EEOC withdraws wellness rules due to regulatory freeze
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) withdrew proposed rules on the value of wellness program incentives.
The proposal was released by the EEOC in early January but was not published in the Federal Register. The rules were withdrawn in late January due to a regulatory freeze, which requires agencies to wait until proposals can be reviewed and approved. The EEOC website indicates that the next steps for the rules are under consideration.
Defining ‘voluntary’
The proposals had addressed limits on incentives that encourage workers to participate in a workplace wellness program.
A wellness program requiring employees to provide medical information must comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA). Under the ADA, participation must be “voluntary.”
The ADA and GINA do not define “voluntary,” so the EEOC has been working on two rules (one for the ADA and one for GINA) that look at the level of incentives that can be used to meet the voluntary standard.
Still waiting
The agency first issued rules clarifying wellness program incentive levels in 2016. However, they were vacated by a court decision in 2017 and employers have been waiting for further guidance from the EEOC.
It looked like that guidance was on the way when the proposed rules were introduced. The regulatory freeze means that the wait continues while the EEOC decides on next steps for the proposals.
Key to remember: The wait continues for employers looking for clarity on wellness program incentives.