File Download: 02-023

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OPINION OF TRUSTEES
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In Re
Complainant: Employees
Respondent: Employer
ROD Case No: 02-023 – April 19, 2006
Trustees: Micheal W. Buckner, A. Frank Dunham, Michael H. Holland, and
Elliot A. Segal.
The Trustees have reviewed the facts and circumstances of this dispute concerning the provision
of benefits under the terms of the Employer Benefit Plan.
Background Facts
The Complainants include Employees who are currently employed by the Respondent and former
Employees who incurred medical bills while employed by the Respondent. The representative
for the Complainants claims that the Respondent has failed to pay health claims in a timely
manner as required by the terms of the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement and the
Employer Benefit Plan. As a result, the Complainants have received collection notices and
statements from providers threatening collection action if the outstanding bills are not paid.
On March 11, 2005, a Funds’ staff member spoke with the Respondent’s Plan Administrator,
who stated that Accordia was the Respondent’s insurance carrier through March 31, 2004. The
Respondent then changed to Corporate Benefit from April 1, 2004 through September 30, 2004.
Allied Benefits Administration has been the insurance carrier since October 1, 2004. In February
2005, the Plan Administrator stated that he received a large envelope of claims from Corporate
Benefit. Some of the claims had been paid and others were duplicates. He stated that he
informed the employees that if they had unpaid claims for services prior to October 2004, they
should send him a copy of the bills.
A representative for the Respondent submitted information indicating that many of the medical
bills originally submitted in the dispute have been paid. The representative also indicated that he
is still checking on some of the bills submitted in connection with this dispute and will provide
additional information as soon as liability or payment has been verified. The bills in question
have dates of service ranging from August 2004 to July 2005.
After the ROD was filed, the representative for the Complainants worked with the Plan
Administrator to sort through the unpaid claims in an attempt to settle the dispute. According to
the Complainants’ representative, although the Respondent paid a number of outstanding claims
originally submitted, late payment of claims by the Respondent continues to be an on-going
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ROD Case No. 02-023
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problem for the Employees. Therefore, the representative requested that the dispute be presented
to the Trustees for review.
The Respondent is signatory to a modified 2002 National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement
(“2002 Wage Agreement”), effective January 1, 2003 through December 31, 2006. This
Agreement provides health coverage under an 80/20 plan and requires Employees to pay a
premium payment which is deducted monthly from the Employees’ gross pay.
Dispute
Is the Respondent providing health benefits coverage for the Complainants as required under the
terms of the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement and Employer Benefit Plan?
Positions of the Parties
Position of the Complainants: The Respondent is not providing health coverage as required under
the terms of the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement and Employer Benefit Plan because
the Complainants receive collection notices and statements from providers threatening collection
action if the outstanding bills are not paid.
Position of the Respondent: The Respondent is providing health benefits coverage for the
Complainants as required under the terms of the Employer Benefit Plan and Wage Agreement.
Many of the medical bills originally submitted in the dispute have been paid. Furthermore, the
information submitted by the Complainants’ representative “was selective in an obvious attempt
to portray the Company [as] not making payment[s] or progress surrounding the medical bill
dilemmas.”
Pertinent Provisions
Article XX (c)(3)(i) of the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 2002 provides in
pertinent part:
(3)(i) Each signatory Employer shall establish and maintain an Employee benefit
plan to provide, implemented through an insurance carrier(s), health and other nonpension benefits for its Employees covered by this Agreement as well as pensioners under
the 1974 Pension Plan and Trust whose last signatory classified employment was with
such Employer. The benefits provided by the Employer to its eligible Participants
pursuant to such plans shall be guaranteed during the term of this Agreement by that
Employer at levels set forth in such plans.
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ROD Case No. 02-023
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Article I (1), (2) and (4) of the 2002 Employer Benefit Plan provide:
Article I – Definitions
The following terms shall have the meanings herein set forth:
(1) “Employer” means (Employer’s Name).
(2) “Wage Agreement” means the National Bituminous Coal Wage
Agreement of 2002, as amended from time to time and any successor
agreement.
(4) “Employee” shall mean a person working in a classified job for the
Employer, eligible to receive benefits hereunder.
Article II A. (5) of the 2002 Employer Benefit Plan provides:
Article II – Eligibility
The persons eligible to receive the health benefits pursuant to Article III are as follows:
A. Active Employees
(5) A new Employee will be eligible for health benefits from the first
day worked with the Employer.
Discussion
Article XX (c)(3)(i) of the 2002 Wage Agreement requires an Employer to provide an Employer
Benefit Plan that is implemented through an insurance carrier(s) for health and other non-pension
benefits. It further requires that “benefits provided by the Employer to its eligible Participants
pursuant to such plans shall be guaranteed during the term of this Agreement by that Employer at
levels set forth in such plans.” Article II. A of the 2002 Employer Benefit Plan provides health
benefits coverage to active employees working in classified jobs for a signatory Employer.
The Complainants in this case have received collection notices because the Respondent has
failed to pay the Complainants’ medical bills in a timely manner. Although the Employer
Benefit Plan does not specify a time period for processing and payment of medical claims,
Department of Labor regulations require the payment of a clean claim—a claim that does not
need additional information to be processed—within 30 days. The Funds, for example, reviews
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ROD Case No. 02-023
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seventy percent of claims within a four-day period and pays a reviewed claim within seven to ten
days. Ninety percent of claims are reviewed within a ten-day period.
In ROD 98-046, the Trustees addressed the issue of processing undisputed or clean claims in a
timely manner and found that the time taken by the Employer or its agent to process and pay
health benefit claims should not cause collection action to be taken against the beneficiary nor
result in any other action that would impair the creditworthiness of the beneficiary. The Trustees
also noted that the Employer must insulate and defend the beneficiary against any such actions
initiated by the provider(s).
Opinion of the Trustees
The Respondent’s failure to process clean or undisputed health benefits claims for the
Complainants in a timely manner does not conform to the requirements of the Department of
Labor, the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement or the Employer Benefit Plan. The
processing time taken by the Respondent or its agent to adjudicate undisputed health benefit
claims may not cause collection action to be taken against a Complainant nor result in any other
action that would impair the creditworthiness of a Complainant. The Respondent must insulate
and defend Complainants against any such actions initiated by the provider(s).