COBRA
This document contains information regarding your rights to continued group health care coverage.
Notice of Employee's Right to Continue Group Health Coverage:
You and your spouse should read this information, regardless of your current employment status with Crawford County.
Your Responsibilities:
Under the law, you and your family member(s) have the responsibility to inform Crawford County’s Plan Administrator of a divorce, legal separation, or child losing dependent status under the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan within 60 days of the date of the event or the date in which coverage would end under the plan because of the event (whichever is the most recent event). Crawford County has the responsibility of notifying the Plan Administrator of an employee’s death, termination, reduction in hours in employment, or Medicare entitlement. Similar rights may apply to certain retirees, your spouse, and dependent children if Crawford County commences a bankruptcy proceeding and these individuals lose coverage.
When the Plan Administrator is notified that one of these events has happened, the Plan Administrator will, in turn, notify you that you have the right to choose continuation coverage. Under the law, you have at least 60 days from the date you would lose coverage because of one of the events described above or the date your election notice is sent to you to inform the Plan Administrator that you want coverage (Whichever date is the most recent).
If you do not choose continuation coverage, your group health insurance coverage will end.
If you choose continuation coverage, Crawford County is required to give you coverage which, as of the time coverage is being provided, is identical to the coverage provided under the plan to similarly situated nonCOBRA beneficiaries or family members. The law requires that you be afforded the opportunity to maintain continuation coverage for three years unless you lost group health coverage because of a termination of employment or a reduction in hours. In that case, the required continuation coverage period is 18 months. This 18 month period may be extended to 36 months if other events (such as death, divorce, legal separation, or Medicare entitlement) occur during that 18 month span.
Disability Extension:
Under current law, if an individual is entitled to COBRA continuation coverage because of a termination of employment or reduction in hours of employment, the plan is generally required to make COBRA continuation coverage available to that individual for 18 months. However, if the individual entitled to the COBRA continuation coverage is disabled (as determined under the Social Security Act) and satisfies the applicable notice requirements, the plan must provide COBRA continuation coverage for 29 months, rather than 18 months.
Under current law, the individual must be disabled at the time of termination of employment or when they see a reduction in hours. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) makes changes to current law (as of January 1st, 1997) to provide disability extension, which will also apply if the individual becomes disabled at any time during the first 60 days of COBRA continuation coverage. HIPAA also makes it clear that, if the individual entitled to the disability extension has non-disabled family members who are entitled to COBRA continuation coverage, non-disabled family members are also entitled to the 29 month disability extension.
The affected individual must notify Crawford County’s Plan Administrator within 30 days of any final determination that the individual is no longer disabled. In no event will continuation coverage last beyond 3 years from the date of the event that originally made a qualifying beneficiary eligible to elect coverage.
Definition of Qualified Beneficiary:
Individuals entitled to COBRA continuation coverage are called qualified beneficiaries. Individuals who may be qualified beneficiaries are the spouse, and dependent children of a covered employee. as well as, in certain circumstance, the covered employee. Under current law, in order to be a qualified beneficiary, an individual must generally be covered under a group health plan on the day before the event that causes a loss of coverage (such as termination of employment, or a divorce from, or death of, the covered employee). HIPAA changes this requirement so that a child born to the covered employee, or who is placed for adoption with the covered employee, during the period of COBRA continuation coverage, is also a qualified beneficiary.
Termination of Continuation Coverage:
Law provides that your continuation coverage may be terminated for any of the following five reasons:
Duration of COBRA Continuation:
Under the COBRA rules, there are situations in which a group health plan may stop making COBRA continuation coverage available earlier than usually permitted. One of those situations is where the qualified beneficiary obtains coverage under another group health plan (see number 3, above). Under current law, if the other group health plan limits or excludes coverage for any preexisting condition of the qualified beneficiary, the plan providing the COBRA continuation coverage cannot stop making the COBRA continuation coverage available merely because of the coverage under the other group health plan.
HIPAA limits the circumstances in which plans can apply exclusions for preexisting conditions. HIPAA makes a coordinating change to the COBRA rules so that a group health plan limits or excludes benefits for preexisting conditions, but because of the new HIPAA rules, those limits or exclusions would not apply to (or would be satisfied by) an individual receiving COBRA continuation coverage, then the plan providing COBRA continuation coverage can stop making the COBRA continuation coverage available. The HIPPA rules limiting the applicability of the exclusions for preexisting conditions become effective in plan years beginning on or after July 1, 1997 (or later for certain plans maintained pursuant to one or more collective bargaining agreements).
You do not have to show that you are insurable to choose continuation coverage. However, under the law, you may have to pay all or part of the premium for your continuation coverage. There is a grace period of at least 30 days for payment of the regularly scheduled premium. [The law also says that at the end of the 18 month or 36 month COBRA continuation coverage period, you must be allowed to enroll in individual conversion plan provided under the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan.]
This law applies to Crawford County’s group health plan beginning on July 1, 1986.
Please contact the Plan Administrator with any questions. You should also notify the fiscal office of any changes in name, marital status, address, etc. It is important that our office keep up-to-date records regarding employees.
Contact Information:
Please refer any questions to the Plan Administrator:
Randi Ryan
Benefits Coordinator &
Accounts Payable Director
Crawford County
111 E Forest
PO Box 249
Girard, KS 66743
(620) 724-6117
(620) 724-4196 Fax
U.S. Department of Labor
Pension & Welfare Benefits Division
Room N5625
200 Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, D. C. 20210
Phone: (202) 219-8776
Web Site: www.dol.gov
Internal Revenue Service
Office of Assistant Chief Counsel
Employee Benefits and Exempt Organizations
1111 Constitution Avenue
Washington, D. C. 20224
Phone: (202) 622-4695
Web Site: www.irs.gov
Notice of Employee's Right to Continue Group Health Coverage:
You and your spouse should read this information, regardless of your current employment status with Crawford County.
- If you are an employee of Crawford County, covered by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan, you have the right to choose continuation coverage at group rates if you lose your group health coverage because of a reduction in hours or termination of employment (for reasons other than gross misconduct on your part).
- If you are a spouse of an employee of Crawford County covered by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan, you have the right to choose continuation coverage for yourself if you lose group health coverage under Blue Cross and Blue Shield for any of the following reasons:
- The death of your spouse.
- A termination of your spouse’s employment (for reasons other than gross misconduct) or reduction in your spouse’s hours of employment.
- Divorce or legal separation from your spouse.
- Your spouse becomes entitled to Medicare.
- In the case of a dependent child of an employee covered by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan; he or she has the right to continuation coverage if group health coverage under Crawford County is lost for any of the following reasons:
- The death of a parent.
- A termination of parent’s employment (for reasons other than gross misconduct) or reduction in a parent’s hours of employment with Crawford County.
- Parent’s divorce or legal separation.
- A parent becomes entitled to Medicare.
- The dependent child ceases to be a “dependent child” under the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan.
Your Responsibilities:
Under the law, you and your family member(s) have the responsibility to inform Crawford County’s Plan Administrator of a divorce, legal separation, or child losing dependent status under the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan within 60 days of the date of the event or the date in which coverage would end under the plan because of the event (whichever is the most recent event). Crawford County has the responsibility of notifying the Plan Administrator of an employee’s death, termination, reduction in hours in employment, or Medicare entitlement. Similar rights may apply to certain retirees, your spouse, and dependent children if Crawford County commences a bankruptcy proceeding and these individuals lose coverage.
When the Plan Administrator is notified that one of these events has happened, the Plan Administrator will, in turn, notify you that you have the right to choose continuation coverage. Under the law, you have at least 60 days from the date you would lose coverage because of one of the events described above or the date your election notice is sent to you to inform the Plan Administrator that you want coverage (Whichever date is the most recent).
If you do not choose continuation coverage, your group health insurance coverage will end.
If you choose continuation coverage, Crawford County is required to give you coverage which, as of the time coverage is being provided, is identical to the coverage provided under the plan to similarly situated nonCOBRA beneficiaries or family members. The law requires that you be afforded the opportunity to maintain continuation coverage for three years unless you lost group health coverage because of a termination of employment or a reduction in hours. In that case, the required continuation coverage period is 18 months. This 18 month period may be extended to 36 months if other events (such as death, divorce, legal separation, or Medicare entitlement) occur during that 18 month span.
Disability Extension:
Under current law, if an individual is entitled to COBRA continuation coverage because of a termination of employment or reduction in hours of employment, the plan is generally required to make COBRA continuation coverage available to that individual for 18 months. However, if the individual entitled to the COBRA continuation coverage is disabled (as determined under the Social Security Act) and satisfies the applicable notice requirements, the plan must provide COBRA continuation coverage for 29 months, rather than 18 months.
Under current law, the individual must be disabled at the time of termination of employment or when they see a reduction in hours. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) makes changes to current law (as of January 1st, 1997) to provide disability extension, which will also apply if the individual becomes disabled at any time during the first 60 days of COBRA continuation coverage. HIPAA also makes it clear that, if the individual entitled to the disability extension has non-disabled family members who are entitled to COBRA continuation coverage, non-disabled family members are also entitled to the 29 month disability extension.
The affected individual must notify Crawford County’s Plan Administrator within 30 days of any final determination that the individual is no longer disabled. In no event will continuation coverage last beyond 3 years from the date of the event that originally made a qualifying beneficiary eligible to elect coverage.
Definition of Qualified Beneficiary:
Individuals entitled to COBRA continuation coverage are called qualified beneficiaries. Individuals who may be qualified beneficiaries are the spouse, and dependent children of a covered employee. as well as, in certain circumstance, the covered employee. Under current law, in order to be a qualified beneficiary, an individual must generally be covered under a group health plan on the day before the event that causes a loss of coverage (such as termination of employment, or a divorce from, or death of, the covered employee). HIPAA changes this requirement so that a child born to the covered employee, or who is placed for adoption with the covered employee, during the period of COBRA continuation coverage, is also a qualified beneficiary.
Termination of Continuation Coverage:
Law provides that your continuation coverage may be terminated for any of the following five reasons:
- Crawford County no longer provides group health coverage to any of its employees.
- The premium for your continuation coverage is not paid on time.
- You become covered by another group plan, unless the plan contains any exclusions or limitations with respect to any preexisting condition you or your covered dependents may have (see Duration of COBRA Continuation below).
- You become entitled to Medicare.
- You extend coverage for up to 29 months due to your disability and there has been a final determination that you are no longer disabled.
Duration of COBRA Continuation:
Under the COBRA rules, there are situations in which a group health plan may stop making COBRA continuation coverage available earlier than usually permitted. One of those situations is where the qualified beneficiary obtains coverage under another group health plan (see number 3, above). Under current law, if the other group health plan limits or excludes coverage for any preexisting condition of the qualified beneficiary, the plan providing the COBRA continuation coverage cannot stop making the COBRA continuation coverage available merely because of the coverage under the other group health plan.
HIPAA limits the circumstances in which plans can apply exclusions for preexisting conditions. HIPAA makes a coordinating change to the COBRA rules so that a group health plan limits or excludes benefits for preexisting conditions, but because of the new HIPAA rules, those limits or exclusions would not apply to (or would be satisfied by) an individual receiving COBRA continuation coverage, then the plan providing COBRA continuation coverage can stop making the COBRA continuation coverage available. The HIPPA rules limiting the applicability of the exclusions for preexisting conditions become effective in plan years beginning on or after July 1, 1997 (or later for certain plans maintained pursuant to one or more collective bargaining agreements).
You do not have to show that you are insurable to choose continuation coverage. However, under the law, you may have to pay all or part of the premium for your continuation coverage. There is a grace period of at least 30 days for payment of the regularly scheduled premium. [The law also says that at the end of the 18 month or 36 month COBRA continuation coverage period, you must be allowed to enroll in individual conversion plan provided under the Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan.]
This law applies to Crawford County’s group health plan beginning on July 1, 1986.
Please contact the Plan Administrator with any questions. You should also notify the fiscal office of any changes in name, marital status, address, etc. It is important that our office keep up-to-date records regarding employees.
Contact Information:
Please refer any questions to the Plan Administrator:
Randi Ryan
Benefits Coordinator &
Accounts Payable Director
Crawford County
111 E Forest
PO Box 249
Girard, KS 66743
(620) 724-6117
(620) 724-4196 Fax
U.S. Department of Labor
Pension & Welfare Benefits Division
Room N5625
200 Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, D. C. 20210
Phone: (202) 219-8776
Web Site: www.dol.gov
Internal Revenue Service
Office of Assistant Chief Counsel
Employee Benefits and Exempt Organizations
1111 Constitution Avenue
Washington, D. C. 20224
Phone: (202) 622-4695
Web Site: www.irs.gov