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 felt 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.
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 Termination of Employment (for reasons
other than "gross misconduct") and a 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
have extended the maximum time frame but have placed the burden of
administration on the insurance company.)
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. As you can see, 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 - some states
have similar state continuation laws with a minimum of two employees) to
provide written notifications to inform employees and their covered
dependents of their rights to continuation coverage. The law requires
five notices; the “General Notice,” Qualifying Event Notice, notice of
Conversion rights under eligible group plans, 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 first class mail but some employers prefer
to send them in a form that offers proof of mailing. (Administrators are
not responsible to see 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.
The 2004 Final Regulations state the General Notice should be sent
within ninety days from the date coverage becomes effective. We
recommend it be sent within 30 days to eliminate other potential issues.
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.
The COBRA Qualifying Event Letter is the notice sent when an
employee/dependent experiences a qualifying event. This letter is
similar to the General Notice in that it explains COBRA but it also
details 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 an 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.
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).
COBRA Acceptance - The natural progression of events is that Active
employees and 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 you 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. 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.
Q: What about COBRA 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. As an administration fee, you may
add two percent to help cover 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. If no payments were
ever made, terminate coverage back to the original date they were
terminated from the group plan. 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 days. If an employee notifies you
they wish to continue coverage but do not submit a premium payment, send
the carrier the COBRA enrollment form with a note stating you have not
received payment. With this information, the carrier will show the
individual enrolled under COBRA but will not pay claims until premium is
received.
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, the law provides for that individual and all others covered
under the same policy to extend their coverage from eighteen to
twenty-nine months. 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 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 2018?
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 Manager software program 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.cafeteriaplanmanager.com and click the "Calculate Your
Savings" link.
COBRAinReview is going Quarterly
COBRA Solutions has been preparing and distributing our monthly newsletter for 18 years and has decided to make it a quarterly newsletter. We will continue to provide relevant COBRA information, keeping you informed of changes/updates to the law and detailing administrative recommendations. As always, we value your business and hope this change will prove to be an efficient manner of keeping you informed.
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