COBRA going out of the country
njjel
1,235 Posts
An employee was on FMLA leave and now advises she will not be returning and will be moving to Puerto Rico. Our carrier does not provide coverage there. Where do we go from here as far as offering COBRA goes?
Comments
She probably will decline and you won't have to think about it again.
I would make sure that this applies to all the insurances you offer, including your FSA.
Hope this helps, njjel.
The previous posters are correct, COBRA does not require you to make coverage available to a relocating Qualified Beneficiary (QB) other than coverage already available to active employees. But, it would still be wise to inform the employee (and other QB's) of their COBRA rights and offer them coverage (such as it is) because remember, the relocating former employee might not be the only QB in the picture and a qualifying child or former spouse who are not relocating may well choose to exercise their COBRA rights.
On the other hand, (and I don't want to stir up a hornet's nest here) but I was wondering if you were going to attempt to recover the ER's portion of the monthly health insurance premium that were paid in the EE's behalf during the his/her FMLA absence? I not saying that you should, just wanted to know that in some instances you can.
G
Accepting COBRA or denying COBRA is the x-employee's burden not the plan's burden!!! The plan's burden is to insure COBRA as written is offered.
PORK
In our case the COBRA coverage for a
>family is $1000+ paid in advance and on time,
>monthly. Any medical facility in the world used
>can apply for claims activity, however, the
>deductible and the "out of network medical
>facility or physician used", the cost jumps to a
>60/40 and a $400.00 deductible.
I can't believe that someone else has the type of costs we do for medical!!!! I thought ours were so outrageous that we were probably one of the only ones with this sort of "hi-jack" premiums. Guess misery does love company, because this makes me fee a tiny bit better -- really felt terrible this year that we could not negotiate any lower premiums.