One aspect of the recently approved federal stimulus bill – the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act -offers eligible terminated employees a 65 percent discount on COBRA coverage. Enacted in 1986, COBRA allows former employees to continue their health insurance coverage for up to 18 months after they are terminated.
The issue facing business owners is that they must pay 65 percent of the COBRA premium and then file for reimbursement through a payroll tax credit. Employees pay the other 35 percent. This discounted rate could potentially cause a dramatic increase in COBRA election by former employees.
To avoid substantial penalties, employers were required to mail out COBRA notices by April 18, 2009 to eligible employees who had been laid off since September 1, 2008. This new regulation affects most companies with 20 or more employees.
Some companies are worried that the federal requirement could cause cash flow problems because of the up-to-three-month delay for reimbursement. And cash flow problems could cause some financially strapped companies to lay off more employees, freeze or cut salaries, or eliminate some benefits.
How the new COBRA rules work:
- The federal government will provide a 65 percent subsidy for up to nine months of the COBRA premium retroactive to March 1 for certain terminated employees.
- To be entitled to the subsidy, employees must have been involuntarily terminated between September 1, 2008, and December 31, 2009, and must be eligible for COBRA.
- A special election period exists for individuals involuntarily terminated on or after last September 1 who had not elected COBRA. They will have 60 more days after receiving the notice to elect coverage, which is retroactive to March 1 if they lost their jobs before then.
- The employer pays the 65 percent on the employee’s behalf and is then reimbursed through a payroll tax credit. Large companies may be reimbursed either weekly or monthly, but smaller employers must file for the credit with their quarterly payroll taxes.
- The employee must pay 35 percent of COBRA before the employer can request reimbursement of the other 65 percent. Employers that do not charge the full COBRA premium will not be entitled to reimbursement of 65 percent of the maximum COBRA premium.
For more information, visit www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-09-27.pdf or www.dol.gov/ebsa/cobra.html

