Notification
If you and/or your
dependents become eligible for COBRA
Continuation Coverage due to your
termination of employment, reduction
in hours, Medicare entitlement, or
death, your employer must notify the
Fund Office within 30 days after the
occurrence.
By law, within 60 days after your
dependent becomes eligible for COBRA
Continuation Coverage because of
legal separation, divorce, or a
dependent child’s reaching the
limiting age or otherwise losing
dependent status, you or the
eligible dependent must notify the
Fund Office that COBRA Continuation
Coverage is wanted. If you or your
dependent do not contact the Fund
Office during the 60-day period,
COBRA Continuation Coverage will not
be available.
Notification should
be made in writing to the Fund
Office and should include the
qualified beneficiary’s name, the
qualifying event entitling them to
COBRA Continuation Coverage, and the
date of the event. Failure to
provide timely notice may prevent
you and/or your dependents from
obtaining or extending COBRA
Continuation Coverage.
Employees, qualified beneficiaries,
or any representative acting on
behalf of the employee or qualified
beneficiary may provide notice.
Notice from one individual will
satisfy the notice requirement for
all related qualified beneficiaries
affected by the same qualifying
event.
Within 45 days of receipt of the
above notice(s), the Fund Office
will send you or your dependents an
election form to continue coverage
with instructions or, if you are not
eligible, information as to why you
are not eligible to elect this
coverage. To be eligible for COBRA
Continuation Coverage, you must
return the completed election form
to the Fund Office within 60 days
after the date the Fund Office
notifies you of your loss of
coverage and eligibility for COBRA
Continuation Coverage. This 60-day
period is referred to as an election
period. If the Fund Office does not
receive your completed election form
within the 60-day election period,
coverage will automatically
terminate for you and/or your
dependents effective the original
date coverage was lost. Failure to
return the completed form within the
time limit will also automatically
terminate the right to continuation
of benefits.
Type Of Coverage
If you or your
eligible dependents choose COBRA
Continuation Coverage, the Plan will
provide coverage for medical,
prescription drug, dental, and
vision care, all covered in the same
rate.
You or your eligible dependent would
be responsible for paying the full
premium cost of coverage plus
administrative charges for COBRA
Continuation Coverage. The cost of
COBRA Continuation Coverage is
determined based on Plan experience
and applicable government
regulations. Your premium will be
due no later than 45 days after you
elect coverage. The first payment
must cover, retroactively, the
period of time from the date on
which your coverage was lost up
through and including the current
month. After that, payments are due
monthly and must be continuous.
Failure to submit the initial
required premium payment within the
time limit specified automatically
terminates the continuation of
benefits and the right to
continuation of benefits.
COBRA
Continuation Coverage Period
Generally, you may
continue coverage under COBRA for a
period of up to 18 months from the
date (or up to 29 months for
disabled individuals, as described
in the next section) you terminate
employment or there is a reduction
in the number of hour you work.
Your spouse and/or dependent
children may qualify to continue
coverage for a period of up to 36
months under the following
circumstances:
-
You and your
spouse become divorced or legally
separated;
-
You become
entitled to Medicare;
-
Your child loses
eligibility as a dependent; or
-
You die.
If COBRA
Continuation Coverage is obtained
after one qualifying event and a
second qualifying event such as
described previously occurs during
the 18-month COBRA Continuation
Coverage period, your spouse or
dependent children would then be
eligible for additional COBRA
Continuation Coverage up to a total
of 36 months from the date of the
qualifying event.
For example, if you are terminated
and continue coverage under COBRA
and then divorce six months later,
you would be eligible for COBRA
Continuation Coverage for a total of
18 months from the date of the
qualifying event, while your spouse
and children could extend their
coverage for a total of 36 months
from the date of the qualifying
event.
Coverage For
Disabled Individuals
If the Social
Security Administration determines
that you or a dependent was totally
and permanently disabled on the day
your employment ended, or within 60
days after that, COBRA Continuation
Coverage may be continued up to a
maximum of 29 months, instead of 18
months for all covered family
members who have elected COBRA
Continuation Coverage. For coverage
to continue, you must notify the
Fund Office, in writing:
You must include any documentation
of your disability with your written
request for extended coverage.
The cost of extended COBRA
Continuation Coverage for disabled
individuals is determined based on
Plan experience and applicable
government regulations. The premium
cost of such extended coverage is
greater than that of continued
coverage.
When your disability ends, you must
notify the Fund Office within 30
days. Your extended coverage will
end unless you are still within the
initial 18-month period of continued
coverage
Electing COBRA
Continuation Coverage
You or your
dependents must complete the COBRA
Continuation Coverage election form
and send it back to the Fund Office
to elect COBRA Continuation
Coverage. These rules apply to the
election of COBRA Continuation
Coverage:
-
Each member of
your family who would lose
coverage because of a qualifying
event is entitled to make a
separate COBRA Continuation
Coverage election.
-
If you do not
elect COBRA Continuation Coverage
for your dependents when they are
entitled to COBRA Continuation
Coverage, your dependents have the
right to elect COBRA Continuation
Coverage for themselves. Your
spouse may elect COBRA
Continuation Coverage for herself
or himself and any children who
are covered by the Plan on the
date of the qualifying event.
-
This provision
applies if international trade
adversely affects your employment.
If you are certified by the U.S.
Department of Labor (DOL) as
eligible for benefits under the
Trade Act of 1974, you may be
eligible for both a new
opportunity to elect COBRA
Continuation Coverage and an
individual Health Insurance Tax
Credit. If you and/or your
dependents did not elect COBRA
Continuation Coverage during your
election period, but are later
certified by the DOL for Trade Act
benefits, you may be entitled to
an additional 60-day COBRA
Continuation Coverage election
period beginning on the first day
of the month in which you were
certified. However, in no event
would this benefit allow you to
elect COBRA Continuation Coverage
later than six months after your
coverage ended under the Plan.
Also under the Trade Act, eligible
individuals can either take a tax
credit or get advance payment of
65% of premiums paid for qualified
health insurance, including COBRA
Continuation Coverage. If you have
questions about these tax
provisions, you may call the
Health Care Tax Credit Customer
Contact Center toll-free at
1-866-628-4282. TTD/TTY callers
may call toll-free at
1-866-626-4282. More information
about the Trade Act is also
available at
www.doleta.go/tradeact/2002act_index.asp
The Plan Administrator may also be
able to assist you with your
questions.
When COBRA
Continuation Coverage Ends
You lose your right
to COBRA Continuation Coverage if:
-
The Plan no longer
provides medical, prescription
drug, dental, and/or vision care
coverage to any participants;
-
You do not pay the
required premium when due;
-
You become covered
under another group medical plan.
Note however, that if you have a
pre-existing condition not covered
by the other plan, your COBRA
Continuation Coverage may be
continued;
-
You become
entitled to Medicare; or
-
The period of time
for COBRA Continuation Coverage
has expired.