Proposed Text
Part I
General
1VAC55-20-20. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Accident or health plan" means a plan described in the Internal Revenue Code § 105.
"Administrative services arrangement" means an arrangement whereby a third party administrator agrees to administer all or part of the health benefits program.
"Adoption agreement" means an agreement executed between a local employer and the department specifying the terms and conditions of the local employer's participation in the health benefits program.
"Adverse experience adjustment" means the adjustment determined by the department, consistent with its actuarial practices, to premiums for the year in which a local employer withdraws from the plan.
"Alternative health benefits plans" means optional
medical benefits plans, inclusive of but not limited to HMOs and PPOs, which
are offered pursuant to the health benefits program in addition to the basic
statewide plan(s) plan.
"Basic statewide plan(s)" plan"
means the statewide hospitalization, medical and major medical plan health
benefits plan for state employees offered at a uniform rate to all state
employees pursuant to § 2.2-2818 of the Code of Virginia.
"Benefits administrator" or "group benefits administrator" means the person or office designated in the application and adoption agreement to be responsible for the day-to-day administration of the health benefits program at the local level. The benefits administrator is an employee of the agency or local employer that employs the benefits administrator. The benefits administrator is not an agent of the health insurance plan or the Department of Human Resource Management.
"Coordinated service" means a health care service or supply covered under both the program and another health plan. The coordinated service will be provided under the program only to the extent it is not excluded or limited under the program.
"Coordination of benefits" means the establishment
of a priority between two or more underwriters which that provide
health benefits protection covering the same claims incident.
"Department" means the Department of Human Resource Management.
"Dependent" means any person who is determined to be an eligible family member of an employee pursuant to subsection E of 1VAC55-20-320.
"Director" means the Director of the Department of Human Resource Management.
"Dual membership" means the coverage in the health benefits program of the employee and either the spouse or one dependent. This definition does not include coverage of retirees or employees or their spouses who are otherwise covered by Medicare.
"Effective date of coverage" means the date on which a participant is enrolled for benefits under a plan or plans elected under the health benefits program.
"Employee" means a person employed by an employer participating in the health benefits program or, where demanded by the context of this chapter, a retired employee of such an employer. The term "employee" shall include state employees and employees of local employers.
"Employee health insurance fund" or "health insurance funds" means accounts established by the state treasury and maintained by the department within which contributions to the plan shall be deposited.
"Employer" means the entity with whom a person maintains a common law employee-employer relationship. The term "employer" is inclusive of each state agency and of a local employer.
"Employer application" or "application" means the form, to be provided by the department, to be used by the local employer for applying to participate in the health benefits program.
"Enrollment action" means providing the information,
which would otherwise be contained on an enrollment form, through an
alternative means such as through the world wide web Internet
or through an interactive voice response system, for the purpose of
securing or changing membership or coverage in the employee health benefits
program. Submitting a properly completed enrollment form and taking an
enrollment action through an employee self-service system are used
interchangeably to indicate equivalent actions.
"Enrollment form" means the form, to be provided by the department, to be used by participants to enroll in a plan or to indicate a change in coverage.
"Experience adjustment" means the adjustment
determined by the department, consistent with its actuarial practices, to
premiums for the year in which a local employer withdraws from the plan.
"Family membership" means the coverage in the health benefits program of the employee and two or more eligible dependents.
"Health benefits program" or "program" means, individually or collectively, the plan or plans the department may establish pursuant to §§ 2.2-1204 and 2.2-2818 of the Code of Virginia.
"Health Maintenance Organization" or "HMO" means an entity created under federal law, "The Health Maintenance Organization Act of 1973" (Title XIII of the Public Health Service Act), as amended, or one defined under state law.
"Health benefits program" or "program"
means, individually or collectively, the plan or plans the department may
establish pursuant to §§ 2.2-1204 and 2.2-2818 of the Code of Virginia.
"Health plan" means:
1. A plan or program offering benefits for, or as a result of, any type of health care service when it is:
a. Group or blanket insurance (including school insurance programs); or
b. Blue Cross, Blue Shield, group practice (including HMOs and
PPOs), individual practice (including IPAs), or any other prepayment
arrangement (including this program) when;:
(1) An employer contributes any portion of the premium; or
(2) An employer contracts for the group coverage on behalf of employees; or
(3) It is any labor-management trustee plan, union welfare plan, employer organization plan, or employee benefit organization plan.
2. The term "health plan" refers to each plan or
program separately. It also refers to any portion of a plan or program which
that reserves the right to take into account benefits of other health
plans when determining its own benefits. If a health plan has a coordination of
benefits provision which that applies to only part of its
services, the terms of this section will be applied separately to that part and
to any other part.
3. A prepaid health care services contract or accident or health plan meeting all the following conditions is not a health plan:
a. One that is individually underwritten;
b. One that is individually issued;
c. One that provides only for accident and sickness benefits; and
d. One that is paid for entirely by the subscriber.
A contract or policy of the type described in this
subdivision 3 of this definition is not subject to coordination of
benefits.
"Independent hearing officer" means an individual requested by the director of the department from a list maintained by the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court of Virginia to arbitrate disputes that may arise in conjunction with these regulations or the health benefits program.
"Impartial health entity" "Independent
review organization" means an organization, which that,
upon written request from the Department of Human Resource Management,
examines the adverse health benefits claim decision made by the Commonwealth's
Third Party Administrator (TPA). The impartial health entity independent
review organization should determine whether the TPA's decision is
objective, clinically valid, compatible with established principles of health
care, and appropriate under the terms of the contractual obligations to the
covered person.
"Insured arrangement" means an accident or health plan underwritten by an insurance company wherein the department's only obligation as it may relate to claims is the payment of insurance company premiums.
"Independent hearing officer" means an individual
requested by the director of the department from a list maintained by the
Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court to arbitrate disputes which may arise
in conjunction with these regulations or the health benefits program.
"Local employees" or "employees of local
governments" means all officers and employees of the governing body of any
county, city, or town, and the directing or governing body of any political
entity, subdivision, branch, or unit of the Commonwealth or of any commission
or public authority or body corporate created by or under an act of the General
Assembly specifying the power or powers, privileges or authority capable of
exercise by the commission or public authority or body corporate, as
distinguished from §§ § 15.2-1300, or
15.2-1303 of the Code of Virginia, or similar statutes, provided that
the officers and employees of a social services department, welfare board, mental
health and mental retardation community services board, or
behavioral health authority, or library board of a county, city, or town
shall be deemed to be the employees of local government.
"Local employer" means any county, city, or town,
school board, and the directing or governing body of any political entity,
subdivision, branch or unit of the Commonwealth or of any commission or public
authority or body corporate created by or under an act of the General Assembly
specifying the power or powers, privileges or authority capable of exercise by
the commission or public authority or body corporate, as distinguished from §§
§ 15.2-1300, or 15.2-1303 of the Code of Virginia, or
similar statutes.
"Local officer" means the treasurer, registrar, commissioner of revenue, attorney for the Commonwealth, clerk of a circuit court, sheriff, or constable of any county or city or deputies or employees of any of the preceding local officers.
"Local retiree" means a former local employee who has met the terms and conditions for early, normal, or late retirement from a local employer.
"Open enrollment" means the period during which an
employee may elect to commence, to waive, or to change
membership or plans offered pursuant to the health benefits program.
"Part-time employee," as defined by each local employer, means an employee working less than full time but more than 20 hours per week whom a local employer has determined to be eligible to participate in the program. The conditions of participation for these employees shall be decided by the local employer in a nondiscriminatory manner.
"Participants" means individuals covered by the plan due to their relationship with the employer. They are not covered as dependents under the plan.
"Plan administrator" means the department.
"Preferred provider organization" or
"PPO" means an entity through which a group of health care providers,
such as doctors, hospitals and others, agree to provide specific medical and
hospital care and some related services at a negotiated price.
"Preexisting condition" means a condition which
that, in the opinion of the plan's medical advisors, displayed signs or
symptoms before the participant's effective date of coverage. These signs or
symptoms must be ones of which the participant was aware or should reasonably
have been aware. The condition is considered preexisting whether or not the
participant was seen or treated for the condition. It is also considered
preexisting whether or not the signs and symptoms of the condition were
correctly diagnosed.
"Preferred provider organization" or "PPO" means an entity through which a group of health care providers, such as doctors, hospitals, and others, agree to provide specific medical and hospital care and some related services at a negotiated price.
"Primary coverage" means the health plan which
that will provide benefits first. It does not matter whether or not a
claim has been filed for benefits with the primary health plan.
"Retiree" means any person who meets the definition of either a state retiree or a local retiree.
"Secondary coverage" means the health plan under which the benefits may be reduced to prevent duplicate or overlapping coverage.
"Self-funded arrangement" means a facility through which the plan sponsor agrees to assume the risk associated with the type of benefit provided without using an insurance company.
"Single membership" means coverage of the employee only under the health benefits program.
"State" means the Commonwealth of Virginia.
"State agency" means a court, department, institution, office, board, council, or other unit of state government located in the legislative, judicial, or executive departments or group of independent agencies, as shown in the Appropriation Act, and which is designated in the Appropriation Act by title and a three-digit agency code.
"State employee" means any person who is regularly employed full time on a salaried basis, whose tenure is not restricted as to temporary or provisional appointment, in the service of, and whose compensation is payable, no more often than biweekly, in whole or in part, by the Commonwealth or any department, institution, or agency thereof. "State employee" shall include the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, and members of the General Assembly. It includes "judge" as defined in § 51.1-301 of the Code of Virginia and judges, clerks, and deputy clerks of regional juvenile and domestic relations, county juvenile and domestic relations, and district courts of the Commonwealth.
"State retiree" means a former state employee who has met the terms and conditions for early, normal or late retirement from the Commonwealth.
"Teacher" means any employee of a county, city, or other local public school board.
1VAC55-20-40. State advisory council. (Repealed.)
In the administration of the health benefits program or any
component plan or plans comprising such program, the department shall take into
consideration the recommendations of the state human resource advisory council
(the "council" or "advisory council"). The council is
created pursuant to § 2.2-2675 of the Code of Virginia and operated in
accordance therewith. Such advisory council will serve to advise the Secretary
of Administration on among other things, issues and concerns of active and
retired employees of the Commonwealth who are participating in the health
benefits program, such as the type and amount of benefits provided by the program,
the cost to employees to participate in the program and ways to effectively
control claims experience. The department shall consider the findings and
recommendations of the council in its decision-making process. Further, the
department may request the council's guidance on other issues of concern to the
department.
1VAC55-20-90. Appeals.
A. The director of the department shall be the final arbiter of any disputes arising under this chapter. The director may not redelegate this authority other than to an independent hearing officer except as provided under subsection C of this section.
All disputes arising under this chapter shall be submitted to
the department, which shall have the responsibility for interpreting and
administering this chapter. All disputes shall be made in writing in such
manner as may be reasonably required by the department and shall set forth the
facts which that the applicant believes to be sufficient to
entitlement to relief hereunder. The department may adopt forms for such
submissions in which case all appeals shall be filed on such forms.
B. Appeals not filed within the time frames established herein shall be denied.
Requests for review of procurements under the provisions of
the VPPA Virginia Public Procurement Act (§ 2.2-4300 et seq. of the
Code of Virginia) shall be filed within 10 days of the department's notice
of intent to award a contract.
Requests for relief from local employers or state agencies with respect to any action of the department other than a procurement shall be filed within 30 days of the action grieving the applicant. Requests for relief from state or local employees with respect to any action of the department other than a procurement shall be filed within 60 days of the action grieving the employee.
C. Upon receipt by the department for a request for review
under this section, it shall determine all facts which that are
necessary to establish the right of an applicant for relief. The department
shall approve, deny, or investigate any and all disputes arising hereunder.
Upon request, the department will afford the applicant the right of a hearing
with respect to any finding of fact or determination related to any claim under
this section. In the event of an adverse decision by the department, the
applicant shall be notified of such decision as hereinafter provided in
this section. Reviews for treatment authorizations or medical claims that
have been denied will be sent to an impartial health entity independent
review organization. The impartial health entity independent
review organization shall examine the final denial of claims or treatment
authorizations to determine whether the decision is objective, clinically
valid, and compatible with established principles of health care. The decision
of the impartial health entity independent review organization
shall (i) be in writing, (ii) contain findings of fact as to the material
issues in the case and the basis for those findings, and (iii) be final and
binding if consistent with law and policy.
D. The applicant shall be notified in writing of any adverse decision with respect to his claim within 90 days after its submission. The notice shall be written in a manner calculated to be understood by the applicant and shall include:
1. The specific reason or reasons for the denial;
2. Specific references to law, this chapter, contracts awarded pursuant to this chapter, or the Health Insurance Manual/Local Administrative Manual and related instructions on which the denial is based;
3. A description of any additional material or information necessary to the applicant to perfect the claim and an explanation why such material or information is necessary; and
4. An explanation of the review process.
If special circumstances require an extension of time for processing an initial application, the department shall furnish written notice of the extension and the reason therefore to the applicant before the end of the initial 90-day period. In no event shall such extension exceed 90 days.
E. Standards, credentials, and qualifications of the impartial
health entity independent review organization.
1. In order to qualify to perform either standard or expedited
external reviews pursuant to this chapter or the Code of Virginia, an impartial
health entity independent review organization shall have and
maintain written policies and procedures that govern all aspects of the
standard and expedited external review processes that include, at a minimum, a
quality assurance mechanism in place that ensures that:
a. External reviews are conducted within the specified time frames and required notices are provided in a timely manner;
b. Qualified and impartial clinical peer reviewers are selected to conduct external reviews on behalf of the impartial health entity and reviewers are suitably matched to specific cases; and
c. The confidentiality of medical records is maintained in
accordance with the confidentiality and disclosure laws of the Commonwealth and/or
or the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
2. All clinical peer reviewers assigned by an impartial
health entity independent review organization to conduct external
reviews shall be physicians or other appropriate health care providers who meet
the following minimum qualifications:
a. Are expert in the treatment of the covered person's medical condition that is the subject of the external review;
b. Are knowledgeable about the recommended health care service or treatment through recent or current actual clinical experience treating patients with the same or similar medical conditions as the covered person's;
c. Hold a nonrestricted license in a state of the United States and, for physicians, a current certification by a recognized American medical specialty board in the area or areas appropriate to the subject of the external review; and
d. Have no history of disciplinary actions or sanctions, including loss of staff privileges or participation restrictions, that have been taken or are pending by any hospital, governmental agency or unit, or regulatory body that raise a substantial question as to the clinical peer reviewer's physical, mental, or professional competence or moral character.
3. An impartial health entity independent review
organization shall not be affiliated with or a subsidiary of nor be owned
or controlled by a health plan, a trade association of health plans, or a
professional association of health care providers.
4. In determining whether an independent review organization or
a clinical peer reviewer of the impartial health entity independent
review organization has a material, professional, familial, or
financial conflict of interest, the director may take into consideration
situations where the characteristics of that relationship or connection are
such that they are not materially sufficient to disqualify the impartial
health entity independent review organization or the clinical peer
reviewer from conducting the external review.
1VAC55-20-160. Establishing contribution rates and accounting for contributions and claims.
A. The department shall establish one or more pools for establishing contribution rates and for accounting for claims and contributions for state employees and participating local employers. The plan for local employers shall be rated separately from the plan established for state employees. There are hereby authorized pools based on geographic and demographic characteristics and employment relationships. Such pools may include but shall not be limited to:
1. Active state employees, including retirees under age 65 and not eligible for Medicare;
2. Active local employees (excluding separately rated employees of public school systems);
3. Active employees of public school systems;
4. Retired state employees over age 65 and retired state employees eligible for Medicare;
5. Retired local employees (excluding separately rated employees of public school systems);
6. Retired employees of public school systems; and
7. Active employees whose employer does not sponsor a health insurance plan.
Participating employers shall make applicable contributions to the employee health insurance fund.
B. Such contributions may take into account the characteristics
of the group, such as the demographics of employees, inclusive of age, sex,
and dependent status of the employees of an employer; the geographic location
of the employer or employees; claims experience of the employer; and the pool of
the employers (for example, see subdivisions A 1 through 6 of 1VAC55-20-160
A) this section). Additionally, any such contributions may further
be determined by spreading large losses, as determined by the department,
across pools. Further, the department reserves the right to recognize, in its
sole discretion, the claims experience of groups of sufficient size, regardless
of their pool, where future claim levels can be predicted with an acceptable
degree of credibility. The application of this rule by the department shall be
exercised in a uniform and consistent manner.
C. The contribution rate in the aggregate will be composed of two factors; first, the current contribution and second, the amortization of experience adjustments. The current contributions will reflect the anticipated incurred claims and administrative expenses for the period; an experience adjustment will reflect gains and losses determined in accordance with an actuarial estimate. An experience adjustment will be part of the contributions for the succeeding year; however, the department may authorize the amortization of the experience adjustment for a period not to exceed three years.
D. The department will notify a terminating local employer of
any adverse experience adjustment within six-calendar months of the time
end of the plan year in which the local employer terminates
participation in the program. Further the department reserves the right to
modify the amount of the experience adjustment applicable to a terminating
local employer for a period not to exceed 12 months from the end of the plan
year in which such termination occurred. The experience adjustment shall be
payable by the local employer in 12 equal monthly installments beginning 30
days after the date of notification by the department. In the event that a
terminating local employer requests in writing an extension beyond a period of
12 months, the department may approve an extension up to 36 months provided the
local employer agrees to pay interest at the statutory rate on any extended
payments.
1VAC55-20-230. Entrance into the health benefits program.
A. Any local employer desiring to participate in the health benefits program shall complete an employer application provided by the department and execute an adoption agreement acknowledging the rights, duties, and responsibilities of the department and the local employer.
As a condition of participation, the department may require the local employer to complete the application in its entirety and deliver it to the department no less than 120 days prior to the effective date of coverage under the health benefits program. The application shall include the designation of a local administrator and include a list of other individuals whose responsibilities may be such that the department may have cause to contact them.
The application of a local employer may be withdrawn without penalty any time within the first 30 days after the department's delivery of rates to the employer. A 15-day extension will be available upon written request by the employer. Thereafter, the department may levy a processing charge not to exceed $500 to cover the cost of processing the application.
B. Except in unusual circumstances to be determined by the department, the completion of any waiting periods will not be required of employees of local employers joining the program at the time of a local employer's initial participation.
C. Local employers may include in the program their active
employees, or their active employees and their retirees. Local employers may
not elect to cover only retirees. If the local employer wishes to provide
benefits to their Medicare-eligible retirees it must also provide coverage for
non-Medicare retirees. The local employer's beneficiaries qualified under the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA) or similar
legislation may also participate in the program. Coverage will not be
available to a new employee unless the employee is on the payroll a minimum of
16 calendar days.
1VAC55-20-240. Payment of contributions.
A. Contributions due. It is the sole responsibility of the
local employer to remit local employer and local employee contributions to the
department or its designee. The local employer is may be responsible
for remitting such contributions for active, retired, and COBRA-participating
employees. Health benefits program contributions are to be made monthly, in
advance, and are due at the department on the first of each month. If the first
day of the month falls on a weekend or holiday, the payment is due at the
department on the first business day of the month.
B. Nonpayment of contributions. A 10-day grace period for the nonpayment of contributions is hereby provided. If the full and complete payment of contributions is not received by the 10th of the month, a notice will be sent to the local employer by the department or its designee. Additionally, there shall be imposed an interest penalty of 12% per annum of the outstanding balance unpaid as of the 10th.
In the event that payment is not received by the 20th of the month, the department shall place a notice of nonpayment of contributions in a newspaper of general circulation in the locality of the local employer notifying the employees of such local employer that claims incurred after the end of the current month will not be paid until all outstanding contributions and interest have been paid.
Furthermore, the department reserves the right to collect from a local employer the greater of the monthly contribution or any amounts incurred for claims during a period of nonpayment as well as any other costs related thereto.
C. Nonpayment as breach. The nonpayment of contributions by a local employer shall constitute a breach of the adoption agreement and the local employer may be obligated to pay damages. In the event that the local employer terminates participation, such termination can only be prospective, and the employer shall be obligated to pay the greater of past contributions or actual claims incurred during such period and any interest and damages that may be associated with such nonpayment.
D. Coverage and contribution period. Except as noted here,
coverage elections including those made by new employees are made on a
prospective basis, that is, effective the first of the month coinciding with or
following the receipt of the election form. However, if an election form is
received from a new employee on the first business day of the month, coverage
for the employee will commence on the first day of that month, (see
1VAC55-20-370). Coverage elections made for newborns, adoption, or
placement for adoptions are effective the date the child is born, adopted,
or placed for adoption, so long as the employee makes the coverage election
within 31 60 days of the event. Coverage terminations are
effective the end of the month following receipt of an election notice, except
for terminations that are required by the plan. Coverage terminations required
by the plan are effective the end of the month that the event takes place.
Examples of coverage terminations required by the plan are such things as a
divorce, termination of employment, or a dependent child losing
eligibility.
Contributions shall always be for full calendar months. Local employees who terminate employment within a calendar month shall have coverage through the end of the month in which they terminate. In the event that a terminating local employee becomes covered under an accident or health plan of another employer prior to the end of the month in which the local employee terminates, this health benefits program shall be a secondary payor to the former local employee's new coverage.
1VAC55-20-280. Commencement of local employer participation.
Local employers may join initially at any time upon the timely
submission of an employer application, but, thereafter, renewals must be as of
July 1 of each year. Local school boards may have an October 1 renewal,
if they so elect. Initial participation by a local employer at any time other
than on July 1 (October 1) may be for the short plan year ending on the June 30
(September 30) following initial participation.
There shall be no specified time for local employee enrollment coincident with the local employer's initial participation in the health benefits program provided the department or its designee shall have knowledge of the local employee elections at least 30 days prior to the effective date of coverage. Thereafter the open enrollment period for local employees shall take place during the month of April or May of each year with the effective date of coverage then being July 1 of such year. Certain school groups may conduct their open enrollment in August and September.
1VAC55-20-290. Reparticipation of local employers.
Local employers having withdrawn from the health benefits
program may reenter the program only with the consent of the department, and
only on the July 1 (October 1 for school boards) following the timely
submission of an employer application. The July 1 (October 1) effective date
may be waived for local employers who have been away from the program for more
than three years. Employees of local Local employers seeking
reparticipation may be required to serve a waiting period.
Department consent shall not be granted until all pending contributions, penalties, and other assessments have been paid by a local employer and there is no outstanding litigation pending between the department and the local employer. A pending appeal will not prohibit a local employer from reparticipating in the health benefits program.
Part IV
Employee Participation
1VAC55-20-320. Eligible employees.
A. State employees.
1. Full-time salaried, classified employees as defined in
1VAC55-20-20 and faculty as defined in 1VAC55-20-20 are eligible for
membership in the health benefits program. A full-time salaried employee is
one who is scheduled to work at least 32 hours per week or carries a faculty
teaching load considered to be full time at his institution.
2. Certain full-time employees in auxiliary enterprises (such as food services, bookstores, laundry services, etc.) at the University of Virginia, Virginia Military Institute, and the College of William and Mary as well as other state institutions of higher learning are also considered state employees even though they do not receive a salaried state paycheck. The Athletic Department of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University is an example of a local auxiliary whose members are eligible for the program.
3. Certain full-time employees of the Medical College of Virginia Hospital Authority are eligible for the program as long as they are on the authority's payroll and were enrolled in the program on November 1, 1996. They may have payroll deductions for health benefits premiums even if they rotate to the Veterans' Administration Hospital or other acute care facility.
4. Other employees identified in the Code of Virginia as eligible for the program.
5. Classified positions include employees who are fully covered by the Virginia Personnel Act, employees excluded from the Virginia Personnel Act by subdivision 16 of § 2.2-2905 of the Code of Virginia, and employees on a restricted appointment. A restricted appointment is a classified appointment to a position that is funded at least 10% from gifts, grants, donations, or other sources that are not identifiable as continuing in nature. An employee on a restricted appointment must receive a state paycheck in order to be eligible.
B. Local employees.
1. Full-time employees of participating local employers are eligible to participate in the program. A full-time employee is one who meets the definition set forth by the local employer in the employer application.
2. Part-time employees of local employers may participate in the plan if the local employer elects and the election does not discriminate among part-time employees. In order for the local employer to cover part-time employees, the local employer must provide to the department a definition of what constitutes a part-time employee.
The department reserves the right to establish a separate plan for part-time employees.
C. Unavailability of employer-sponsored coverage.
1. Employees, officers, and teachers without access to employer-sponsored health care coverage may participate in the plan. The employers of such employees, officers, and teachers must apply for participation and certify that other employer-sponsored health care coverage is not available. The employers shall collect contributions from such individuals and timely remit them to the department or its designee, act as a channel of communication with the covered employee and otherwise assist the department as may be necessary. The employer shall act as fiduciary with respect to such contributions and shall be responsible for any interest or other charges imposed by the department in accordance with these regulations.
2. Local employees living outside the service area of the plan offered by their local employer shall not be considered as local employees whose local employers do not offer a health benefits plan. For example, a local employee who lives in North Carolina and works in Virginia may live outside the service area of the HMO offered by his employer; however, he may not join the program individually.
3. Employer sponsorship of a health benefits plan will be broadly construed. For example, an employer will be deemed to sponsor health care coverage for purposes of this section and 1VAC55-20-260 if it utilizes § 125 of the Internal Revenue Code or any similar provision to allow employees, officers, or teachers to contribute their portion of the health care contribution on a pretax basis.
4. Individual employees and dependents who are eligible to join the program under the provisions of this subsection must meet all of the eligibility requirements pertaining to state employees except the identity of the employer.
D. Retirees.
1. Retirees are not eligible to enroll in the state retiree health benefits group outside of the opportunities provided in this section.
2. Retirees are eligible for membership in the state retiree group if a completed enrollment form is received within 31 days of separation for retirement. Retirees who remain in the health benefits group through a spouse's state employee membership may enroll in the retiree group at one of three later times: (i) future open enrollment, (ii) within 31 days of a qualifying mid-year event, or (iii) within 31 days of being removed from the active state employee spouse's membership.
3. Membership in the retiree group may be provided to an employee's spouse or dependents who were covered in the active employee group at the time of the employee's death in service.
4. Retirees who have attained the age of 65 or are otherwise covered or eligible for Medicare may enroll in certain plans as determined by the department provided that they apply for such coverage within 31 days of their separation from active service for retirement. Medicare will be the primary payor and the program shall serve as a supplement to Medicare's coverage.
5. Retirees who are ineligible for Medicare must apply for coverage within 31 days of their separation from active service for retirement. In order to receive coverage, the individual must meet the retirement requirements of his employer and receive an immediate annuity. For local employers, the immediate annuity requirement is not applicable as long as the retiree meets the age and service requirements imposed by the plan.
6. Local employers may offer retiree coverage at their option.
E. Dependents. 1. The following family members may be
covered if the employee elects:
a. 1. The employee's spouse. The marriage must be
recognized as legal in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
b. 2. Children. Under the health benefits
program, the following eligible children may be covered to the end of the year
in which they turn age 26 (age requirement is waived for adult incapacitated
children):
(1) a. Natural children, adopted children, or
children placed for adoption.
(2) b. Stepchildren. A stepchild is the natural
or legally adopted child of the participant's legal spouse. Such marriage must
be recognized by the Commonwealth of Virginia.
(3) c. Incapacitated children.
(1) Adult children who are incapacitated due to a physical or mental health condition, as long as the child was covered by the plan and the incapacitation existed prior to the termination of coverage due to the child attaining the limiting age. The employee must make written application, along with proof of incapacitation, prior to the child reaching the limiting age. Such extension of coverage must be approved by the plan and is subject to periodic review. Should the plan find that the child no longer meets the criteria for coverage as an incapacitated child, the child's coverage will be terminated at the end of the month following notification from the plan to the enrollee. The child must live with the employee as a member of the employee's household, be unmarried, and be dependent upon the employee for financial support. In the case of a divorce, living with the spouse will satisfy the condition of living with the employee. Furthermore, the support test is met if either the employee or spouse or combination of the employee and spouse provide over one half of the child's financial support.
(2) Adult incapacitated children of new employees may also be covered, provided that:
(a) The enrollment form is submitted within 31 30
days of hire;
(b) The child has been covered continuously by group employer coverage since the disability first occurred; and
(c) The disability commenced prior to the child attaining the limiting age of the plan.
The enrollment form must be accompanied by a letter from a physician explaining the nature of the incapacitation, providing the date of onset, and certifying that the dependent is not capable of self-support. This extension of coverage must be approved by the plan in which the employee is enrolled.
(4) d. Other children. A child in which for
whom a court has ordered the employee to assume sole permanent custody.
Additionally, if the employee or spouse shares custody with the minor child who is the parent of the "other child," then the other child may be covered.
When a child loses eligibility, coverage terminates at the end of the month in which the event that causes the loss of eligibility occurs.
There are certain categories of persons who may not be covered as dependents under the program. These include dependent siblings, grandchildren, nieces, and nephews except where the criteria for "other children" are satisfied. Parents, grandparents, aunts, and uncles are not eligible for coverage regardless of dependency status.
1VAC55-20-330. Enrollment form or enrollment action.
A. No coverage is available unless an employee files an enrollment form or takes an equivalent enrollment action. No changes in coverage are effective unless an employee files an enrollment form or takes an equivalent enrollment action. Employees alone are responsible for knowing when an enrollment action is required, for taking the action, and for certifying that the information conveyed is complete and true.
B. The employer is responsible for checking that the employee fills in the form completely and accurately. The employer will certify each enrollment form in the space provided on the form.
C. The effective date of coverage shall be determined from the date the enrollment form is stamped as received by a designee of the department or the date of the equivalent enrollment action. This is generally the first of the month following receipt.
Except as noted here, coverage elections including those made
by new employees are made on a prospective basis, that is, effective the first
of the month following the receipt of the election form or enrollment action.
However, if the receipt of the form or the date of the enrollment action is the
first of the month, then the effective date will be the first of the month.
Additionally, if an election form or enrollment action is received from a new
employee on the first business day of the month, coverage for the new employee
will commence on the first day of that month (see 1VAC55-20-370). Coverage
elections made on account of a newborn, adoption, or placement for
adoption are effective the date the child is born, adopted, or placed for
adoption, as long as the employee makes the coverage election within 31 60
days of the event. Coverage terminations are effective the end of the month
following receipt of an election notice, except for terminations that are
required by the plan. Coverage terminations required by the plan are effective
the end of the month that the event takes place. Examples of coverage
terminations required by the plan are such things as a divorce, termination of
employment, or a dependent child losing eligibility.
1VAC55-20-350. Membership.
A. Type of membership. Participants have a choice of three types of membership under the program:
1. Single (employee only). If a participant chooses employee
only membership, the health benefits program does not cover the employee's
dependents (spouse or children). A woman with single membership under the
program does have maternity coverage. However, the newborn child is covered
only for routine hospital nursery care, unless the mother changes to dual or
family membership within 31 days of the date of birth.
2. Dual (employee and one eligible dependent).
3. Family membership (employee and two or more eligible dependents).
B. Changing type of membership.
1. Employees may change membership subject to 1VAC55-20-370.
a. During open enrollment.
b. Within 31 no more than 60 days of a
qualifying mid-year event. Any such change in membership must be on account of
and consistent with the event.
c. Within 31 no more than 60 days of a cost and
coverage change, as acknowledged by the department.
2. All changes in membership must be made on a prospective basis except for the birth, adoption, or placement for adoption of a child.
3. If the change is from single to dual or family membership or vice versa because of a qualifying mid-year event, the employee must certify in the enrollment action the type of event and the date of the event.
1VAC55-20-370. Effective date of coverage.
A. General. Coverage and changes in coverage or membership
are generally prospective, effective on the first day of the month following
the month in which the enrollment action is received by the department's
designee. Newly eligible employees. Newly eligible employees (new
hires) have up to 30 calendar days to enroll in a health plan or flexible
spending account offered by the state. The 30-day countdown period begins on
the first day of employment and ends 30 calendar days later. If the enrollment
action is received within the 30-calendar-day time frame, coverage will be
effective the first of the month coinciding with or following the date of
employment. There is no discretion allowed in this area. Coverage will always
be effective in this manner. In no case will coverage begin before the eligible
employee's first day of employment.
B. Date coverage begins. Coverage begins on the first day
of the first full month of employment following the receipt of the employee's
enrollment action. Employees who begin work on the first working day of the
month are considered employed effective the first of the month. Thus, if an
employee submits the completed enrollment action on or prior to the first
working day of the month, coverage will be effective the first of the month in
which employment commenced. Qualifying mid-year events. Employees who
experience a qualifying mid-year event have 60 calendar days to make a
consistent election change. The 60-day countdown period begins on the day of
the event. Normally changes will be effective the first of the month following
receipt of the enrollment action.
C. Exceptions. With prior approval from the department, coverage
may be allowed to commence on an earlier date in limited circumstances when
prior coverage is unavailable; for example, a new employee who has moved out of
the service area of an HMO. Terminations required by the plan. Employees
can only provide coverage for family members who meet the health plans'
eligibility definition.
1VAC55-20-380. Leaves Leave of absence.
Note: This section addresses various aspects of employee leave and may or may not be applicable to a local employer.
A. Leave of absence with full pay. As long as an employee is
still receiving full pay, health benefits coverage continues with the employer
making its contribution. Nothing special must be done to maintain coverage.
No action is required.
Local employers are not required to contribute toward coverage for any part-time employee granted any type of leave of absence.
B. Virginia Sickness and Disability Program, Long-Term Disability (VSDP-LTD).
1. LTD-working employees continue in active coverage until the end of the month in which the employee transitions to LTD-not working.
1. 2. Coverage with the employer contribution
continues to the end of the month in which the LTD benefits begin, unless
benefits begin on the first day of the month, in which case the employer
contribution will end on the last day of the preceding month. Thereafter,
employees may continue coverage by paying the entire cost of the coverage.
2. 3. Employees receiving LTD benefits may enroll
in the State Retiree Health Benefits Program upon service retirement regardless
of whether they have maintained health coverage in the state program provided
that the individuals have been continuously covered and have had no break in
long-term disability benefits prior to service retirement. The LTD participant
has 31 days from the date of retirement to enroll in the State Retiree Health
Benefits Program. Coverage in the retiree group begins on the first day of the
first full month of retirement.
C. Educational leave -- full or partial pay. An official educational leave is a leave for educational reasons with partial or full pay maintained for the leave, not for work rendered. It is possible to maintain health coverage on an educational leave even when less than full pay is given provided that at least half pay is given. Coverage may continue for the duration of the leave up to 24 months.
D. Leave of absence without pay.
1. Coverage with the employer contribution continues to the end of the month in which the leave without pay begins provided the first day of the leave is after the first work day of the month. If the person returns from leave the following month and works at least half of the workdays in the month, coverage will be continuous. If the leave without pay begins on or before the first work day of the month, coverage and the employer contribution ceases on the last calendar day of the previous month.
2. Employees who do not want to continue coverage will be asked to sign a waiver.
E. Changing coverage while on leave. Coverage changes may be made while on leave in the same manner that changes may be made while actively employed. The same procedures and rules apply.
An employee enrolled in an alternative health benefits plan
who moves out of the plan's service area while on a leave of absence may change
to another plan offered by the department in his new location by taking an
enrollment action within 31 60 days of the date of the move.
F. Returning from leave without pay.
1. Employees who have maintained coverage while on leave without pay. If the employee has maintained coverage while on leave, the employee's coverage in the health benefits program (with the employer making its contribution) will begin on the first of the month following the date the employee returns to full-time employment. However, if the return to work falls on the first day of the month then the employer contributions may begin immediately. It is not necessary for the employee to take a new enrollment action.
Employees may change from single to dual or family membership
within 31 60 days of returning from leave without pay if the
employee dropped dual or family membership during the leave or if there was a
qualifying mid-year event during the leave. A new enrollment action must be
taken. In the case of a qualifying mid-year event, the effective date would
follow the rule on initiating dual or family membership at the time of the
particular qualifying mid-year event.
2. Employees who have not maintained coverage while on leave will be treated in the same manner as new employees, unless they have exercised their rights under the Family Medical Leave Act. If these rights are exercised, they will have all rights that are required by law.
a. It shall be necessary to take a new enrollment action to receive coverage. The enrollment action shall indicate the date the employee returned to work as the date that the employee's continuous full-time employment commenced.
b. The employee has a choice of type of membership and plan.
c. The usual deadlines for filing apply. Coverage begins according to the rules and procedures for new employees.
3. Employees returning from military leave for active service. Employees returning from military leave of 30 days or more have the same choice of coverage as a new employee. If the employee returning from a military leave applies for coverage within 31 days of discharge, the coverage will begin on either the first day of the month of discharge or the first of the following month, whichever is necessary to effect continuous coverage.
4. Taking a second leave without pay. If an employee returns from a leave without pay and is employed full-time on every scheduled work day for at least one full calendar month before taking another leave without pay, the second leave will be treated as a new leave. If there is less than one calendar month of full-time employment between leaves without pay, the leaves will be treated as one, regardless of the types of leave. The length of time that coverage may be continued will depend on the current type of leave.
1VAC55-20-390. Termination of coverage.
A. Coverage ends at the end of the month in which an employee terminates the employment relationship, otherwise loses group eligibility, or on the last day of the month for which premiums are paid.
B. Coverage ends on the date of a participant's death. Coverage for family members of state employees continues until the end of the month following the month in which the participant died.
1. A surviving state beneficiary may enroll in the state retiree group if:
a. The state dependent is eligible for an annuity under
the VRS Virginia Retirement System (VRS) death-in-service
provision;
b. The employee had submitted a disability retirement application naming the dependent under the survivor option before his death and the employee died prior to achieving the retirement date; or
c. The death was job related.
To continue coverage, the family member must apply within 60 days of the date the coverage would otherwise end due to the death.
2. Survivors of deceased state employees who are not eligible for an annuity from VRS can nonetheless be covered under the State Health Benefits Program if they had coverage at the time the employee died. To continue coverage, the state family member must apply within 60 days of the employee's death.
C. In the event that an employee on leave without pay notifies the employer that he is terminating employment, coverage ends on the last day of the month in which the leave without pay ceases.
1VAC55-20-400. Termination of employment.
A. Coverage continues to the end of the month in which an employee terminates. Each terminating employee may elect continuation of coverage pursuant to Internal Revenue Code section 4980B and accompanying regulations.
B. Terminating employees may also have the option of
converting to a non-group policy. The carrier will send the employee a letter offering
non-group coverage. The employee will have 30 days after the date of the letter
to reply in order for coverage to be continuous. All terminating employees
will be given certificates of coverage as required by the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act.
1VAC55-20-410. Suspension and reinstatement of state employees.
A. General.
1. Coverage generally continues with the state contribution
through the end of the month in which the suspension began. However, if the
suspension was effective on or before the first work day of the month, there
will be no coverage for that month unless the employee is reinstated in time to
work half of the work days in the month. For example, if a suspension is
effective on April 19, the employee will have coverage with the state
contribution through the end of April. If the suspension is effective April
1, the employee will have no must pay the entire cost of coverage
in for the month of April. By the same token, if the suspension
is effective April 2 and the employee's first workday in April is April 3, the
employee will not have coverage the state contribution in April. If
the employee is reinstated in time to work half of the workdays in the month
following the month in which the suspension began, there will be continuous
coverage.
2. If the employee is suspended pending court action or pending
an official investigation, the suspension may go beyond one pay period. In
these cases, coverage will continue with the state contribution to the
end of the month in which the suspension began. If the employee is reinstated
in time to work half of the workdays of the month following the month in which
the suspension began, there would be no break in coverage. Suspension beyond
that period should be handled in the same way as a leave without pay with no
employer contribution. The employee may waive coverage or remain in the
group by paying the full monthly contributions contribution
to the employer in advance. Group coverage may continue until a court decision
is issued or the official investigation is completed, or up to a period of 12
months, whichever is less.
3. If the employee is reinstated with back benefits, the
employer should refund the employee the amount of the employer contribution
during the period the employee paid the full premium. Single membership
should be reinstated retroactive to the date the employee was removed from the
group up to a limit of 60 days. Retroactive dual or family membership will be
available up to a maximum period of 60 days. Appropriate contributions must
be made to cover the retroactive period. Alternatively, the family membership
may begin the first full month of reinstatement if the employee applies within
31 days of reinstatement. Previous coverage elections, including dual and
family memberships, will be reinstated retroactively.
B. Termination and grievance reinstatement.
1. Employees who are terminated and file a grievance shall be
treated as terminated employees and may elect extended coverage or nongroup
coverage. In the event such an employee is reinstated with back pay, he will
be given single membership retroactive up to 60 days. Retroactive dual or
family membership will be available up to a maximum period of 60 days. previous
health and flexible spending account elections will be reinstated
retroactively. Appropriate contributions must be made to cover the period.
2. If the employee is reinstated without full back pay, no retroactive coverage is available.
1VAC55-20-430. Coordination of benefits.
A. Employees are required to notify the plan administrator
that they or a covered dependent are enrolled under another plan. If a plan participant
is eligible for coverage under two or more plans, the plans involved will share
the responsibility for the participant's benefits according to these rules.
New employees will receive and be required to respond to a coordination of
benefits (COB) inquiry letter following enrollment in the health plan.
Employees should notify the plan administrator if coverage changes during
employment for them or a covered dependent. If a plan participant is eligible
for coverage under two or more plans, the plans involved will share the
responsibility for the participant's benefits according to these rules.
1. If the other coverage does not have COB rules substantially similar to the participant's health plan's rules, the other coverage will be primary.
2. If a covered person is enrolled as the employee under one coverage and as a dependent under another, generally the one that covers him as the employee will be primary. The plan that covers a person as an active employee, that is an employee who is neither laid off nor retired, or as a dependent of an active employee is the primary plan. The plan covering that same person as a retired or laid-off employee or as a dependent of a retired or laid-off employee is the secondary plan.
3. If a covered person is the employee under both coverages, generally the one that covers him for the longer period of time will be primary.
4. If the dependent is covered as a dependent on his parent's or parents' plan and is also covered as a dependent on his spouse's plan, the spouse's plan is primary.
5. If the covered person is enrolled as a dependent child under both coverages (for example, when both parents cover their child), typically the coverage of the parent whose birthday falls earliest in the calendar year will be primary.
6. Special rules apply when a covered person is enrolled as a dependent child under two coverages and the child's parents are living apart. Generally, the coverage of the parent or step-parent with custody will be primary. However, if there is a court order that requires one parent to provide health care for the child, that parent's coverage will be primary. If there is a court order that states the parents share joint custody without designating that one parent is responsible for medical expenses, the parent whose birthday falls earliest in the plan year will be primary.
7. If a covered active employee or employee's dependent is also covered by Medicare, the coverage provided by the employer is primary, unless Medicare eligibility is due to end stage renal disease and the coordination period has been exhausted.
8. If a covered retiree, survivor, or long-term disability participant, or a covered dependent of any of these, is eligible for Medicare, the Medicare-eligible member is not eligible for active employee coverage under the member's health plan, except during an end stage renal disease coordination period.
B. If the other health benefit plan contains a coordination
of benefits provision establishing the substantially same order of benefit
determination rules as the ones in this section, the following will apply in
the order of priority listed:
1. The plan that lists the person receiving services as the
enrollee, insured or policyholder, not as a dependent, will provide primary
coverage. There is one exception. If the person is also entitled to Medicare,
and as a result of federal law Medicare is (i) secondary to the plan covering
the person as a dependent; and (ii) primary to the plan covering the person as
other than a dependent (e.g., a retired employee), then the benefits of the
plan covering the person as a dependent are determined before those of the plan
covering the person as other than a dependent.
2. Primary coverage for an enrolled child will be the plan
which lists the parent whose month and day of birth occurs earliest in the
calendar year as an enrollee, insured, or policyholder, except in the following
circumstances:
a. When the parents are separated or divorced, primary
coverage will be the plan that covers the child as a dependent of the parent
with custody. The plan of the husband or wife of a remarried parent with
custody may provide primary coverage if the remarried parent with custody does
not have a plan that covers the child.
b. Despite subdivision 2 a of this subsection, if there is
a court order that requires one parent to provide hospital or medical/surgical
coverage for the child, primary coverage will be that parent's plan. If the
specific terms of a court decree state that the parents will share joint
custody and the court decree does not state that one of the parents is
responsible for health care expenses of the child, then the rule set forth in
the first sentence of subdivision 2 of this subsection, the birthday rule, will
apply.
3. If subdivisions 1 and 2 of this subsection do not apply,
primary coverage will be the plan that has covered the participant for the
longest uninterrupted period of time. There are two exceptions to this rule:
a. The benefits of the plan that covers the person as a
working employee (or the employee's dependent) will be determined before those
of the plan that covers the person as a laid-off or retired employee (or the
employee's dependent).
b. The benefits of the plan that covers the person as an
employee (or the employee's dependent) will be determined before those of the
plan that covers the person under a right of continuation pursuant to federal
or state law.
B. When the participant's health plan is the primary coverage, it pays first. When the participant's health plan is the secondary coverage, it pays second as follows:
1. The plan administrator calculates the amount the participant's health plan would have paid if it had been primary coverage, then coordinates this amount with the primary plan's payment. The participant's health plan's payment in combination with the other plan's payment will never exceed the amount the participant's health plan would have paid if it had been the participant's primary coverage.
2. Some plans provide services rather than making a payment (i.e., a group model HMO). When such a plan is the primary coverage, the participant's health plan will assign a reasonable cash value for the services and that will be considered the plan's primary payment. The participant's health plan will then coordinate with the primary plan based on that value.
3. In no event will the participant's health plan pay more in benefits as secondary coverage than it would have paid as primary coverage.
C. If a plan does not have a coordination of benefits
provision establishing substantially the same order of benefit determination
rules as the ones in this section, that plan will be the primary coverage.
D. If, under the priority rules, the state plan is the
primary coverage, participants will receive unreduced benefits for covered
services to which they are entitled under this plan.
E. If the other plan is the primary coverage, the
participant's benefits will be reduced so that the total benefit paid under
this plan and the other plan will not exceed the benefits payable for covered
services under this plan absent the other plan. In calculating benefits that
would have been paid under this plan absent the other plan, any reduction in
benefits for failure to receive a referral will not be considered. Benefits
that would have been paid if the participant had filed a claim under the
primary coverage will be counted and included as benefits provided. In a
calendar year, benefits will be coordinated as claims are received.
F. When a health benefit plan provides benefits in the form
of services, a reasonable cash value will be assigned to each covered service.
This cash value will be considered a "benefit payment."
G. At the option of the plan administrator, payments may be
made to anyone who paid for the coordinated services the participant received.
These benefit payments by the administrator are ones that normally would have
been made to the employee or on the employee's behalf to a facility or
provider. The benefit payments made by the administrator will satisfy the
obligation to provide benefits for covered services.
H. C. If the administrator provided primary
coverage and discovers later that it should have provided secondary coverage,
the administrator has the right to recover the excess payment from the employee
or any other person or organization. If excess benefit payments are made on
behalf of the employee, the employee must cooperate with the administrator in
exercising its right of recovery.
I. D. Employees are obligated to supply the plan
administrator all information needed to administer this coordination of
benefits provision. This must be done before an employee is entitled to receive
benefits under this plan. Further, the employees must agree that the
administrator has the right to obtain or release information about covered
services or benefits received. This right will be used only when working with
another person or organization to settle payments for coordinated services. The
employee's prior consent is not required.
1VAC55-20-460. Alternative health benefit plans.
The department also offers several health maintenance
organization and preferred provider organization plans which that
are available to participants residing in the service area of the HMO or PPO. A
list of these plans is available upon request to the department.
Non-Medicare-eligible retirees have the same enrollment options as active employees.
Retirees must enroll in a plan within 31 days of separation for retirement. A separating state employee who defers retirement will not be eligible to enroll in a retiree medical plan when the former employee seeks retirement benefits.
FORMS (1VAC55-20)
Adoption Agreement.
Health Benefits Program Application.
Enrollment Application/Waiver Form SHBP (rev. 3/01).
Out of Area Exception Form.
Name/Address Change.
Claim Forms.
Extended Coverage.
Explanation of Benefits.
Interagency Transfer Invoice.
HIPAA Certificate.
Adoption Agreement, T20082 (R1/02)
Commonwealth of Virginia Health Benefits Program Application, T20445 (rev. 1/13)
Enrollment Form - The Local Choice Health Benefits Program, T20911 (1/14)
General Notice of Extended Coverage Rights (rev. 3/05)
Interagency Transfer Invoice, Department of Accounts DA-02-039 (rev. 7/86)