Fair Health Insurance Costs
DB
136 Posts
I posted this under Benefits and had no replies. Please help!
We have 4 union contracts that specify employees hired before a certain date pay NOTHING for family coverage. Employees hired after that date pay $100 per month for a $925 policy. No one pays anything for single coverage. The City cannot afford this any longer and has to make a change. All the contracts are coming up for renewal soon.
Option 1 would require all employees to pay a percentage of their salary - starting at 1% this year and moving up to 6% over 3 years. Everyone would pay regardless of single or family coverage. The percentage increases would occur at the same time the COLA are received.
Option 2 would require all employees to pay a percentage of the premium - probably something in the 10-15% range but employees would only pay based on the type of coverage they have. Premium increases occur at the same time as the COLA.
Option 3 would be to decrease the benefits (our medical is cream of the crop - the company won't even sell it anymore). Unfortunately, many employees have never worked anywhere else, don't know how good it is and don't believe us when we tell them.
My boss likes Option 1 but I've never seen it implemented before. It sounds cumbersome to me. Plus, a highly paid employee with single coverage could end up paying more than a lower paid employee with family coverage.
Please give me your input.
We have 4 union contracts that specify employees hired before a certain date pay NOTHING for family coverage. Employees hired after that date pay $100 per month for a $925 policy. No one pays anything for single coverage. The City cannot afford this any longer and has to make a change. All the contracts are coming up for renewal soon.
Option 1 would require all employees to pay a percentage of their salary - starting at 1% this year and moving up to 6% over 3 years. Everyone would pay regardless of single or family coverage. The percentage increases would occur at the same time the COLA are received.
Option 2 would require all employees to pay a percentage of the premium - probably something in the 10-15% range but employees would only pay based on the type of coverage they have. Premium increases occur at the same time as the COLA.
Option 3 would be to decrease the benefits (our medical is cream of the crop - the company won't even sell it anymore). Unfortunately, many employees have never worked anywhere else, don't know how good it is and don't believe us when we tell them.
My boss likes Option 1 but I've never seen it implemented before. It sounds cumbersome to me. Plus, a highly paid employee with single coverage could end up paying more than a lower paid employee with family coverage.
Please give me your input.
Comments
Option 1 seems cumbersome (but we have an affiliated organization that uses a proration of the number of hours worked as the basis for the medical/dental cost, so I've seen stranger things); Option 3 could get your costs down significantly if you had a snowball's chance in h--- to get the union to buy that one.
Find a standard plan or what you are willing to live with, and find the weakest most pathetic coverage and use it as your threat.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
What if we assign employee contributions to premiums based on risk and experience?
I expect to get the electronic equivalent of a Calloway Great Big Bertha to the face over this from the Forumites, so bring it on!
Gene
I don't think we're ready yet for consumer driven health. One other thing: If you are still doing actual COLAs, get rid of them!
Public sector employees need to be dragged kicking and screaming into the real world.
It will be difficult and you may have to risk a strike, but you need to scale back your plan and make the employees pay a % of the premium. Around here an 80/20 split is fairly standard (of the premium and the increases.)
Good luck.
But I am not in a union atmosphere. Good Luck!
Their union voted to keep the expensive plan, pay the difference, and accepted a pay increase that just covered the insurance.
Several other schools have come to similar arragements, giving back most of their salary increase in insurance premiums.
Option #2 is probably going to be the option your employees will approve.
Good luck!
Health insurance costs are irrational - based on the age of the employee in a lot of cases. For example , I am 57 and my stay-at-home spouse is 48 - and I am the only one working : so I currently pay a lot more than if our roles were reversed and he was the one working. It is crazy. Younger age doesn't aways mean better health.
Chari
Part of why I did this was because our illustrious Governor signed back into law permission for government entities within the state to unionize. Currently we have no unions in our county employees, but there are runblings. It just amazes me that people who are on the taxpayers payroll think the world owes them. The nature of working for a gov't entity is not to make a ton of money. If they want that, go back to the private sector. We just covered come oif these issues in my CEBS course so this is interesting reading!
In-house administered medical coverage plan will save you money.
PORK
Why not try the percentage of salary for employee coverage and if someone has dependent coverage they also pay $X amount? It is fair for all.
I just felt like saying that. I feel better. Sorry I couldn't help you, though.
Plan A - 250 deductible - employee portion $225 - plan pays 90%
Plan B - 450 deductible - employee portion $170 - plan pays 80%
People in negotiations require and deserve simplified examples to look at and decide upon. They will caucus forever and a day if you present what you have outlined.