Minimum Essential Coverage Individual Mandate
Section § 100700
This section explains that California has put a rule in place called the individual mandate, which requires people to have health insurance or face a penalty. This is important for three main reasons: protecting the health and welfare of residents, making sure people can access affordable healthcare, and keeping the health insurance market working smoothly. Without this requirement, it's likely that health insurance would become more expensive and harder to get. The state has the right to enforce this mandate to keep the insurance market stable, according to federal law.
Section § 100705
Starting January 1, 2020, Californians must have basic health insurance every month. This also applies to their spouses and dependents. However, some individuals are exempt, like those with hardship or religious exemptions, members of health care sharing ministries, incarcerated individuals, non-citizens without legal status, members of Indian tribes, residents in U.S. territories, and others with specific IRS status or under specific State Department programs.
If you don't comply, you'll face a penalty called the Individual Shared Responsibility Penalty, based on revenue and taxation laws.
Section § 100710
This section defines key terms for understanding California's health coverage laws. It explains what an 'applicable dependent' is, which is a dependent linked to someone required to have health insurance, who is eligible for coverage, and not covered by other essential plans that month. It also defines an 'applicable individual' and 'applicable spouse,' clarifying coverage eligibility and tax filing requirements. Additional terms like 'California resident,' 'dependent,' 'exchange' (Covered California), and 'minimum essential coverage' are explained by referencing other legal sections.
Section § 100715
This law describes situations where a person can be exempt from having to carry health insurance in California, referred to as the "Minimum Essential Coverage Individual Mandate." If someone faces a hardship that prevents them from getting insurance, they can be exempt for that month. Also, those with religious beliefs that conflict with medical health services can get an exemption. They must be members of a religious sect that either is recognized under specific tax code or relies on non-medical healing methods. However, if they get medical services, they might not qualify for this exemption and could face penalties.
The law requires that a process be set up to determine who qualifies for an exemption, issue certificates for those who do, and inform the necessary tax authorities.
Section § 100720
This law requires the California Health Exchange to reach out to those who either didn't have minimum essential health coverage last year or who were exempt from having such coverage, based on their tax return information. They also need to contact people who expressed interest in affordable health coverage on their taxes. To do this, the Exchange uses data from the Franchise Tax Board. Essentially, this is all about making sure more people are informed about and enrolled in health insurance plans.
Section § 100725
This section explains how rules and regulations related to the Exchange and Franchise Tax Board in California can be established and implemented. The Exchange can set rules alongside the Franchise Tax Board, with the latter's regulations not allowed to conflict with the Exchange's rules. Until January 1, 2022, any necessary rules could be created as emergency regulations, which are considered vital for public welfare and can bypass typical procedures. These emergency rules must still follow specific processes, like being discussed at board meetings and are limited in duration unless renewed properly. Additionally, there's a mandate to align with prior federal regulations from the Internal Revenue Code, as long as they don’t conflict with California's own rules.