|
GOVERNOR PATERSON PROPOSES LEGISLATION TO ENSURE CONTINUED ACCESS TO HEALTH INSURANCE FOR UNEMPLOYED NEW YORKERS
Federal Economic Recovery Package Provides Subsidy for COBRA Health Insurance Premiums
Bill Will Give Eligible Individuals Who Previously Declined COBRA Coverage a Second Chance to Elect Coverage
Governor David A. Paterson today announced
that he has submitted a bill to ensure that New Yorkers laid off by
small businesses can qualify for federal benefits that pay up to 65
percent of Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA)
health insurance premiums. The subsidy, part of the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), is available to individuals who were
involuntarily terminated on or after September 1, 2008. However, a
change in State law is needed so that all eligible workers laid off by
small businesses can access subsidized coverage.
“I want to thank New York’s Congressional delegation for pushing hard
to bring these funds to New York,” said Governor Paterson. “The subsidy
made available by the federal economic recovery package represents a
significant step in the right direction towards improving and expanding
access to affordable health insurance for all New Yorkers. However, the
need to pass this bill is urgent because we must ensure as many people
as possible retain their health coverage. One of the greatest
challenges facing the State as a result of the current economic crisis
is how we help unemployed New Yorkers retain access to their health
insurance. Given the record levels of unemployment announced just last
week, we need to move quickly to amend State law to make this subsidy
available to as many New Yorkers as possible.”
Superintendent of Insurance Eric Dinallo
said: “The Governor’s bill will give employees of small businesses the
same access to federal economic recovery funds as employees of big
businesses. There is no downside. We must ensure that all New Yorkers
who lose their jobs have the ability to access the federal subsidy for
health insurance.”
COBRA gives workers and their families who
lose their health benefits the right to choose to continue group health
benefits provided by their group health plan for limited periods of
time under certain circumstances. Under federal law, COBRA generally
applies to employers with 20 or more employees, and workers may be
charged up to 102 percent of the full health insurance premium. Smaller
employers – those who have fewer than 20 employees – are required to
offer the same continuation coverage under New York State’s
“mini-COBRA” law.
The ARRA that President Barack Obama signed into law on February 17,
2009, makes a subsidy available for up to 65 percent of the cost of
COBRA health insurance premiums for employees involuntarily terminated
from their jobs between September 1, 2008, and December 31, 2009. The
subsidy is available for up to nine months and is administered through
a payroll tax credit, meaning that individuals with COBRA coverage will
be responsible for no more than 35 percent of premiums. Income
limitations apply, with subsidies phasing out for those with annual
incomes greater than $125,000 (for individual taxpayers) or $250,000
(for those filing a joint tax return). For
individuals who lost their jobs after September 1, 2008, and before
ARRA was enacted and who did not initially elect to enroll in COBRA,
the federal economic recovery package provides for a “special election
period” during which they may enroll in COBRA to take advantage of the
new subsidy. However, while ARRA extended the 65 percent premium
subsidy to state continuation plans, the Act did not extend a “special
election period” to those covered under state “mini-COBRA” continuation
laws. The bill proposed by Governor Paterson today amends State law to
create such an election period, allowing eligible New Yorkers a second
chance to choose mini-COBRA coverage in order to take full advantage of
the federal subsidy.
Employers or their health plans must
notify eligible individuals of the availability of the subsidy within
60 days of ARRA’s enactment, and individuals must elect coverage within
60 days thereafter. Because of these deadlines, swift enactment of a
change in State law is critical. In addition to affording a second
chance for the election of coverage under the State’s “mini-COBRA” law,
the Governor’s bill will provide that the period beginning on the date
that an individual was involuntarily terminated and ending on the date
when COBRA coverage starts will be disregarded for the purpose of
determining whether a pre-existing condition exclusion period applies.
New Yorkers can contact the Insurance
Department for more information about the COBRA health insurance
premium subsidy by calling (800) 342-3736 or by accessing the
Department’s website at www.ins.state.ny.us. The U.S. Department of Labor has information available regarding the federal subsidy at www.dol.gov/ebsa/COBRA.html.
|