Request Denied?
Protect employees from a health insurance loophole.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2006/march/83604.html
Employees who participate in group health insurance could be
left with a hefty tab if the insurer denies a claim. A little-known
provision in the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,
or ERISA, holds that, with a few exceptions, people who get health
coverage through a group policy at work cannot sue their insurance
companies under state law, and their options under federal law are
limited, says Arnold Levinson, an attorney and partner at Pillsbury &
Levinson LLP in San Francisco.
"Under federal law, the insurance company gets to decide
whether your claim is paid or not, and they don't even have to
be right," Levinson says. "All they have to do is show
that they were not arbitrary and capricious. While you might be
able to sue in federal court, you can't win unless you prove
the insurance company [was] arbitrary and capricious."
One solution, Levinson says, is to stop offering group coverage
and simply increase wages so your employees can buy their own
insurance. Another is to set up your health coverage under a safe
harbor outside ERISA. The com-pany can't sponsor the plan or
pay any of the premiums, and you must comply with other el-ements
of the safe harbor provision. Consult with an attorney who has
expertise in ERISA to make sure your plan meets the
requirements.
Jacquelyn Lynn is a freelance business
writer in Orlando, Florida.
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