Date: Fri 01-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 01-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
self-insurance-school
Full Text:
Officials Say Self-Insurance Gamble Is Paying Off
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
There's always an element of risk when a town or a school district is
self-insured, but local officials are convinced the practice has saved
millions of dollars for Newtown.
"Being self-insured has saved $3.5 million for the town since we started in
1982," Board of Education President Herb Rosenthal said. "Claims vary from
year to year but overall being self-insured has been a big savings."
Mr Rosenthal and Municipal Finance Director Benjamin Spragg made separate
presentations to the Legislative Council recently to discuss the status of the
self-insurance health benefit plans and to request funding for next year.
"Claims are down slightly this year," Mr Rosenthal said. "We anticipate we
will need $1,692,000 in the operating budget for next year - the same as this
year - plus we also had $827,000 in this fund as of the end of January. The
big variable is what happens between now and (the end of the fiscal year on)
June 30."
TR Paul, the third party administrator of the school district insurance plan,
estimates claims will amount to $2,233,000 next year, Mr Rosenthal said.
Mr Rosenthal said the school plan has 447 "insured units" which include
single, two-person and family coverage. The school district includes the first
$80,000 in claims for each covered unit; claims over that amount are covered
by outside insurers. The district also has a $3.4 million cap on the total
amount of claims it will pay each year; after that, an outside "stop-loss"
insurance plan goes into effect.
School district employees generally contribute one percent of their salary
toward health coverage; some administrators contribute up to two percent. This
helps to cover about 20 percent of the cost of the plan, Mr Rosenthal said,
while the district pays the other 80 percent.
In 1992 the town began a self-funded health insurance plan for municipal
employees. For the first year, actually nine months of coverage, the town put
$850,000 into the plan.
"It was a horrible year for claims - we spent it all," Mr Spragg said. "The
following year we funded it with $1.1 million and almost spent all of that,
too."
In the third year, however, claims dropped. The following year Council reduced
the funding, but claims went up. Council reduced the funding a little more,
hedging that claims would go down, but 1995-96 appears to be turning out to be
the worst year yet as far as claims go, Mr Spragg said.
"We're having a rough year," he said. "Our aggragrate stop-loss is $1,187,000
and I estimate that we will exceed it."
For next year's budget, Mr Spragg recommended that the town increase its
funding to $900,000. The Board of Selectmen approved $850,000, an amount Mr
Spragg said he had no problem accepting.
"Our aggregate stop-loss for next year is $1.3 million," he said. "If we max
out this year and we do it again next year, we probably won't have any reserve
fund in June 1997. But if we only have $800,000 in claims, we will have
$500,000 left."
The chance that claims may be low and money will be left is what makes
self-insurance popular. "If you pay insurance premiums, the money is gone even
if there are few claims," Mr Spragg said. "I estimate that we've saved
hundreds of thousands of dollars."
