Contact
Name

Email

Phone:

Equiry Type

Comments

Enter Code:  
 

 
  Topics  
  Accident Claims
Divorce
Employment
Estate
Immigration
Law
Lemon Law
Medical Malpractice
No Win No Fee
Personal Injury
Taxes
 
 

Cobra Notice

AN EMPLOYEE QUIT LAST YEAR AND YOU'RE PRETTY CERTAIN THAT YOU SENT HIM A COBRA NOTICE, BUT CAN=T PROVE IT. YOU WANT TO KNOW YOUR POTENTIAL LIABILITY? B IT COULD BE STAGGERING!

An employer is required to notify an employee and qualified beneficiaries of their rights to continue their group health plan benefits within 14 days from the date notified of a Aqualifying event.@ 26 U.S.C. '4980B(f)(6)(d). A qualifying event is an event which disqualifies an employee or a qualified beneficiary from further participation in the employer=s group health plan. The employer can treat a notice sent to an employee=s spouse as notice to all of the dependent children residing with that spouse.

The Internal Revenue Code imposes an excise tax on any employer maintaining a group health plan who fails to meet COBRA requirements. The IRS can assess a penalty of $100 per day during the noncompliance period for each qualified beneficiary affected by the failure to comply. If it affects two or more qualified beneficiaries in the same family, the maximum is $200 per day.

When computing the noncompliance period, it commences on the date the employer=s failure to comply with COBRA first occurs and ends on the earlier of: (1) the date the failure is corrected, or (2) six months after the last day the qualified beneficiary=s COBRA continuation coverage could have been terminated not including terminations for failure to make payment. For failure to provide coverage, however, the noncompliance period does not commence until 45 days after COBRA coverage is requested.

If an employer inadvertently fails to comply with COBRA, the noncompliance period does not commence until the employer knew or should have known of its noncompliance with COBRA. An employer will be deemed to have inadvertently failed to comply with COBRA if it can prove that it did not know and had no reason to know that it was in noncompliance with COBRA requirements. Yeah, good luck with that!

An employer is afforded a 30 day grace period for correcting its failure to comply with COBRA. The grace period begins on the date when the employer knew or should have known that the failure existed. Provided that the employer=s compliance failure was the result of reasonable cause and not willful neglect, the IRS cannot impose the excise tax on an employer who corrects the violation within the grace period.

A COBRA compliance failure is deemed corrected if (1) the failure is retroactively undone to the extent possible, and (2) the qualified beneficiary is placed in a financial position as good as the position which he would have enjoyed had the employer not failed to comply with COBRA. Moreover, the beneficiary must be treated in the manner which he would have enjoyed had he elected the most favorable continuation coverage available under the plan.

ERISA also subjects employers, who fail to provide the required COBRA notices to qualified beneficiaries, to a $100 a day fine for each participant to whom the employer fails to provide the statutorily required notice. ERISA penalties apply to all group health plans except small employer plans (less than 20 employees); church plans; government plans; and other non-ERISA plans.

This article is free for republishing
Source: http://www.goinglegal.com/article_85920_88.html


Don't Miss...
  1. Using Beneficiary Designations to Avoid Probate
  2. Beneficiary Controlled Trust Fact Sheet
  3. Estate Planning And The Revocable Living Trust
  4. The Revocability or Irrevocability of a Trust
  5. Compromising With The IRS
  6. When to use USCIS Premium Processing
  7. Battling the IRS
  8. IRS Non-Filer? Don't Go to Jail! Here's What to Do:
  9. The New Rage: Incentive Trusts
  10. Do it Yourself Last Will and Testament Tips
  11. ILIT's Offer Exceptional Estate Tax Planning Benefits
  12. Pet Trusts - Do You Have One For Your Pets?
  13. Small Business: Don’t Screw Around with the IRS.
  14. The Living Trust - Is It For You?
  15. Common Questions Asked About Last Will Forms
  16. Small Business IRS Tax Debt: Is Being Your Own Boss; a Dream or a Nightmare
  17. Everything You Must Know Before you Fill out Your Last Will and Testament Form
  18. Partnership Agreements
  19. Divorce, Taxes, and the IRS
  20. Legal Designations Of People Under US Immigration Law
  21. Are you in compliance? - Sexual Harassment Prevention – California's New Law (AB1825)
  22. Should You Take A Lie Detector Test?
  23. How To Profit From Your Great Idea! 3 Critical Steps to Take Your Idea from Concept to Cash Flow
  24. FAA, IRS don't regulate in the same language -
  25. Philadelphia Family Law Topics
  26. New Offer in Compromise Rules! Is Tax Debt Relief Dead?
  27. Joint Tenancies for Probate Avoidance
  28. Permax Heart Valve Damage
  29. Estate Planning - Protecting Your Spouse.
  30. Personal Injury Litigation
Latest...
  1. New York Scaffold Law Protects New York Construction Workers
  2. Australian Workplace Agreements Explained
  3. Information Technology - Wrongful Termination of Contract
  4. IT - Negotiating certain Terms in IT Contracts
  5. Employment Law - Excessive Working Hours - Breach of Duty of Care
  6. Employment Law - Claims - Overseas Worker
  7. Employment Law: Time Limits for Bringing Employment Tribunal Claims
  8. Employment Law: Unfair Dismissal - Employer Succeeded in Changing Terms of Employment
  9. Employment Law: Attendance Rewards - Legal Ramifications
  10. Employment Law - Unfair Dismissal - Constructive Dismissal
 
     
     
| Accident Claims | Divorce | Employment | Estate | Immigration | Law | Lemon Law | Medical Malpractice | No Win No Fee | Personal Injury | Taxes |