insurance Marketplace Transparency" in the explanatory

 

                    statement to accompany P.L. 113-235 (Congressional Record,

 

                    December 11, 2014, p. H9837). [Note: A less specific

 

                    provision was included in the FY2014 appropriations act;

 

                    see above.]

 

 

                  o Prohibited risk corridor payments (authorized by ACA

 

                    Section 1342) from the CMS Program Management

 

                    appropriations account.

 

 

                  The explanatory statement to accompany P.L. 113-235,

 

                  submitted by the House Appropriations Committee Chairman and

 

                  published in the December 11, 2014, Congressional Record,

 

                  instructed HHS to include in the FY2016 budget justification

 

                  the amount of expired unobligated balances available for

 

                  transfer to the NEF, and the amount of any such balances

 

                  transferred to the NEF. In addition, the explanatory

 

                  statement instructed the HHS OIG to (1) submit to Congress,

 

                  within 60 days of enactment, a plan of how it will conduct

 

                  health reform oversight activities; and (2) report to

 

                  Congress (jointly with the Treasury Inspector General), no

 

                  later than June 1, 2015, on the IRS's procedures for

 

                  reconciling premium tax credits and reducing fraud and

 

                  overpayments. [Note: Section 4 of P.L. 113-235 stated that

 

                  the explanatory statement is to be treated as if it were a

 

                  joint explanatory statement of the conference committee.]

 

 

                  Division E of P.L. 113-235 -- the FY2015 Financial Services

 

                  Appropriations Act -- did not include any ACA-related

 

                  provisions. However, the explanatory statement to accompany

 

                  P.L. 113-235 (discussed above) instructed the IRS to submit

 

                  quarterly reports to Congress during FY2015 on actions

 

                  planned and taken to reconcile advance premium tax credit

 

                  payments received in 2014 when 2014 tax returns are filed in

 

                  2015. It also required the Treasury Secretary to provide

 

                  Congress with an accounting each month of the number of

 

                  individuals who had not paid the full amount of any premium

 

                  owed for the preceding month for health coverage obtained

 

                  through an exchange.

 

 

                  Division M of P.L. 113-235 -- the Expatriate Health Coverage

 

                  Clarification Act of 2014 -- exempts expatriate health plans

 

                  offered to individuals working outside the United States from

 

                  certain ACA requirements. Prior to enactment of this law,

 

                  U.S. insurance companies offering these plans had to fully

 

                  comply with the ACA, whereas foreign insurance companies did

 

                  not.

 

 

 Legislative activity prior to enactment of P.L. 113-235. The House

 

 passed the FY2015 Financial Services appropriations bill (H.R. 5016, H.Rept.

 

 113-508) on July 16, 2014. The measure did not include the $436 million

 

 increase in funding requested by the IRS for ACA implementation. Moreover, it

 

 would have (1) prohibited the IRS from using any of the funds provided in the

 

 bill to implement the individual mandate; (2) prohibited any transfers from

 

 HHS to the IRS for ACA implementation; and (3) required the Treasury Secretary

 

 to provide Congress an accounting each month of the number of individuals who

 

 had not paid the full amount of any premium owed for the preceding month for

 

 health coverage obtained through an exchange. Language in H.Rept. 113-508

 

 would have directed the IRS to submit monthly status reports to Congress

 

 during FY2015 on actions taken to reconcile advance premium tax credit

 

 payments received in 2014 when 2014 tax returns are filed in 2015.

 

 

 The House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor-HHS-ED did not introduce or

 

 report a FY2015 appropriations bill.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor-HHS-ED approved a draft bill

 

 for FY2015 on June 10, 2014, and released an accompanying draft committee

 

 report, but no further action was taken. The Senate Appropriations

 

 Subcommittee on Financial Services approved a draft bill for FY2015 on June

 

 24, 2014, but no further action was taken.

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                     FY2016

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 P.L. 114-113     Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016. Division H of

 

 Dec. 18, 2015    P.L. 114-113 -- the FY2016 Labor-HHS-ED Appropriations Act

 

                  -- includes the following ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                  o Rescinds $15 million of IPAB's FY2016 appropriation. [Note:

 

                    An IPAB funding rescission was included in the

 

                    Labor-HHS-ED appropriations acts for each of the past four

 

                    fiscal years (FY2012-FY2015); see above.]

 

 

                  o Requires the HHS Secretary to transfer the FY2016 PPHF

 

                    funds to the accounts specified, in the amounts specified,

 

                    and for the activities specified in a table included in the

 

                    explanatory statement to accompany P.L. 114-113

 

                    (Congressional Record, December 17, 2015, p. H10290).

 

                    Prohibits the Secretary from making further transfers.

 

                    [Note: The requirement to transfer PPHF funds in accordance

 

                    with the allocations specified by the committee has been

 

                    included in each Labor-HHS-ED appropriations bill reported

 

                    by the Senate Appropriations Committee since the ACA was

 

                    enacted. However, the provision did not get included in the

 

                    final enacted appropriations legislation until FY2014; see

 

                    above.]

 

 

                  o Requires the HHS Secretary to establish a website with

 

                    detailed information on the allocation and use of PPHF

 

                    funds, organized by program or by state. [Note: The same

 

                    provision was included in the FY2014 and FY2015

 

                    appropriations acts; see above.]

 

 

                  o Prohibits the use of PPHF funds for lobbying, publicity, or

 

                    propaganda purposes. [Note: The same provision was included

 

                    in the FY2014 and FY2015 appropriations acts; see above.]

 

 

                  o Authorizes the HHS Secretary to transfer up to $305 million

 

                    from the Medicare trust funds to the CMS Program Management

 

                    account for Medicare operations, but prohibits the use of

 

                    such transferred funds for ACA implementation. [Note: The

 

                    same provision was included in the FY2014 and FY2015

 

                    appropriations acts; see above.]

 

 

                  o Requires the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2017 budget

 

                    justification and on the HHS website a detailed breakdown

 

                    of the ACA programs and activities receiving funds

 

                    appropriated to implement the law, including the number of

 

                    FTEs, for FY2016 and each fiscal year since the ACA was

 

                    enacted. [Note: The same provision was included in the

 

                    FY2014 and FY2015 appropriations acts; see above.]

 

 

                  o Requires the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2017 budget

 

                    justification a detailed breakdown of all funds used to

 

                    date by CMS for the exchanges, including the proposed use

 

                    of such funds in FY2017. Funding details must be provided

 

                    for all the activities specified under the heading "Health

 

                    Insurance Exchange Transparency" in the explanatory

 

                    statement to accompany P.L. 114-113 (Congressional Record,

 

                    December 17, 2015, p. H10288). [Note: The same provision

 

                    was included in the FY2015 appropriations act; see above.]

 

 

                  o Prohibits risk corridor payments (authorized by ACA Section

 

                    1342) from the CMS Program Management appropriations

 

                    account. [Note: The same provision was included in the

 

                    FY2015 appropriations act; see above.]

 

 

                  o Requires the HHS Secretary to provide the Appropriations

 

                    Committees with detailed monthly enrollment figures for the

 

                    exchanges at least two days before making the information

 

                    publicly available.

 

 

                  o Requires the HHS Secretary to include in the FY2017 budget

 

                    justification an analysis of how the ACA requirement that

 

                    health plans cover recommended immunizations and other

 

                    preventive services without any cost-sharing will impact

 

                    eligibility for HHS discretionary programs. [Note: A

 

                    similar provision was included in the FY2014 appropriations

 

                    act; see above.]

 

 

                  o Requires that through January 1, 2018, any provision of the

 

                    ACA (or other law) that references the recommendations of

 

                    the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) regarding

 

                    breast cancer screening must use the recommendations prior

 

                    to 2009 that gave routine screening mammography for women

 

                    ages 40-49 a "B" grade, rather than the more recent USPSTF

 

                    recommendations (both current and draft) that give routine

 

                    screening mammography for that age group a "C" grade. Under

 

                    the ACA, most private insurance plans must cover preventive

 

                    services that receive a USPSTF "A" or "B" grade, generally

 

                    without out-of-pocket costs. Coverage of preventive

 

                    services that receive a USPSTF grade of "C" or lower is not

 

                    required.

 

 

                    The explanatory statement to accompany P.L. 114-113,

 

                    submitted by the House Appropriations Committee Chairman

 

                    and published in the December 17, 2015, Congressional

 

                    Record, instructs HHS to include in the FY2017 budget

 

                    justification the amount of expired unobligated balances

 

                    available for transfer to the NEF, the amount of any such

 

                    balances transferred to the NEF, and details of the

 

                    specific projects supported with NEF funds. In addition,

 

                    the explanatory statement instructs CMS to ensure that

 

                    state-based exchanges (SBEs) are not using ACA Section 1311

 

                    funds (i.e., exchange planning and establishment grants)

 

                    for operational expenses, contrary to law. CMS is directed,

 

                    within 120 days, to report on its efforts to implement the

 

                    recommendations in the HHS OIG's April 2015 alert on this

 

                    issue. It also must immediately notify House and Senate

 

                    appropriators of any unauthorized use of Section 1311 funds

 

                    and explain how it plans to recoup those funds from the

 

                    states. Finally, the explanatory statement instructs CMS,

 

                    within 90 days, to submit a report to House and Senate

 

                    appropriators explaining its policy that allows exchange

 

                    plans to refuse to accept premium payments from certain

 

                    nonprofit organizations on behalf of needy individuals.

 

                    [Note: Section 4 of P.L. 114-113 states that the

 

                    explanatory statement is to be treated as if it were a

 

                    joint explanatory statement of the conference committee.]

 

 

                    Division E of P.L. 114-113 -- the FY2016 Financial Services

 

                    Appropriations Act -- includes the following ACA-related

 

                    provision:

 

 

                    o Provides an additional $290 million to the IRS

 

                      Commissioner to be used, pursuant to a plan submitted to

 

                      the Appropriations Committees, for improving customer

 

                      service, preventing refund fraud and identity theft, and

 

                      enhancing cybersecurity. These funds may not be used for

 

                      ACA implementation.

 

 

                    Division P of P.L. 114-113 ("Tax-Related Provisions")

 

                    includes the following ACA-related provisions:

 

 

                    o Delays the ACA's Cadillac tax (i.e., excise tax on

 

                      high-premium employer-sponsored health coverage) by two

 

                      years; the Cadillac tax now takes effect in 2020.

 

 

                    o Allows the Cadillac tax to be deducted as a business

 

                      expense.

 

 

                    o Requires GAO to study and report within 18 months on the

 

                      suitability of using the Blue Cross/Blue Shield standard

 

                      benefit option under the Federal Employees Health

 

                      Benefits Plan as a benchmark for the age and gender

 

                      adjustment of the applicable dollar limit for the

 

                      Cadillac tax.

 

 

                    o Establishes a one-year moratorium on the ACA's annual fee

 

                      on certain health insurance providers for 2017.

 

 

                    Division Q of P.L. 114-113 -- the Protecting Americans from

 

                    Tax Hikes Act of 2015 -- includes the following ACA-related

 

                    provision:

 

 

                    o Establishes a two-year moratorium on the ACA's medical

 

                      device excise tax for 2016 and 2017.

 

 

 Legislative activity prior to enactment of P.L. 114-113. The House

 

 Appropriations Committee approved its FY2016 Financial Services appropriations

 

 bill (H.R. 2995,H.Rept. 114-194) on June 17, 2015. The measure would have

 

 reduced the IRS's discretionary funding by about 8% compared to the FY2015

 

 level. It also would have (1) prohibited the IRS from using any of the funds

 

 provided in the bill to implement the individual mandate, and (2) prohibited

 

 any transfers from HHS to the IRS for ACA implementation.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Committee reported its FY2016 Financial Service

 

 appropriations bill (S. 1910, S.Rept. 114-97) on July 30, 2015. The measure

 

 would have reduced the IRS's discretionary funding by about 4% compared to the

 

 FY2015 level.

 

 

 The House Appropriations Committee reported its FY2016 Labor-HHS-ED

 

 appropriations bill (H.R. 3020, H.Rept. 114-195) on July 10, 2015. The bill

 

 would have reduced funding for the CMS Program Management account by about 9%

 

 compared to the FY2015 level. It would have continued all but one of the ACA

 

 provisions in the enacted FY2015 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations act (see above)

 

 -- the provision authorizing the transfer of Medicare trust funds to the CMS

 

 Program Management Account was not included. The House committee bill would

 

 have prohibited the use of any of the funds provided for CMS's Program

 

 Management account to support CCIIO. It would have prohibited using any of the

 

 funds provided in the bill for (1) patient-centered outcomes research; (2)

 

 exchange navigators; or (3) implementation of any provision of the ACA. It

 

 also would have prohibited CMS from collecting and using exchange user fees.

 

 Besides rescinding $15 million of IPAB's FY2016 appropriation (up from the $10

 

 million in FY2015), the bill would have rescinded (1) $6.8 billion of CMMI's

 

 $10 billion appropriation; (2) $100 million of PCORTF's FY2016 funding; (3)

 

 $18 million of the remaining CO-OP funds; and (4) all unobligated HIRIF funds.

 

 Moreover, the bill would have terminated the NEF and rescinded all its

 

 unobligated funds. In addition, it would have required the HHS Secretary to

 

 include in the FY2017 budget justification an analysis of how the ACA

 

 requirement that health plans cover recommended immunizations and other

 

 preventive services without any cost-sharing will impact eligibility for HHS

 

 discretionary programs. Finally, the House committee bill incorporated the

 

 Health Care Conscience Rights Act (H.R. 940). Among other things, H.R. 940

 

 would have amended the ACA so that individuals/employers would not have to

 

 purchase/sponsor coverage of abortion or other items or services to which they

 

 have a moral or religious objection.

 

 

 The Senate Appropriations Committee reported its FY2016 Labor-HHS-ED

 

 appropriations bill (S. 1695, S.Rept. 114-74) on June 25, 2015. The bill

 

 would have reduced funding for the CMS Program Management account by about 17%

 

 compared to the FY2015 level. Like the bill approved by the House

 

 Appropriations Committee, the Senate version would have continued all of the

 

 ACA provisions in the enacted FY2015 Labor-HHS-ED appropriations act with the

 

 exception of the provision authorizing the transfer of Medicare trust funds to

 

 the CMS Program Management Account. In addition, the Senate committee bill

 

 would have (1) rescinded $18 million of the remaining CO-OP funds; (2)

 

 prohibited the use of any of CMS's Program Management funds to support

 

 exchange operations; and (3) required the Secretary to provide the

 

 Appropriations Committees with detailed monthly enrollment figures for the

 

 exchanges at least two days before making the information publicly available.

 

 

Author Contact Information

 

C. Stephen Redhead

 

Specialist in Health Policy

 

credhead@crs.loc.gov, 7-2261

 

 

Ada S. Cornell

 

Information Research Specialist

 

acornell@crs.loc.gov, 7-3742

 

FOOTNOTES

 

 

1 The ACA was signed into law on March 23, 2010 (P.L. 111-148, 124 Stat. 119). A week later, on March 30, 2010, the President signed the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act (HCERA; P.L. 111-152, 124 Stat. 1029). HCERA included several new health reform provisions and amended numerous provisions in the ACA. Several subsequently enacted bills made additional changes to certain ACA provisions. All references to the ACA in this report refer collectively to the law and to the changes made by HCERA and subsequent legislation.

2 Numerous CRS products that provide more in-depth information on the many new programs and activities authorized and funded by the ACA are available at http://www.crs.gov/pages/subissue.aspx?cliid=3746&parentid=13&preview=False.

3King v. Burwell, No. 14-114 slip op. (June 25, 2015), http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/14pdf/14-114_qol1.pdf.

4NFIB v. Sebelius, No. 11-393, slip op. (June 28, 2012), http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/11-393c3a2.pdf. For more information, see CRS Report R42367, Medicaid and Federal Grant Conditions After NFIB v. Sebelius: Constitutional Issues and Analysis, by Kenneth R. Thomas.

5 Authorizing legislation generally refers to substantive legislation, reported by a committee (or committees) of jurisdiction other than the House or Senate Appropriations Committees, that establishes or continues the operation of a federal program or agency either indefinitely or for a specific period.

6 For further information on direct spending, see CRS Report RS20129, Entitlements and Appropriated Entitlements in the Federal Budget Process, by Bill Heniff Jr.

7 For further information on discretionary spending, see CRS Report R42388, The Congressional Appropriations Process: An Introduction, by Jessica Tollestrup.

8 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, letter to the Honorable Nancy Pelosi, Speaker, U.S. House of Representatives, providing an estimate of the direct spending and revenue effects of ACA, as amended by HCERA (March 20, 2010), http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/ftpdocs/113xx/doc11379/amendreconprop.pdf.

9 For a summary of all the ACA's mandatory appropriations, and the status of obligation of those funds, see CRS Report R41301, Appropriations and Fund Transfers in the Affordable Care Act (ACA), by C. Stephen Redhead.

10 The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA; P.L. 114-10, 129 Stat. 87) extended CHCF funding for the health centers program and the NHSC for two years by appropriating a total of $3.910 billion to the fund for each of FY2016 and FY2017. Of that amount, $3.6 billion is for the health centers program and the remaining $310 million is for the NHSC.

11 The ACA also reauthorized funding for many existing discretionary grant programs authorized under the Public Health Service Act; notably, the federal health workforce programs administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). The authorizations of appropriations for many of these programs expired prior to the ACA's enactment, though most of them were still receiving annual appropriations. The ACA also permanently reauthorized appropriations for the federal health centers program and for programs and services provided by the Indian Health Service (IHS). Congressional appropriators generally have continued to provide discretionary funding for these long-standing programs, though typically at funding levels below the amounts authorized by the ACA. For more details on all the authorizations (and reauthorizations) of discretionary funding in ACA, including the FY2011-FY2015 funding levels for programs that received an appropriation, see CRS Report R41390, Discretionary Spending Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), coordinated by C. Stephen Redhead.

12 The Nonrecurring Expenses Fund is an account within the Department of the Treasury. The HHS Secretary is authorized to transfer to the NEF unobligated balances of expired discretionary funds. NEF funds are available until expended for use by the HHS Secretary for capital acquisitions including facility and information technology infrastructure.

13 CMS has transferred more than half of the HIRIF funds to the IRS.

14 For more discussion on the budget requests for, and sources of, funding to cover the administrative costs of implementing the ACA, see CRS Report R41390, Discretionary Spending Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), coordinated by C. Stephen Redhead.

15 For more discussion and analysis of limitation provisions, including the relevant House and Senate rules and the procedural issues that arise during floor consideration of general appropriations measures that include such provisions, see CRS Report R41634, Limitations in Appropriations Measures: An Overview of Procedural Issues, by Jessica Tollestrup.

16 CRS Report R41634, Limitations in Appropriations Measures: An Overview of Procedural Issues (see footnote 2) discusses the differences between limitations and legislative provisions in appropriations measures, and how to distinguish between the two.

17 P.L. 113-46, 127 Stat. 558. For more analysis of the various legal and procedural considerations arising from the use of the appropriations process to delay or defund the ACA, see CRS Report R43246, Affordable Care Act (ACA) and the Appropriations Process: FAQs Regarding Potential Legislative Changes and Effects of a Government Shutdown, coordinated by C. Stephen Redhead.

18 P.L. 113-76, 128 Stat. 5.

 

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