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Frequently Asked Questions
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HSA
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What is a Health
Savings Account?
An HSA is a
tax-free savings plan from which covered
employees and individuals can pay for certain
qualified medical expenses. Consumers are
allowed to deposit pre-tax dollars into an HSA
up to certain yearly limits. For 2008, the
limits are $2,900 for individuals and $5,800 for
families. An HSA can only be used in conjunction
with a qualifying High-Deductible Health Plan,
and is only available for people under
sixty-five years of age.
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Will money deposited
into an HSA be lost if not used by the end of the
year?
No. Many people
worry that they may be getting a “use it or lose
it” account, as were some of the older medical
savings plans. An HSA works more like an IRA,
except that the tax-free deposits and
withdrawals are limited to use for qualified
medical expenses. If the money deposited in any
given year is not used by year’s end, the money
remains available for later use in subsequent
years, accruing interest.
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What are
High-Deductible Health Plans (HDHPs) and how do they
work?
These insurance
plans are newer on the market than the more
traditional HMOs and PPOs. For the year of 2008,
the minimum deductibles for an individual and a
family are $1,100 and $2,200, respectively. The
maximum out-of-pocket for any HDHP is $5,600 for
individual coverage and $11,200 for family
coverage. A High-Deductible Health Plan works
like this: Instead of paying more up-front
monthly premiums to an insurance company to get
a co-pay structure at the point of service, a
lower monthly insurance premium is paid. When an
HDHP insured goes for medical service, he or she
is charged the negotiated discounted rate which
the insurance company has contracted with its
network providers, at an average 25-45% discount
from the uninsured rates. All payments made by
an insured for any qualified medical expense,
such as hospital charges, doctors’ visits and
covered prescription drugs (if applicable to the
plan) are applied toward the deductible. When
paired with an HSA, the insured can use tax-free
dollars from their Health Savings Account to pay
for these discounted services. The overall cost
savings for insureds that select HDHP HSA
accounts are generally quite dramatic.
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What are “qualified
expenses” for an HSA? Are they limited to what is
covered by the insurance plan?
The complete list
of qualified expenses for health savings
accounts includes a whole gamut of medical
expenses, some of which are normally covered
under health plans and some of which are not.
Regardless of whether these expenses would be
covered on a specific health plan, the HSA owner
can use HSA dollars to cover any of the approved
expenses as listed in section 213d of the
Internal Revenue Code. A partial list of
expenses which are considered HSA-eligible are:
acupuncture, alcoholism treatment, ambulance,
anesthetists, artificial limbs, birth control
pills (by prescription), blood tests, braces,
cardiographs, chiropractor, contact lenses,
contraceptive devices, crutches, dental
treatment and x-rays, dentures, dermatologist,
diagnostic fees, drug addiction therapy, drugs
(prescription), eyeglasses, guide dog,
gynecologist, hearing aids, hospital bills,
hydrotherapy, insulin treatments, lab tests,
metabolism tests, neurologist, obstetrician,
operating room costs, ophthalmologist, optician,
oral surgery, organ transplant (including
donor's expenses), orthopedic shoes,
orthopedist, osteopath, oxygen and oxygen
equipment, pediatrician, physicians,
physiotherapist, postnatal treatments, prenatal
care, prescription medications, psychiatrist,
psychoanalyst, psychologist, psychotherapy,
radium therapy, registered nurse, special school
costs for the handicapped, spinal fluid test,
splints, sterilization, surgeon, therapy
equipment, transportation expenses (relative to
health care), vaccinations, vasectomy, vitamins
(if prescribed),wheelchair, and x-rays.
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Cancer Insurance
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What is cancer
insurance?
Cancer insurance
is supplementary coverage to help offset
financial setbacks which often come as a result
of cancer. While medical insurance will pay
benefits for established cancer treatments such
as chemotherapy and certain surgeries, there are
always expenses which are not covered by medical
policies. Direct medical costs are only a
portion of the total monetary toll cancer can
take on an individual or a family. Non-medical
costs add up quickly: transportation to and from
treatment centers (for the patient and a
companion), childcare, housekeeping assistance,
wigs, and counseling often are not covered. Add
to this the inevitable loss of income for the
cancer victim and a spouse who often becomes the
caretaker, and normal monthly expenditures
balloon into an insurmountable obstacle. Cancer
insurance pays benefits to the insured in
addition to whatever costs the medical insurer
pays.
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How does a cancer
policy work?
Whereas the medical insurance will pay medical
personnel and facilities for services rendered,
a cancer policy pays a monetary benefit directly
to the insured when the insured is diagnosed
with an internal cancer. This money can be used
by the insured for whatever expenses he or she
deems necessary. Most policies will pay a
lump-sum upon first diagnosis. Some policies
offer a large first-diagnosis lump-sum as their
benefit, while others pay a smaller lump sum and
subsequent payouts based on the insured’s
treatments and other incurred expenses.
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Is
a cancer policy a replacement for a major medical
policy?
No. A cancer
policy should by no means be considered a
replacement for major medical coverage. Cancer
insurance is meant to supplement a health
policy, and it usually covers expenses that
would not be covered by a health policy.
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Disability Income Insurance
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What is disability
income insurance?
Known by many
industry insiders as “paycheck insurance,”
disability income insurance is just that:
coverage for loss of income when a person
becomes disabled and unable to work. This
insurance pays a pre-specified percentage of the
insured’s income, should he or she become
disabled. The policies that fall under this
designation are most often differentiated by the
size of payments available, the definition of
disability, the length of the elimination
(waiting) period, the length benefit payments
are available, and often the type of employment
of the potential insured. Coverage may also be
limited by the cause of a disability, i.e., some
policies only cover disabilities caused by an
accident, others only cover disabilities caused
by illness.
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Why does an insurance
company only pay a percentage of income?
Insurance companies (and some states) limit the
amount of disability income coverage to prevent
creating a monetary incentive for a person to
stay on disability once he or she becomes
medically able to return to work. The amount of
benefits an insured receives from any one
insurance company is also dependent upon what
other benefits may be in place. An insurance
company will coordinate benefits with other
companies providing coverage to make sure a
person is not receiving more than the state’s
legal limit.
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Are disability
benefits taxable?
If a person pays
for a policy with after-tax (net) dollars, the
benefit will generally not be taxed; the amount
was already taxed through payroll. However, if
the policy was paid with pre-tax (gross) dollars
or paid fully by an employer, the benefits with
most likely be taxed.
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What are the main
types of disability insurance?
Short-term
Disability insurance generally has a short
elimination period of 0 to 14 days before
benefits are paid, and benefits are paid for a
limited amount of time, usually no more than two
years. Long-term Disability insurance has a
longer elimination period of several weeks to
several months and will pay benefits for several
years, to a specific age, or for life.
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Doesn’t Social
Security cover disabilities?
Social Security
is subject to a set of stringent requirements
which basically state that a person must be
totally, permanently disabled and unable to earn
income through any type of employment. There is
also a waiting period of 26 weeks from date of
total disability.
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Doesn’t Worker’s
Compensation cover disabilities?
Worker’s
Compensation only covers injuries sustained on
the job. Most debilitating accidents are known
to happen in or near the home. It is best to
have coverage for both eventualities.
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What are some
disability options for business owners?
If a business
owner becomes unable to work because of a
disability, income can dry up quickly and the
day-to-day expenses can quickly bankrupt a
company. A business owner can be protected by a
Business Overhead Expense (BOE) policy. This
type of insurance provides a business owner with
the money to pay day-to-day business expenses
until he or she recovers or can sell the
business. For businesses owned by a partnership,
a Disability Buy-Sell Agreement (funded by
disability insurance) can be quite useful should
a partner become disabled and therefore unable
to perform his or her duties. If a disability
appears to be permanent, the ensuing disability
checks would then buy out the disabled partner’s
interest in the company. The remaining partners
would then become the owners, and the disabled
partner would have cash equal to the value of
his or her ownership interest. Sometimes,
however, there are key people who do not have
any ownership in a business, but whose services
are deemed to be irreplaceable. A business owner
can cover this person with a Key Person
Disability policy, which would pay the company
benefits should this key person become disabled.
This money could then be used to offset
financial loss created by the absence of the key
employee or to pay somebody else to do the
person’s work until that person can return or be
effectively replaced.
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Health Insurance
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What are the main
types of Medical Expense Insurance?
Generally,
medical expense insurance can be classified
either as basic plans or major medical plans.
Basic plans usually only offer coverage for
surgical expense, hospital expense, or a
combination of the two. These basic plans will
generally cover the insured on a “first-dollar”
basis, with no deductible to be met prior to
receiving benefits. They usually reimburse 100%
of covered hospital and surgical expenses, up to
the contracted maximum. Conversely, major
medical plans normally cover a wider range of
medical costs, which may include hospital and
surgical expenses, non-surgical physicians’
expenses, private nursing services, x-ray and
laboratory services for diagnostic purposes,
prescription drugs, ambulance service, and many
other doctor-prescribed medical expenses and
services. Major medical plans also have higher
limits, but the insured takes a more active
role, sharing part of the costs of the covered
services; there are often deductible and
coinsurance responsibilities.
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What is a deductible?
It
is the amount that an insured has agreed to pay
before the insurance company becomes responsible
for paying benefits. It is a means of cost
sharing with the insurance company, and serves
to motivate the insured to use medical services
more wisely, thus keeping costs for the
insurance company down. This translates into
more savings for the consumer, reflected in
lower premium charges. Some plans offer services
only after a deductible is paid, and some offer
a combination of pre-deductible services (which
usually require a copayment) and services which
are only reimbursed after the deductible is
satisfied.
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What is coinsurance?
Coinsurance is
another way insurance companies keep costs down
by sharing responsibility with the insured. It
is usually applied after the deductible has been
met. Coinsurance is often called “percentage
participation.” On a policy with an 80/20
coinsurance provision, once the deductible has
been met, the insurance plan will then pay 80%
of covered medical expenses, and the insured is
responsible for the remaining 20%. Medical
expense plans often have a “stop-loss” limit, or
a coinsurance cap, which places a maximum limit
on the insured’s out-of-pocket expenses in any
given calendar year. Should the insured meet
both the deductible and the maximum
out-of-pocket limit, the insurance company then
covers all eligible expenses for the remainder
of the calendar year.
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What are copayments?
A copayment is a
set amount an insured is required to pay for a
certain medical service. Copayments are often
found in “managed care” medical plans for
doctor’s office visits, prescription drugs, and
even occasionally for emergency room or urgent
care clinic visits. Copayments usually do not
count toward a plan’s deductible.
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What are some common
exclusions from major medical expense plans?
Some of the most
universal exclusions are: routine
(non-emergency) dental and vision care; cosmetic
surgery (except for certain cases of birth
defects, injuries, and post-mastectomy
reconstruction); and on-the-job injuries and
illnesses which are covered by Workers’
Compensation.
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What is a preexisting
condition and what effect can it have on insurance
coverage?
A preexisting
condition is a medical condition that has
required treatment during a set amount of time
before an insured’s date of coverage. In the
state of Florida, this definition has been
expanded to include any “condition that would
have caused an ordinary prudent person to seek
medical advice, diagnosis, care or treatment,”
meaning that a person cannot wait until it is
obvious that medical attention will be needed to
buy insurance. Group health plans can exclude
coverage for a pre-existing condition for up to
12 months. Under individual health plans,
coverage for pre-existing conditions can vary.
Many plans carry exclusionary riders for
pre-existing conditions, which may be temporary
(for twelve months) or permanent (for the life
of the policy). The exclusion may be specific
for the affected body area only, or may be
general, for the entire related system. Some
insurers will agree to insure the individual,
but only with an increase in premium or
deductible. Some pre-existing conditions are
cause to exclude the person from any coverage at
all.
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What is the
difference between group and individual coverage?
Group policies
require an employer to pay a part of the
employee-only premiums to be able to apply. It
is underwritten based on the combined risk an
entire group presents, and is often “Guaranteed
issue,” meaning that the insurance company
cannot turn down an applicant. To qualify, an
employee must work a minimum number of hours per
week. Individual policies only cover one person
or a family unit. It is underwritten based on
the risk presented by the individual or family
applicants. The benefits available on individual
plans may be somewhat less than what is mandated
for group plans, so it is very important to
understand the benefits offered.
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Does it cost more to
use an agent or broker to buy insurance than it
would to deal directly with an insurance company?
No. Dealing with
an agent/broker does not cost any extra, and
there are many benefits to doing so. An agent
can compare the possible plans from several
different insurers to present the client with a
variety of viable options. An independent agent
can be a definite asset to a client, not only
when it is time to search for coverage, but also
for help afterwards with navigation through
issues that may arise. Since pricing for
individual policies is state-regulated, the
deciding factor in choosing an insurance agent
should be the level of quality service offered
both before the sale and during the life of a
policy.
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Can an insurance
company “single out” an individual client and cancel
a policy because of health problems?
No. An individual
with major health problems can, however, use up
all his/her benefits by exceeding their
contractual lifetime maximum.
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Do insurance
companies charge more to insure smokers than
non-smokers?
No, not under
group plans. Under individual plans, the answer
is often yes.
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What is a section 125
plan, and why is it important to know if one’s group
coverage falls under this classification?
A section 125
plan is a means for employees to pay for certain
employee benefits using pre-tax dollars.
Premiums are paid through the ease of payroll
deduction.
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What is COBRA and
what does it do?
In 1986, Congress
passed the Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act, which provided for
continuation of group health coverage benefits
which might otherwise be terminated. It allows
certain former employees, spouses, dependent
children, retirees, and former spouses with
continued health coverage at group rates when
coverage is lost due to certain specific events.
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Who is eligible for
COBRA benefits?
COBRA benefits are only available for companies
with more than 20 employees. If the company does
not offer group insurance, COBRA benefits do not
apply. Florida state law also includes a
“mini-COBRA” provision, which allows
continuation of group coverage for former
employees (or eligible dependents) of companies
with less than 20 employees. COBRA and
mini-COBRA coverage must be requested by the
former insured within thirty days of loss of
coverage. Qualified beneficiaries/qualifying
events include:
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Qualifying event |
Beneficiary
eligible
for COBRA |
Maximum
coverage
time |
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·
Reduced
hours
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Termination or voluntarily quitting job |
Employee
Spouse
Dependent child |
18 months |
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·
Employee becomes entitled to Medicare
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Legal separation or Divorce
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Death of employee |
Spouse
Dependent child |
36 months |
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·
Loss of dependent-child status |
Dependent child |
36 months |
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PEO
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What is a PEO?
A professional
employer organization (PEO) is a company which
contractually assumes and manages critical human
resource and personnel responsibilities which
can include payroll services, Workers’
Compensation, Human Resources and benefits
administration duties. A PEO will establish and
maintain an employer relationship with worksite
employees. Human Resource Outsourcing allows
businesses to focus on growing the company,
while the professional employer organization
handles all of the employee administration. In
regards to Human resources the Professional
Employer Organization is responsible for labor
compliance, unemployment claims, maintaining
employee files and employee handbooks. In the
area of risk management they handle all workers
compensation claims and update safety manuals
regularly. They also take care of all employee
health benefits and payroll matters including
tax filings.
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Are PEOs recognized
as employers?
PEOs operate in all fifty of the United States.
Twenty-three states provide some form of
specific licensing, registration, or regulation
for PEOs. Many states statutorily recognize PEOs
as the employer or co-employer of worksite
employees for purposes of workers' compensation
and state unemployment insurance taxes. The IRS
has long accepted the right of a Professional
Employer Organization to withhold and remit
federal income and unemployment taxes for
worksite employees in regards to tax filings.
The IRS has promulgated specific guidance
confirming the authority of PEOs to provide
retirement benefits to workers.
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What is the
difference between employee leasing and a PEO
arrangement?
Although older
statutes governing PEO services still use the
employee leasing terminology, PEOs are in fact
based upon the co-employment of an existing
workforce. Today, the major distinction is that
employee leasing or staffing service supplies
new workers on a temporary or project specific
basis. These leased employees return to the
staffing service for reassignment after
completion of their work at the client. Some
would define employee leasing as a supplemental,
temporary employment arrangement where one or
more workers are assigned to a customer for a
fixed period of time, often for a specific
project. This concept creates little long-term
equity or investment between the worker and
customer (much like leasing a car for two years
and knowing that you are using it for a specific
need but not building any long-term equity). A
Professional Employer Organization or
co-employment arrangement, however, involves all
or a significant number of the client's existing
worksite employees in a long-term, non-project
related, employment relationship. The PEO
assumes employer responsibility for employee
administration, workers compensation, labor
compliance, employment tax filings, employee
files, health benefits, and other human resource
purposes. Through the use of a PEO relationship,
client companies make a long-term investment in
their workers, because in most cases, the
Professional Employer Organization provides
access to health benefits, retirement savings
plans, and other critical employee benefits for
their worksite employees. In the event a PEO
relationship is terminated, the co-employees
will cease to work for the PEO but will continue
as employees of the client.
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What is the
difference between temporary staffing services and a
PEO arrangement?
Like employee
leasing, a temporary staffing service recruits
employees and assigns them to clients to support
or supplement the client's workforce in special
work situations, such as employee absences,
temporary skill shortages, or seasonal
workloads. These workers are traditionally only
a small portion of the client's workforce.
Professional Employer Organization services,
contractually assumes and manages employee
administration for all or a majority of a
client's workforce. Industry ratios identify the
PEO arrangement as a long-term relationship with
nearly 90% of our clients and worksite employees
remaining with the PEO for a year or longer.
Worksite employees participate in the PEOs full
range of employee benefits including, health
benefits, dental, and life insurance, vision
care, and retirement savings plans.
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Who uses a PEO?
The average
client customer of a PEO is a small business
with 16 worksite employees, though larger
businesses also find value in a PEO arrangement.
These small business customers include every
single type of business from accountants to
small manufacturers and every profession in
between including doctors, retailers, mechanics
and more. Other forms of HR Outsourcing include
the ASO and BPO model’s which are designed to
handle larger companies.
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How many Americans
are employed in a co-employment Professional
Employer Organization arrangement?
It is estimated
that 2-3 million Americans are currently
co-employed in a PEO arrangement. PEOs are
operating in every state and the industry
continues to grow more at an average of 20% each
year. Today, it is estimated there are around
800 PEO companies who are responsible for
generating more than $43 billion in gross
revenues. NAPEO member companies are estimated
to account for more than 70% of the industry's
gross revenues.
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How does a PEO
arrangement work?
Once a client
company contracts with a PEO, the PEO will then
co-employ the client's worksite employees. In
the relationship among a Professional Employer
Organization, a worksite employee, and a client
company, there exists a co-employment
relationship in which both the PEO and client
company have an employment relationship with the
worker. The PEO assumes responsibility and
liability for the employee administration such
as risk management or workers compensation,
personnel management, employee files, labor
compliance and payroll tax filings. The client
company retains responsibility for and manages
product development and production, business
operations, marketing, sales, and service. The
PEO and the client share certain
responsibilities for employment law compliance.
As a co-employer, the PEO will often provide
employee administration, labor compliance,
workers compensation, employee handbooks and
health benefits for the worksite employees.
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Why would a small
business use a PEO?
Small business
owners want to focus their time and energy on
the "business of their business" and not on the
"business of employment." As businesses grow,
most small business owners don't have the
necessary human resource training; payroll and
accounting skills; knowledge of regulatory
compliance; or backgrounds in risk management,
insurance and employee benefit programs to meet
the demands of being an employer. Human Resource
Outsourcing takes over the employee
administration for the business owner allowing
them to grow their business.
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Does the small
business owner lose control of his or her business?
No. The client
retains ownership of the company and control
over its operations. As co-employers, the PEO
and client will contractually share or allocate
employer responsibilities and liabilities. The
PEO will generally only assume responsibilities
and liabilities associated with a "general"
employer for purposes of employee
administration, payroll, taxes and benefits. The
client usually retains those rights and
responsibilities associated with "special"
employers related to actual business operations.
As such, the client will continue to have
responsibility for worksite safety and
compliance. The PEO will be responsible for
payroll and employment taxes, will maintain
employee files, employee handbooks and health
benefits. Because the Professional Employer
Organization may also be responsible for
workers' compensation, the PEO will also focus
on improving safety manuals and compliance. In
general terms, the PEO will focus on
employment-related issues and the client will be
responsible for the actual business operations.
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Why would a worker of
a small business want a PEO as an employer?
Workers seek
financial security, quality health insurance, a
safe working environment, and opportunities for
retirement savings. PEO services provide Fortune
500 quality employee benefits including, health
insurance and 401(k) savings plans, and
aggressive workplace risk management and safety
manuals. Job security is improved as the PEO's
economy of scale permits a business to lower
employment costs. When workers are provided
quality human resource services like employee
handbooks, safety manuals, grievance procedures,
and improved communications; job satisfaction
and productivity increases.
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Is this just a "fired
and rehired" scheme?
No. Workers are
not fired by the client business and rehired by
the PEO. Instead, a worker becomes an employee
of two employers in a co-employment
relationship. The PEO assumes employer
responsibilities and liabilities for the human
resource and personnel obligations of the
worksite employees. This responsibility includes
the employee wages and employment taxes,
workers' compensation and unemployment
insurance, and employee benefits. The small
business retains employer responsibilities and
supervision for the production of the products
or the delivery of services. HR Outsourcing,
otherwise known as PEO services, ASO and BPO
services are legal and approved through each
state’s department of labor as well as IRS code.
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Is this a scheme to
avoid providing health or retirement saving benefits
to rank and file workers?
No. The reverse
is generally true. Frequently, HR Outsourcing
arrangements are the only opportunity for a
worker of small businesses to receive Fortune
500 quality employee benefits like health
insurance, dental and vision care, life
insurance, retirement saving plans, job
counseling, adoption assistance, and educational
benefits. Without HR Outsourcing, a small
business can neither afford nor manage these
benefits.
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Who is responsible
for the employees’ wages and employment taxes?
Using Human
Resource Outsourcing through PEOs, ASO or BPO
programs, they assume responsibility and
liability for payment of wages and compliance
with all rules and regulations governing the
reporting and payment of federal and state taxes
on wages paid to its employees. PEOs have long
established their role as reporting income and
handling withholding, FICA and FUTA. In 2002,
the IRS issued guidance confirming the ability
of human resource outsourcing entities
(including PEO services) to offer qualified
retirement benefits.
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Who is responsible
for state unemployment taxes?
As the employer
for employment tax and employee benefits, PEOs
assume responsibility and liability for payment
of state unemployment taxes, and most states
recognize the PEO as the responsible entity. A
few states require the PEO to report
unemployment tax liability under its clients'
account number, and some states may hold the
client and PEO jointly liable for unemployment
taxes.
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Who is responsible
for employment laws and regulations?
Both the client
and the Professional Employer Organization have
compliance obligations. However, PEOs provide
worksite employees with coverage under the
entire spectrum of employment laws and
regulations, including federal, state, and local
discrimination laws, Title VII of the 1964 Civil
Rights Act, maintaining employee files, employee
handbooks, safety manuals, Age Discrimination in
Employment Act, ADA, FMLA, HIPAA, Equal Pay Act,
and COBRA. In many cases, these laws would not
apply to workers at small businesses without the
PEO relationship, since many statutes have
exemptions based upon the number of workers in a
work force. Once included in the PEO's
workforce, the workers are protected by these
laws.
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Who is responsible
for workers' compensation?
Many states
recognize the PEO as the employer of worksite
employees for purposes of providing workers'
compensation coverage.
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Does a PEO
arrangement impact a collective bargaining
agreement?
No. PEOs work
equally well in union and non-union worksites.
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
recognizes that, in co-employment relationships,
worksite employees are appropriately included in
the client employer's collective bargaining
unit. Where a collective bargaining agreement
exists, PEO services fully abide by the
agreement's terms. PEOs endorse the rights of
employees to organize, or not organize,
according to standards of the NLRB.
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Life Insurance
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What is life
insurance?
Life insurance is
a financial resource for your loved ones in the
event of your death. You enter into a contract
with an insurance company, which promises to
provide your beneficiary(ies) with a certain
amount of money upon your death. In return, you
make periodic payments, known as premiums. The
amount of the premiums generally depends on
factors such as your age, gender, occupation,
medical history and whether you intend to build
up cash value in your policy. Some policies may
require a medical exam. Certain types of life
insurance may also provide benefits for you and
your family while you're still living. Such
policies accumulate cash value on a tax-deferred
basis that can be used for future needs such as
supplementing your retirement income, help
provide for a child's education, and pay estate
taxes and funeral expenses.
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Do I need life
insurance?
The ability to
earn an income can be considered your family's
most valuable asset because your income allows
you to obtain other assets, particularly the
necessities of life and, of course, the creature
comforts. However, as we know, the ability to
earn an income is not guaranteed. Yet, the need
for income may continue for those who were
financially dependent upon you. Consequently,
your need for life insurance and the amount will
depend upon your personal and financial
circumstances. If any of the following
statements apply to you, you probably do need to
consider life insurance:
You have a spouse; You have dependent children;
You have an aging parent or disabled relative
who depends on you for support; You have another
loved one that you wish to provide for; You have
business or estate planning needs that life
insurance can satisfy; Your retirement pension
and savings are not enough to insure your lived
ones' futures against a rising cost of living.
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How can I choose the
policy that's right for me?
Life insurance is a long-term commitment. Before
buying any policy, ask yourself these very
important questions:
+How much
insurance do I need?
If I were to die, what would my spouse and
dependents need in order to live comfortably?
+In
addition to protection, what am I trying to
accomplish with life insurance?
Am I accumulating funds for education costs?
Providing away to pay estate taxes? Do I need
some additional supplemental income for my
retirement or emergencies?
+How much
can I afford to pay for a policy?
+Is
the insurance company I'm considering
financially secure?
Do they have a good claims payment history, good
customer service and competitive prices?
Independent companies such as Standard and
Poor's, A.M. Best, Moody's, Fitch and Weiss rate
insurance companies and their publications can
be found in your local library.
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What are my options?
There are four basic types of life insurance to
meet your individual needs.
+Term life
insurance.
Coverage is in effect for a fixed term or period
of time - usually one to 30 years - and usually
can be renewed. The policy pays your beneficiary
a fixed amount of money if you die during the
term of the policy.
+Whole
life insurance.
The premiums remain at a fixed level for the
duration of the contract. Over time, the policy
generally builds up cash value on a tax-deferred
basis. You should keep in mind that life
insurance should not be purchased solely for
accumulation. Its primary purpose is protection.
Also, withdrawals and/or loans will decrease the
death benefit.
+Universal
life insurance.
These policies are interest-sensitive and permit
the owner to adjust the death benefit and/or
premium payments, within limits, to fit the
owner's situation. Your net premium payments are
applied to the accumulation fund, which earns a
guaranteed interest rate. The monthly cost of
the death benefit and policy administration is
deducted from the accumulation fund. Since you
decide how much premium to pay, within limits,
some universal life policies even allow you to
skip payments. If you skip a premium payment,
the administrative and death benefit costs are
deducted from your cash value. The policy stays
in effect until your cash value can no longer
cover these costs. Universal life insurance
rates are subject to change, but the rate will
never fall below the minimum rate guaranteed in
the contract.
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How can I conserve
costs?
Here are some
ways you can save money when purchasing the life
insurance that's right for you: +Don't buy
insurance if you don't need it, and don't buy
more insurance than you actually need to provide
for your loved ones. +Shop for a
competitively-priced policy while you are in
good health. Don't smoke. Take care of yourself
by exercising regularly and maintaining a
moderate weight. +If you buy term insurance,
look for guaranteed renewable policies. That way
you won't have to shop for a new policy (with
higher premiums) when you're older. +Buy
additional riders, which are optional forms of
coverage, only if you need them. +Shop around
and compare prices and coverage. Get at least
three quotes on comparable policies, and ask
questions about the policy's renewal and
withdrawal provisions.
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What if I already
have life insurance coverage?
Even if you have
life insurance, keep in mind that life changes
and, as it changes, so do your needs for
protection. Your life insurance needs should be
reviewed every few years. Any of the changes
listed below should prompt you to sit down with
your insurance agent to make sure your plan is
still appropriate:
You have recently
married or divorced; A child or grandchild has
been born or adopted; Your health or your
spouse's health has deteriorated; You have begun
to provide care or financial help to a parent; A
loved one will require assistance or long term
care; You have recently purchased a new home;
Your children or grandchildren are about to
enter school or college; You or your spouse
retired or will retire early; You or your spouse
has been promoted recently; You have refinanced
your home mortgage in the past six months; You
or your spouse has received an inheritance.
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Can I trade or
replace my policy?
You can trade or
replace your policy, but it's not something to
be considered lightly, regardless of whether you
are thinking of switching policies within the
same company or switching from one company to
another. New policies typically have high costs
the first few years and there is normally a new
"contestability period" during which the insurer
can cancel the policy and refuse to pay death
benefits if an application was misleading. If
you want to increase your total life insurance,
it may be better to keep your old policy and
simply add a new one, or increase your specified
face amount under the same life insurance
policy.
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Long Term Care
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What is long term
care?
Long term care
refers to assistance with the very basic,
everyday activities that most of us can do for
ourselves. We call them ADLs or Activities of
Daily Living. As a result of illness, injury or
advanced age, many people need assistance in
order to eat or dress or bathe. The need for
long term care may also result because a person
has cognitive impairment. Some people need
supervision or reminders to accomplish every day
activities, such as using the toilet, eating,
bathing, dressing, and so forth.
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How long is
“long-term”?
“Long term” cannot be uniquely defined. In 1996,
the Federal government effectively defined a
“long-term” need for assistance as one that
lasts at least 90 days. Some policies provide
coverage on the first day that the insured
person meets the criteria for benefits. Others
require 30, 60, 90, or 120 days of assistance
before benefits become payable.
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Who pays for long
term care?
Approximately
half of all long term care expense is paid by
state Medicaid programs. About one-third is paid
out of pocket by individuals and their families.
Medicare only provides for some skilled care in
some very “limited” situations. Neither Medicare
supplemental insurance nor major medical
coverage provided by most companies pays for
long term care. This leaves approximately
one-sixth of the total cost to be covered by
other government programs and private insurance.
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Who should consider
purchasing long term care insurance?
Anyone who is age
45 or older should consider long term care
insurance when planning his or her insurance
needs. "Consider" does not necessarily mean
"purchase". Depending upon a person's particular
insurance budget, there may be other insurance
needs that deserve priority. Certainly, the
purchase of long term care insurance should
never create a financial hardship.
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What are the factors
I should consider in analyzing my need for coverage?
1. Scope of
facilities in which treatment must be performed
(e.g. nursing home vs. assisted living) 2. Scope
of "professionals" who can perform the care
(e.g. nurses vs. aids.) 3. How benefits are
paid: Reimbursement or indemnity 4. Maximum
lifetime benefits 5. Maximum daily benefits 6.
The conditions that "trigger" benefits 7.
Elimination (or waiting) period before benefits
begin 8. Inflation protection 9. Qualified or
non-qualified policy 10. Discounts for husband
and wife 11. Restoration of benefits 12. Waiver
of premium if benefits are being paid 13.
Nonforfeiture benefits if you stop paying
premiums 14. Premium paying period 15. Respite
care
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Why should someone 45
years old worry about long term care?
It is difficult
to know in advance who among us is going to need
long term care. Also, it is difficult to predict
who will develop a medical condition between the
ages 45 and 60 that would preclude the purchase
of long term care insurance -- when the
potential need for assistance with ADLs is just
a few years away. Another consideration is the
premium, which is generally lower at younger
ages. Early purchase can make long term care
coverage affordable later on, particularly after
retirement.
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Does medicare cover
long term care?
Medicare will
only provide for some skilled care in very
limited situations. It was not designed to cover
activities of daily living. Rather, it was
designed to cover acute care or skilled care
such as that provided during a short hospital
stay.
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Does medicaid cover
long term care?
Yes, but in very
limited situations. Medicaid will generally
apply only to those with very low incomes and
very few assets. Even then, there is only
limited choice of what and where benefits will
be provided. For example, there might be limited
choice of physician and facility, no control
over the number of people sharing a room, or no
ability for the family to pay for any extras.
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Does medical
insurance cover long term care?
Although medical
insurance has some aspects of long term care,
they are not the same thing. For example, some
medical plans may pay for the services of a
nurse while you are recovering from an illness
or an injury that requires medical attention.
This medical benefit is very limited. Once you
are better or reach the maximum benefit for
nursing services, this benefit would cease to be
available. Medical insurance is not designed to
cover activities of daily living. Long term care
is designed to cover activities of daily living.
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What kind of care is
covered by long term care policies?
overed expenses
can vary from policy to policy. In a
comprehensive policy, benefits are paid for
services delivered in nursing facilities,
assisted living facilities, adult day care
centers, or at home. A non-comprehensive policy
restricts the benefits to services that are
provided in nursing facilities. Care is further
subdivided into skilled care and custodial care.
Skilled care is generally ordered by a physician
under a plan of treatment, and is provided 24
hours a day. It is usually provided in a nursing
home. Personal care or custodial care helps a
person perform ADLs (activities of daily living)
-- assistance that can be provided in almost any
setting.
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What activities are
included in the ADLs (Activities of Daily Living)?
Technically, ADLs
refer to the triggers that would indicate that
benefits might become payable. The broadest
definition would include ambulating (walking),
bathing, continence, dressing, eating,
transferring to or from a bed or wheel chair,
and using toilet facilities. The actual ADL's
that are considered and the number needed to
trigger benefits vary from policy to policy.
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