COBRA Training 101 
As we enter a new year, we receive numerous phone calls regarding COBRA 
administration procedures. And with the addition of many new users, our staff 
feels it important to go through the basics of COBRA administration so everyone 
has a clear understanding as to "what needs to be done when" and your 
administration responsibilities. We know that this may be elementary for many of 
our seasoned professionals but we still recommend that you take the time to read 
through it. 
				 • What is COBRA?  • What is a qualifying event?  • 
				What are the required notifications? • What about COBRA 
				Premiums?  • What is a disability extension?  • What is a 
				Multiple Qualifying Event? 
				 Q: What is COBRA?  A: In July of 1986, 
				Congress passed the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation 
				Act, commonly known by its acronym COBRA. In the 1980's (as with 
				today), the population of uninsured Americans was growing at an 
				alarming rate. Congress determined that many of these uninsured 
				individuals have some relationship to an employer. Their thought 
				was to create legislation that would allow employees and covered 
				dependents the ability to temporally continue their group 
				coverage for a reasonable amount of time when they experience a 
				"qualifying event." 
				 Q: What is a qualifying event?  A: There 
				are two types of qualifying events; ones that affect employees 
				and others that affect an employee's dependents. The two 
				qualifying events that affect employees are (1) Termination of 
				Employment (for reasons other than "gross misconduct") and (2) 
				Reduction in Work Hours. To be considered a qualifying event, 
				the employee must have a loss of coverage. (Example: If an 
				employee has a reduction in work hours but is still eligible to 
				continue under the group plans, there is no qualifying event.) 
				Employees experiencing one of these events are eligible to 
				continue coverage (for themselves and their covered dependents) 
				for up to eighteen months under federal COBRA. (Some states such 
				as California, New York, Connecticut and Texas have extended the 
				maximum time frame.) 
				 Dependents have their own qualifying events; Death of the 
				Employee, Divorce or Legal Separation, Employee's Medicare 
				Entitlement and Dependents that no longer meet the definition of 
				a "Dependent" under the group insurance contract. Covered 
				dependents that experience these qualifying events (in most 
				cases) will experience a loss of coverage and should be offered 
				the right to continue for up to thirty-six months. 
				 Members losing coverage upon experiencing one of these 
				events is classified as a "qualified beneficiary." Each 
				qualified beneficiary has independent rights under COBRA. This 
				means a spouse or dependent child may continue singularly on the 
				group plan as if they were an employee of the company. They may 
				only enroll on the plan(s) they were enrolled on the day prior 
				to the qualifying event (unless they move from a specific 
				service area and another plan is available). At Open Enrollment 
				time, the qualified beneficiary has the same rights as 
				"similarly-situated active employees" and may add/change plans, 
				even add dependents. Dependents added during open enrollment do 
				not receive the same rights as a qualified beneficiary but 
				merely may continue coverage with the qualified beneficiary. In 
				the software, we refer to qualified beneficiaries as 
				"qualifiers." 
				 Q: What are the required notifications? 
				A: COBRA requires employers (with twenty or more employees on at 
				least half of the business days in the previous calendar year) 
				to provide written notifications to inform employees and their 
				covered dependents of their rights to continuation coverage. The 
				law requires seven notices; the General Notice, Qualifying Event 
				Notice, notice of Conversion rights under eligible group plans, 
				Open Enrollment letter, Short Payment Letter, Unavailability of 
				COBRA notice and a Termination letter when the qualified 
				beneficiary terminates coverage prior to the end of his COBRA 
				term. All notifications may be sent by USPS first class mail. 
				(Administrators are not responsible to verify the qualified 
				beneficiary receives the notice but merely prove it has been 
				sent to the last known address.) The General Notice is designed 
				to be sent to newly-hired employees as they enroll on one or 
				more of the group plans. This notification explains COBRA and 
				the steps necessary for notifying the Plan Administrator of a 
				qualifying event. This notice should be sent to both the 
				employee and covered spouse. Many insurance companies include 
				the General Notice in their certificate of coverage but it is 
				recommended a notice be sent via mail. COBRA requires the 
				General Notice be sent within ninety days from the date coverage 
				becomes effective. To produce this letter in the software, click 
				File and Newly Hired (Active) Employee and enter the employee's 
				information. Double click in the Things-to-Do box on the line 
				that states "Send DOL General Notice to . . ." and the letter 
				will be produced. Since all employees should have been provided 
				this notification at some time; if you cannot prove they receive 
				it you should send another and place a copy in their file. (Once 
				printed, the letter will be saved in the employee’s digital File 
				Cabinet.) 
				 The COBRA Qualifying Event Letter is the notice sent when an 
				employee/dependent experiences a qualifying event. This letter 
				explains a qualified beneficiary’s COBRA rights as well as 
				detailing the cost for coverage and the enrollment procedures. 
				Anytime you remove someone from the insurance plan, you should 
				examine if a qualifying event has occurred. If so, you need to 
				send a Qualifying Event Letter. To produce the Qualifying Event 
				Letter in the software, click the File Menu followed by the New 
				COBRA Qualifier option. Enter the information on both the 
				employee and covered dependents. (If the employee elected not to 
				cover his/her dependents on any group plans, do not enter them 
				into the system.) Once completed, the Things-to-Do list will 
				state "Send DOL Qualifying Event Letter to . . .” Double click 
				on that line in the list and the letter will be produced, 
				importing the information specific to the qualified beneficiary. 
				This notice must be sent within forty-four days of the later of 
				the qualifying event date or the date coverage is lost. 
				(Employers using a Third Party Administrator must provide notice 
				within thirty days to the TPA and then the TPA has fourteen days 
				to produce and send the letter.) 
				 The Conversion Notification explains a qualified 
				beneficiary's right when they lose coverage at the end of their 
				COBRA term. Not all plans offer a conversion right and the 
				appropriate box should be checked under the insurance plan 
				information screen. If your plan offers a conversion privilege, 
				the system will track a COBRA Participant's coverage and 180 
				days prior to the end of their COBRA time frame, a line in the 
				Things-to-do box will advise you to send this notification. A 
				conversion policy is an individual plan whereby the 
				employee/dependent does not have to qualify (by medical 
				underwriting) for coverage. Usually, conversion policies are 
				age-rated and have higher rates than standard individual plans. 
				We have seen a trend of insurers to eliminate conversion plans 
				after the passage of the Affordable Care Act which provides 
				plans with no pre-existing condition limitations. 
				 As insurance plans renew, they have different monthly 
				premiums. Plan Administrators are required to notify 
				Participants of the new rates and their rights during Open 
				Enrollment. Participants should be granted the same rights as 
				“similarly-situated” active employees. Therefore, if active 
				employees are allowed to change, add or terminate plans, 
				Participants should be allowed the same rights. During Open 
				Enrollment, most plans offer the ability to add/remove 
				dependents. COBRA Participants should be offered this right as 
				well but any added dependents added do not receive the rights of 
				qualified beneficiary. To produce Open Enrollment letters in the 
				software, click the “Produce Open Enrollment Letters” under the 
				Events Menu. Enter the renewal date, select the plans the 
				Participants are eligible followed by selecting all the 
				participants. Lastly, enter the date you need the Enrollment 
				Forms from the Participants and click the Print button.  
				 If a Participant sends a payment that is short by an 
				“insignificant” amount, Plan Administrators are required to 
				notify the Participant and make arrangements to make up the 
				payment. The law defines a payment being “insignificantly” short 
				if you receive a minimum of 90% of the monthly premium when the 
				premium is less than $500. For monthly premiums over $500, if 
				the payment is short by $50 or less than it is considered 
				“insignificant.” Plan Administrators are allowed to accept the 
				check as payment in full or send a notice detailing the short 
				payment. The software will notify the user when a payment is 
				short by an insignificant amount and places an item in the 
				Things-to-do list to send the letter.  
				 The Unavailability of COBRA notification is sent to former 
				qualified beneficiaries who are not eligible to continue under 
				COBRA. For example, a spouse contacts the Plan Administrator 
				ninety days after his/her divorce of their desire to continue 
				coverage. The law provides sixty days for the qualified 
				beneficiary to notify the Plan Administrator; therefore the 
				person did not meet the deadline and have become ineligible for 
				continuation coverage. In the past, the individual would be 
				under the assumption they had coverage (until they submitted a 
				claim and it was denied). For this reason the Department of 
				Labor (DOL) requires Plan Administrators to send a notification 
				explaining they were not re-activated and they do not have 
				coverage. To create this notification, select FILE/Other Unique 
				Files/Individual Ineligible for COBRA/New File. Enter the 
				individual’s information and save. The Things-to-do box will 
				notify you to send the Unavailability of COBRA notice.  
				 In the event you are removing a qualified beneficiary from 
				the group plan (voluntarily or not) prior to the end of their 
				COBRA time frame, the 2004 Final Regulations require you send a 
				termination notice. The software has always produced these 
				notifications and you will be prompted in the Things-to-do box 
				after terminating their coverage. Produce the letter and send as 
				soon as possible (because time frames will vary based upon the 
				type of termination experienced). If the employer is terminating 
				one or more group health plans without replacing them, COBRA 
				Participant’s should be notified. Since the facts of this form 
				of plan termination differ among employers, the system will NOT 
				produce a template letter. Plan Administrators will be 
				responsible for creating and distributing a notice.  
				 COBRA Acceptance - The natural progression of events is 
				Active employees and/or covered dependents become qualified 
				beneficiaries who then become COBRA Participants (when they 
				agree to pay for premiums for continuation coverage). As part of 
				the COBRA Qualifying Event Letter, a Summary and Election Form 
				is provided so the qualifier may notify the Plan Administrator 
				of their desire to continue coverage. If you receive this form 
				or are contacted directly, you should have them complete a COBRA 
				application for the insurance carrier(s) and notify the software 
				so it may set-up a billing account. Qualifiers have sixty days 
				from the later of date they lose coverage or the date on the 
				Qualifying Event Letter to notify you of their desire to accept 
				COBRA. 
				 Since COBRA coverage is continuation coverage, you must add 
				them back onto the group plan with no lapse in coverage. It is 
				recommended you do not reinstate coverage until you have 
				received the first premium payment. This could mean going back a 
				few months to retro-actively add them back onto the plan(s). 
				There is one exception when you would not retro-actively enroll 
				the qualifier and that is when the employee removes a dependent 
				from the plan "in anticipation of a future qualifying event." 
				The most common situation is when an employee removes a spouse 
				and later they are divorced. In that situation, you would offer 
				COBRA to the spouse effective on the date of the divorce. 
				 The most important procedure with COBRA administration is to 
				document or have a paper trail of all COBRA-related events. A 
				2006 court case demonstrated the importance of maintaining a 
				copy of sent notifications (which the software stores in its 
				digital file cabinet) as well as a log detailing all 
				notifications sent, when they were placed in the mail and have 
				the administrator initial it was mailed. The software has a 
				Proof of Mailing Form that should be completed on a daily basis 
				and maintained in a log book. Another form of proof is to scan 
				the postmarked envelope and save the copy to the qualified 
				beneficiary file cabinet. 
				 Q: Are Participants required to pay monthly 
				premiums?  A: Once a qualifier elects COBRA and 
				becomes a participant, they are required to make payments to 
				your organization. Premiums are based upon the group rates your 
				firm is charged (plus a two percent administrative fee to help 
				cover postage/administrative costs). The participant is required 
				to make payments in a timely fashion. They have a forty-five day 
				grace period to make their initial premium payment. Thereafter, 
				they have a thirty-day grace period. If they do not pay within 
				these time frames, you may terminate their coverage. The 
				software tracks payments and notifies you when someone has not 
				paid in a timely fashion. Once notified, you should prepare the 
				termination notice and then terminate them from the plan 
				effective the last day premiums were paid through. You will want 
				to make sure you notify the insurance companies as soon as 
				possible because most of them have implemented a maximum 
				retro-termination policy, only allowing you to receive premium 
				credits back sixty. 
				 There will be times when participants will not pay you prior 
				to the company submitting group premiums to the insurance 
				carriers. If you have not received COBRA payments, it is 
				recommended you do not pay the carrier for their premiums. 
				 Q: What is a disability extension?  A: 
				If a qualified beneficiary is disabled on a date that is earlier 
				than the 61st day under COBRA and later considered “disabled” by 
				Social Security Administration (SSA), the law provides for that 
				individual and all others covered under the same policy to 
				extend their coverage from eighteen to twenty-nine months. To 
				receive the extension, qualified beneficiaries must provide the 
				SSA determination to the Plan Administrator within 60 days of 
				the notice’s date and prior to the end of the 18 month 
				continuation period. This eleven month extension comes with a 
				price. Employers may (or may not) charge a fifty percent 
				administration fee during this extension. The software will make 
				the necessary change to premiums, automatically. 
				 Q: What is a Multiple Qualifying Event? 
				A: If an employee initially experiences a termination of 
				employment or reduction in work hours and later a covered 
				dependent experiences another (or “multiple”) qualifying event, 
				the dependent should be offered the right to continue up to 
				thirty-six months from the original COBRA start date. In the 
				software, click the Events Menu followed by the Multiple 
				Qualifying Event option. Enter the information on the qualifier 
				and the system will create a new billing account for them and 
				produce a letter explaining their rights. (If employment 
				termination follows a reduction in work hours, the law does not 
				consider it a multiple qualifying event; therefore the qualified 
				beneficiary would only receive the eighteen months continuation 
				coverage offered upon the reduction of work hours.) 
				 This is a very brief summary of COBRA. The actual law is 
				hundreds of pages and is very complex. We appreciate your 
				confidence in our software and hope that we can continue to 
				provide you with useful information to assist with maintaining 
				your COBRA compliance. Our goal is to keep you informed about 
				COBRA, proposed legislation and the operation of our software. 
				If you have any recommendations as to content of these monthly 
				newsletters or software enhancements, feel free to email us at
				help@csisupport.com.  
	Is Your Cafeteria Plan Ready for 2019? 
		 Most employers have been receiving large rate increases over the 
			last several years from their insurance providers because medical 
			trend is over 15%. In many cases, the employer is forced to pass on 
			the increase to employees. One good way to minimize rate increases 
			is to start a Cafeteria Plan. A Cafeteria Plan allows employees to 
			pay for their portion of premiums on a pre-tax basis. This lowers 
			their taxable base, therefore decreasing federal, FICA and most 
			state's taxes. Most employees (depending on their tax bracket) will 
			see that a Cafeteria Plan saves them 20% to 35% of their cost of 
			premiums. Not only does the employee save money but the employer 
			sees a reduction in their FICA and other payroll taxes. 
				 In addition to paying for premiums on a pre-tax basis, 
				employees may set up Flexible Spending Accounts (FSAs) to pay 
				for items not covered by an insurance plan (i.e. deductibles, 
				copays, coinsurance, over the counter medication, etc.) and even 
				Dependent Care expenses. It is a win-win situation; both the 
				employer and employee save money in taxes. 
				 COBRA Solutions offers Cafeteria Plan software that assists 
				employers with the administration of a Cafeteria Plan. Please 
				visit our website at www.cobrasolutions.com for further 
				information and a free 60-day no obligation demonstration 
				version of Cafeteria Plan Manager. It is an outstanding software 
				program that will pay for itself in the first few months, and 
				the savings will continue for years. To see what your firm may 
				save by implementing a Cafeteria Plan, visit our site at
				
				http://www.cobrasolutions.com/CafeteriaPlanManager.html and 
				click the "Calculate Your Savings" link. 
Senate Bill 1217 – Arizona mini-COBRA 
To address the lack of options for employees (and/or their covered 
dependents) that lose their group insurance from their employer with fewer than 
20 employees (as calculated in the previous calendar year), Arizona legislation 
passed Senate Bill 1217 to allow limited-time group continuation coverage. 
Although similar to the federal law called COBRA, Arizona “mini-COBRA” has 
numerous differences. 
				Effective with a small group insurance plan renewal on or 
				after January 1, 2019, employers are responsible for notifying 
				employees/dependents (who have been enrolled on a group plan for 
				a minimum of 3 months and who are not Entitled to Medicare) of 
				their right to continue group coverage for 18 months (“total 
				coverage period”) if they lose coverage due to experiencing any 
				of the following “qualifying” events:
  
				
					- Voluntary or Involuntary termination of employment;
 
					- Reduction of work hours;
 
					- Divorce or separation;
 
					- Death of the employee;
 
					- Employee becomes Entitled to Medicare; or
 
					- Loss of dependent status under the group plan.
 
				 
				Employers are required to send a notice to the 
				employee/dependent (“qualifier”) within 44 days of the 
				qualifying event. (Unless the employer knows of a dependent’s 
				different address, sending a single letter to the employee will 
				satisfy the notification requirement.) If the notice is 
				postmarked within this 44 day window, the qualifier has 60 days 
				(from the date of the letter) to notify the employer of their 
				desire to continue their group coverage. Qualifiers are 
				responsible for premiums back to the date they are terminated 
				from the group plan and must be made within 45 days from the day 
				they notify the employer of their continuation decision. 
				If the employer does NOT meet the 44 day notification period, 
				qualifiers will be allowed a 120 day election period and to pay 
				premiums back to the coverage termination date. To ease the 
				burden of creating a notice meeting the law’s requirements, the 
				Department of Insurance has been tasked for providing a “model 
				notice.” 
				Each qualifier will have an independent right to elect 
				Arizona mini-COBRA. The premiums for the Qualifiers will be 
				based upon the group plan rate plus a 5% administration fee. 
				Employers are also required to notify qualifier of changes to 
				the premiums 30 days prior to the change. 
				If a dependent is deemed disabled by the Social Security 
				Administration within the first 18 months of continuation 
				coverage, they shall be offered an 11 month extension for a 
				total coverage period of 29 months. If a dependent experience a 
				divorce, separation, employee’s death or Entitlement to Medicare 
				or a loss of dependent status during their time under 
				continuation coverage, they shall be offered an additional 18 
				months of continuation coverage (for a total coverage period of 
				36 months). 
				 If a qualifier elects to continue coverage, they may 
				continue until the: 
				
					-  Qualifier completes their total coverage period;
 
					- Qualifier does NOT make “timely” premium payments;
 
					- Qualifier becomes Entitled to Medicare, Medicaid or 
					other healthcare coverage; or
 
					- Employer terminates (without replacing) the group health 
					insurance plan.
 
				 
				The law also addresses continuation coverage for employees in 
				the Military Reserve or National Guard that is outside the scope 
				of this article. For further information you may want to review 				
				https://www.azleg.gov/legtext/53leg/2R/laws/0164.pdf. 
				SSome of the differences we find between the way the law is 
				written and federal COBRA are: 
				
					- Regardless of qualifying event experienced, qualifiers 
					will be offered 18 months of coverage;
 
					- Employers do not have to offer Arizona mini-COBRA to 
					employees/dependents on Medicare at the time of the 
					qualifying event;
 
					- The law mentions a 45 day grace period for submitting 
					the initial premium payment but never defines “timely 
					manner” payments. Without this information, we would assume 
					subsequent premium payments are due on the first of the 
					month of coverage with NO grace period.
 
					- Only dependents are eligible for the 11 month disability 
					extension;
 
					- Qualifiers may be terminated from Arizona mini-COBRA if 
					it is known they have obtained ANY other coverage;
 
					- Employers must notify qualifiers of rate changes 30 days 
					in advance of the change; 
 
					- Qualifiers may be charged a 5% administration fee; and
 
					- The qualifying event “divorce or separated” does not 
					state “divorce or LEGAL separation.”
 
				 
				All contents of this article are our initial opinion of 
				Senate Bill 1217. We request you contact an Arizona Benefits 
				Attorney for advice on this bill. COBRA Solutions will be 
				producing and releasing a separate software product for 
				administering Arizona mini-COBRA after 01/01/2019. 
			
  
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