The COBRA Act
The Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation
Act of 1986
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· INTRODUCTION
· WHAT IS THE CONTINUATION HEALTH LAW?
· WHO IS ENTITLED TO BENEFITS?
· CHART: Periods of Coverage
· YOUR RIGHTS: NOTICE AND ELECTION PROCEDURES
· HOW COBRA COVERAGE WORKS
· COVERED BENEFITS
· DURATION OF COVERAGE
· PAYING FOR COBRA COVERAGE
· CLAIMS PROCEDURES
· ROLE OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
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INTRODUCTION
Health insurance programs allow workers and their families to take
care of essential medical needs. These programs can be one of the most
important benefits provided by your employer.
There was a time when group health coverage was available only to full-time
workers and their families. That changed in 1986 with the passage of
health benefit provisions in the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act (COBRA). Now, terminated employees or those who lose coverage because
of reduced work hours may be able to buy group coverage for themselves
and their families for limited periods of time.
If you are entitled to COBRA benefits, your health plan must give you
a notice stating your right to choose to continue benefits provided
by the plan. You have 60 days to accept coverage or lose all rights
to benefits. Once COBRA coverage is chosen, you are required to pay
for the coverage.
This page is designed to:
* Provide a general explanation of COBRA requirements * Outline the
rules that apply to health plans for employees in the private sector
* Spotlight your rights to benefits under this law
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WHAT IS THE CONTINUATION HEALTH
LAW?
Congress passed the landmark Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act (COBRA){1} health benefit provisions in 1986. The law amends the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), the Internal Revenue
Code and the Public Health Service Act to provide continuation of group
health coverage that otherwise would be terminated.
COBRA contains provisions giving certain former employees, retirees,
spouses and dependent children the right to temporary continuation of
health coverage at group rates. This coverage, however, is only available
in specific instances. Group health coverage for COBRA participants
is usually more expensive than health coverage for active employees,
since usually the employer formerly paid a part of the premium. It is
ordinarily less expensive, though, than individual health coverage.
The law generally covers group health plans maintained by employers
with 20 or more employees in the prior year. It applies to plans in
the private sector and those sponsored by state and local governments.{2}
The law does not, however, apply to plans sponsored by the Federal government
and certain church- related organizations.
Group health plans sponsored by private sector employers generally
are welfare benefit plans governed by ERISA and subject to its requirements
for reporting and disclosure, fiduciary standards and enforcement. ERISA
neither establishes minimum standards or benefit eligibility for welfare
plans nor mandates the type or level of benefits offered to plan participants.
It does, though, require that these plans have rules outlining how workers
become entitled to benefits.
Under COBRA, a group health plan ordinarily is defined as a plan that
provides medical benefits for the employer's own employees and their
dependents through insurance or otherwise (such as a trust, health maintenance
organization, self-funded pay-as-you-go basis, reimbursement or combination
of these). Medical benefits provided under the terms of the plan and
available to COBRA beneficiaries may include:
· Inpatient and outpatient hospital care
· Physician care
· Surgery and other major medical benefits
· Prescription drugs
· Any other medical benefits, such as dental and vision care
..
Life insurance, however, is not covered under COBRA.
{1} The original continuation health provisions were contained in
Title X of COBRA, which was signed into law (Public Law 99-272) on April
7, 1986. {2} Provisions of COBRA covering state and local government
plans are administered by the U.S. Public Health Service within the
Department of Health and Human Services.
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WHO IS ENTITLED TO BENEFITS?
There are three elements to qualifying for COBRA benefits. COBRA establishes
specific criteria for plans, beneficiaries and events which initiate
the coverage.
PLAN COVERAGE
Group health plans for employers with 20 or more employees on more
than 50 percent of the working days in the previous calendar year are
subject to COBRA. The term "employees" includes all full-time
and part-time employees, as well as self-employed individuals. For this
purpose, the term employees also includes agents, independent contractors
and directors, but only if they are eligible to participate in a group
health plan.
BENEFICIARY COVERAGE
A qualified beneficiary generally is any individual covered by a group
health plan on the day before a qualifying event. A qualified beneficiary
may be an employee, the employee's spouse and dependent children, and
in certain cases, a retired employee, the retired employee's spouse
and dependent children.
QUALIFYING EVENTS
"Qualifying events" are certain types of events that would
cause, except for COBRA continuation coverage, an individual to lose
health coverage. The type of qualifying event will determine who the
qualified beneficiaries are and the required amount of time that a plan
must offer the health coverage to them under COBRA. A plan, at its discretion,
may provide longer periods of continuation coverage.
| Qualifying Event |
Beneficiary Eligible
For Cobra |
Maximum Coverage Time |
| Termination of job or quit voluntarily |
Employee |
18 months |
| Reduced hours |
Spouse
Dependent child |
|
| Employee entitled to Medicare
Divorce or legal separation
Death of employee |
|
|
| Loss of dependent-child status |
Dependent child |
36 month |
{3} The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986 contained amendments
to the Internal Revenue Code and ERISA affecting retirees and family
members who receive post-retirement health coverage from employers involved
in bankruptcy proceedings begun on or after July 1, 1986. This booklet
does not address that group. {4} In the case of individuals who qualify
for Social Security disability benefits, special rules apply to extend
coverage an additional 11 months.
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YOUR RIGHTS: NOTICE AND ELECTION PROCEDURES
COBRA outlines procedures for employees and family members to elect
continuation coverage and for employers and plans to notify beneficiaries.
The qualifying events contained in the law create rights and obligations
for employers, plan administrators and qualified beneficiaries.
Qualified beneficiaries have the right to elect to continue coverage
that is identical to the coverage provided under the plan. Employers
and plan administrators have an obligation to determine the specific
rights of beneficiaries with respect to election, notification and type
of coverage options.
NOTICE PROCEDURES
General Notices
An initial general notice must be furnished to covered employees, their
spouses and newly hired employees informing them of their rights under
COBRA and describing provisions of the law.
COBRA information also is required to be contained in the summary plan
description (SPD) which participants receive. ERISA requires employers
to furnish modified and updated SPDs containing certain plan information
and summaries of material changes in plan requirements. Plan administrators
must automatically furnish the SPD booklet 90 days after a person becomes
a participant or beneficiary begins receiving benefits or within 120
days after the plan is subject to the reporting and disclosure provisions
of the law.
Specific Notices
Specific notice requirements are triggered for employers, qualified
beneficiaries and plan administrators when a qualifying event occurs.
Employers must notify plan administrators within 30 days after an employee's
death, termination, reduced hours of employment, entitlement to Medicare.
Multi-employer plans may provide for a longer period of time.
A qualified beneficiary must notify the plan administrator within 60
days after events such as divorce or legal separation or a child's ceasing
to be covered as a dependent under plan rules.
Disabled beneficiaries must notify plan administrators of Social Security
disability determinations. A notice must be provided within 60 days
of a disability determination and prior to expiration of the 18-month
period of COBRA coverage. These beneficiaries also must notify the plan
administrator within 30 days of a final determination that they are
no longer disabled.
Plan administrators, upon notification of a qualifying event, must
automatically provide a notice to employees and family members of their
election rights. The notice must be provided in person or by first class
mail within 14 days of receiving information that a qualifying event
has occurred.
There are two special exceptions to the notice requirements for multi-employer
plans. First, the time frame for providing notices may be extended beyond
the 14- and 30-day requirements if allowed by plan rules. Second, employers
are relieved of the obligation to notify plan administrators when employees
terminate or reduce their work hours. Plan administrators are responsible
for determining whether these qualifying events have occurred.
ELECTION
The election period is the time frame during which each qualified beneficiary
may choose whether to continue health care coverage under an employer's
group health plan. Qualified beneficiaries have a 60-day period to elect
whether to continue coverage. This period is measured from the later
of the coverage loss date or the date the notice to elect COBRA coverage
is sent. COBRA coverage is retroactive if elected and paid for by the
qualified beneficiary.
A covered employee or the covered employee's spouse may elect COBRA
coverage on behalf of any other qualified beneficiary. Each qualified
beneficiary, however, may independently elect COBRA coverage. A parent
or legal guardian may elect on behalf of a minor child.
A waiver of coverage may be revoked by or on behalf of a qualified
beneficiary prior to the end of the election period. A beneficiary may
then reinstate coverage. Then, the plan need only provide continuation
coverage beginning on the date the waiver is revoked.
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HOW COBRA COVERAGE WORKS
Example 1: John Q. participates in the group health plan maintained
by the ABC Co. John is fired for a reason other than gross misconduct
and his health coverage is terminated. John may elect and pay for a
maximum of 18 months of coverage by the employer's group health plan
at the group rate. (See Paying for COBRA Coverage.)
Example 2: Day laborer David P. has health coverage through his wife's
plan sponsored by the XYZ Co. David loses his health coverage when he
and his wife become divorced. David may purchase health coverage with
the plan of his former wife's employer. Since, in this case divorce
is the qualifying event under COBRA, David is entitled to a maximum
of 36 months of COBRA coverage.
Example 3: RST, Inc. is a small business which maintained an insured
group health plan for its 10 employees in 1987 and 1988. Mary H., a
secretary with six years of service, leaves in June 1988 to take a position
with a competing firm which has no health plan. She is not entitled
to COBRA coverage with the plan of RST, Inc. since the firm had fewer
than 20 employees in 1987 and is not subject to COBRA requirements.
Example 4: Jane W., a stock broker, left a brokerage firm in May 1990
to take a position with a chemical company. She was five months pregnant
at the time. The health plan of the chemical company has a pre-existing
condition clause for maternity benefits. Even though Jane signs up for
the new employer's plan, she has the right to elect and receive coverage
under the old plan for COBRA purposes because the new plan limits benefits
for preexisting conditions.
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COVERED BENEFITS
Qualified beneficiaries must be offered benefits identical to those
received immediately before qualifying for continuation coverage.
For example, a beneficiary may have had medical, hospitalization, dental,
vision and prescription benefits under single or multiple plans maintained
by the employer. Assuming a qualified beneficiary had been covered by
three separate health plans of his former employer on the day preceding
the qualifying event, that individual has the right to elect to continue
coverage in any of the three health plans.
Non-core benefits are vision and dental services, except where they
are mandated by law in which case they become core benefits. Core benefits
include all other benefits received by a beneficiary immediately before
qualifying for COBRA coverage.
If a plan provides both core and non-core benefits, individuals may
generally elect either the entire package or just core benefits. Individuals
do not have to be given the option to elect just the non-core benefits
unless those were the only benefits carried under that particular plan
before a qualifying event.
A change in the benefits under the plan for active employees may apply
to qualified beneficiaries. Beneficiaries also may change coverage during
periods of open enrollment by the plan.
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DURATION OF COVERAGE
COBRA establishes required periods of coverage for continuation health
benefits. A plan, however, may provide longer periods of coverage beyond
those required by COBRA. COBRA beneficiaries generally are eligible
to pay for group coverage during a maximum of 18 months for qualifying
events due to employment termination or reduction of hours of work.
Certain qualifying events, or a second qualifying event during the initial
period of coverage, may permit a beneficiary to receive a maximum of
36 months of coverage.
Coverage begins on the date that coverage would otherwise have been
lost by reason of a qualifying event and can end when:
- You reach the last day of maximum coverage.
- The employer ceases to maintain any group health plan.
- Premiums are not paid on a timely basis.
- The employer goes out of business.
- You obtain coverage through another employer group health plan
that does not contain any exclusion or limitation with respect to
pre-existing conditions of a beneficiary. (Eligibility under a spouse's
group health plan does not count.)
- A beneficiary is entitled to Medicare benefits.
Special rules for disabled individuals may extend the maximum periods
of coverage. If a qualified beneficiary is determined under Title II
or XVI of the Social Security Act to have been disabled at the time
of a termination of employment or reduction in hours of employment and
the qualified beneficiary properly notifies the plan administrator of
the disability determination, the 18-month period is expanded to 29
months.
Although COBRA specifies certain maximum required periods of time that
continued health coverage must be offered to qualified beneficiaries,
COBRA does not prohibit plans from offering continuation health coverage
that goes beyond the COBRA periods.
Some plans allow beneficiaries to convert group health coverage to
an individual policy. If this option is available from the plan under
COBRA, it must be offered to you. In this case, the option must be given
for the beneficiary to enroll in a conversion health plan within 180
days before COBRA coverage ends. The premium is generally not at a group
rate. The conversion option, however, is not available if the beneficiary
ends COBRA coverage before reaching the maximum period of entitlement.
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PAYING FOR COBRA COVERAGE
Beneficiaries may be required to pay the entire premium for coverage.
It cannot exceed 102 percent of the cost to the plan for similarly situated
individuals who have not incurred a qualifying event. Premiums reflect
the total cost of group health coverage, including both the portion
paid by employees and any portion paid by the employer before the qualifying
event, plus two percent for administrative costs.
For disabled beneficiaries receiving an additional 11 months of coverage
after the initial 18 months, the premium for those additional months
may be increased to 150 percent of the plan's total cost of coverage.
Premiums due may be increased if the costs to the plan increase but
generally must be fixed in advance of each 12-month premium cycle. The
plan must allow you to elect to pay premiums on a monthly basis if you
ask to do so.
The initial premium payment must be made within 45 days after the date
of the COBRA election by the qualified beneficiary. Payment generally
must cover the period of coverage from the date of COBRA election retroactive
to the date of the qualifying event. Premiums for successive periods
of coverage are due on the date stated in the plan with a minimum 30-day
grace period for payments.
The due date may not be prior to the first day of the period of coverage.
For example, the due date for the month of January could not be prior
to January 1 and coverage for January could not be canceled if payment
is made by January 31.
Premiums for the rest of the COBRA period must be made within 30 days
after the due date for each such premium or such longer period as provided
by the plan. The plan, however, is not obligated to send monthly premium
notices.
COBRA beneficiaries remain subject to the rules of the plan and therefore
must satisfy all costs related to deductibles, catastrophic and other
benefit limits.
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CLAIMS PROCEDURES
Health plan rules must explain how to obtain benefits and must include
written procedures for processing claims. Claims procedures are to be
included in the SPD booklet.
You should submit a written claim for benefits to whomever is designated
to operate the health plan (employer, plan administrator, etc.). If
the claim is denied, notice of denial must be in writing and furnished
generally within 90 days after the claim is filed. The notice should
state the reasons for the denial, any additional information needed
to support the claim and procedures for appealing the denial.
You have 60 days to appeal a denial and must receive a decision on
the appeal within 60 days after that unless the plan:
· provides for a special hearing, or
· the decision must be made by a group which meets only on a
periodic basis.
Contact the plan administrator for more information on filing a claim
for benefits. Complete plan rules are available from employers or benefits
offices. There can be charges up to 25 cents a page for copies of plan
rules.
COORDINATION WITH OTHER BENEFITS
The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), effective August 5, 1993,
requires an employer to maintain coverage under any "group health
plan" for an employee on FMLA leave under the same conditions converage
would have been provided if the employee had continued working. Coverage
provided under the FMLA is not COBRA coverage, and FMLA leave is not
a qualifying event under COBRA. A COBRA qualifying event may occur,
however, when an employer's obligation to maintain health benefits under
FMLA ceases, such as when an employee notifies an employer of his or
her intent not to return to work.
Further information on FMLA is available from the nearest office of
the Wage and Hour Division, listed in most telephone directories under
U.S. Government, Department of Labor, Employment Standards Administration.
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ROLE OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
Continuation coverage laws are administered by several agencies. The
Departments of Labor and the Treasury have jurisdiction over private
sector health plans. The United States Public Health Service administers
the continuation coverage law as it affects public sector health plans.
The Labor Department's interpretative and regulatory responsibility
is limited to the disclosure and notification requirements. If you need
further information on your election or notification rights with a private
sector plan, write to the nearest office of the Pension and Welfare
Benefits Administration (See Field Directory at end of document) or:
U.S. Department of Labor Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration
Division of Technical Assistance and Inquiries 200 Constitution Ave.,
N.W. (Room N-5619) Washington, D.C. 20210
The Internal Revenue Service, which is in the Department of the Treasury,
is responsible for publishing regulations on COBRA provisions relating
to eligibility and premiums. Both Labor and Treasury share jurisdiction
for enforcement.
The U.S. Public Health Service, located in the Department of Health
and Human Services, has published Title XXII of the Public Health Service
Act entitled "Requirements for Certain Group Health Plans for Certain
State and Local Employees." Information about COBRA provisions
concerning public sector employees is available from the:
U.S. Public Health Service Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health
Grants Policy Branch (COBRA) 5600 Fishers Lane (Room 17A-45) Rockville,
Maryland 20857
Federal employees are covered by a law similar to COBRA. Those employees
should contact the personnel office serving their agency for more information
on temporary extensions of health benefits.
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Written and Produced by PWBA's Division of Public Affairs, 1994
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