News

1099 Repeal Heads to the President


 

The Senate on April 5 voted to repeal the unpopular 1099 tax reporting requirement from the Affordable Care Act.

The repeal bill (H.R. 4), which was passed by the House in March, will now go to President Obama for his signature. The president called on Congress to address this provision in his State of the Union speech and received a standing ovation from lawmakers.

The provision was passed as part of the Affordable Care Act and requires businesses, including physician practices, to file a 1099 tax form with the Internal Revenue Service for all payments to vendors of more than $600 per year. The requirement was set to take effect in 2012. The American Medical Association has been lobbying against the 1099 requirement, noting that compliance would be expensive and that it would negatively impact the operation of physician practices.

Members of Congress had attempted to strip the 1099 requirement from the health reform law earlier but could not reach agreement on how to offset potential revenue from the provision.

H.R. 4 pays for the change by allowing the federal government to recoup more money from taxpayers in cases where individuals received an overpayment in their health care tax credit. The increased amounts that the government can collect are capped on a sliding income scale.

Recommended Reading

Lean Six Sigma Brings Efficiencies to US Oncology Practices
MDedge Psychiatry
Low Income, Poor Insurance Tied to Leaving ED Without Being Seen
MDedge Psychiatry
Survey: Most Inhalant Abuse Treatment Admissions Are for Adults
MDedge Psychiatry
Survey Finds Majority of Hospitals Facing Serious Drug Shortages
MDedge Psychiatry
Psychiatry Declines Slightly in Resident Match
MDedge Psychiatry
Report Accuses AARP of Abusing Nonprofit Status
MDedge Psychiatry
CMS Issues Long-Awaited Proposal on ACOs
MDedge Psychiatry
Electronic Health Record Mandate Squeezes Private Practice
MDedge Psychiatry
Project BOOST Models Ways to Improve Care Transitions
MDedge Psychiatry
Portable Electronics May Be Source of HIPAA Violations, Penalties
MDedge Psychiatry