Employee wants to cancel Health Ins.
skippy
18 Posts
Does anyone know if COBRA applies in the following situation? We have an employee who is covered under our company's health insurance; she and her husband are both covered under our plan.
She and her husband are ALSO COVERED under HER HUSBANDS company's plan.
Our Plan Year is July. She wants to cancel coverage with our company this month (January) and carry only coverage under her husbands plan for the two of them.
Can she cancel anythime? Do we have to send COBRA documents to him because he'll be losing some coverage? We have a Section 125 Cafeteria plan (plan year is July) bue she is not participating in it, although, THE COST OF HER INSURANCE IS BEING DEDUCTED PRE-TAX UNDER THE CAFETERIA PLAN.
I guess, now, I have two questions: The second is can an employee cancel insurance before the plan year if they've signed up for a Pre-Tax plan? Thank you in advance for any help you can provide.
She and her husband are ALSO COVERED under HER HUSBANDS company's plan.
Our Plan Year is July. She wants to cancel coverage with our company this month (January) and carry only coverage under her husbands plan for the two of them.
Can she cancel anythime? Do we have to send COBRA documents to him because he'll be losing some coverage? We have a Section 125 Cafeteria plan (plan year is July) bue she is not participating in it, although, THE COST OF HER INSURANCE IS BEING DEDUCTED PRE-TAX UNDER THE CAFETERIA PLAN.
I guess, now, I have two questions: The second is can an employee cancel insurance before the plan year if they've signed up for a Pre-Tax plan? Thank you in advance for any help you can provide.
Comments
Hope this helps a little.
At a previous employer I ran into this problem several times - I would sit down with the ee to sign them up for the various insurance plans (having provided them with all the SPDs in advance as well as a letter stating the date and time we would meet as well as what information they needed to bring with them) and the employee would not have the required information or they had not yet made a decision regarding what they did and did not want to enroll in. I would give them more time to look at the information, or to obtain whatever information they needed, and schedule another date and time to meet. If, after the second meeting they still did not have the necessary information, I would follow up with one more letter (no scheduled meeting) and if I did not receive a response, they would not be enrolled in the plan.
My thought is that I had TOO many other issues to deal with and I was not hired to be their babysitter, they are adults and should act like it. I actually did have one employee who had a back injury, and did not sign up for the insurance due to lack of him providing information, and after w/c denied it tried blaming me for his not being on the plan. I made sure I had documented everything and he ended up being responsible for the medical bills.
Kansasliberal