Utah Code § 26B-3-909

State contractor -- Employee and dependent health benefit plan coverage
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) For purposes of Sections 17B-2a-818.5, 19-1-206, 63A-5b-607, 63O-2-403, 72-6-107.5,
and 79-2-404, "qualified health coverage" means, at the time the contract is entered into or
renewed:
(a) a health benefit plan and employer contribution level with a combined actuarial value at least
actuarially equivalent to the combined actuarial value of:
(i) the benchmark plan determined by the program under Subsection 26B-3-904(1)(a); and

(ii) a contribution level at which the employer pays at least 50% of the premium or contribution
amounts for the employee and the dependents of the employee who reside or work in the
state; or
(b) a federally qualified high deductible health plan that, at a minimum:
(i) has a deductible that is:
(A) the lowest deductible permitted for a federally qualified high deductible health plan; or
(B) a deductible that is higher than the lowest deductible permitted for a federally qualified
high deductible health plan, but includes an employer contribution to a health savings
account in a dollar amount at least equal to the dollar amount difference between
the lowest deductible permitted for a federally qualified high deductible plan and the
deductible for the employer offered federally qualified high deductible plan;
(ii) has an out-of-pocket maximum that does not exceed three times the amount of the annual
deductible; and
(iii) provides that the employer pays 60% of the premium or contribution amounts for the
employee and the dependents of the employee who work or reside in the state.
(2) The department shall:
(a) on or before July 1, 2016:
(i) determine the commercial equivalent of the benchmark plan described in Subsection (1)(a);
and
(ii) post the commercially equivalent benchmark plan described in Subsection (2)(a)(i) on the
department's website, noting the date posted; and
(b) update the posted commercially equivalent benchmark plan annually and at the time of any
change in the benchmark.

‹ Prev All Utah sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.