testedmonkey
Member
What is the name of your state? California
When I was hired at my last job, medical benefits were supposed to kick in after 30 days. It was not explained to me that the company had each employee apply for an individual health plan that the company would then pay the premium on. My application for health coverage was rejected due to my medical history so I had no coverage until I got married a year later and went on my husband's plan. At that point, the company wrote me a separate check every month to compensate for the after-tax cost my husband was charged for my health coverage. In the year without coverage, they reimbursed me for any office visits or medications I needed for general illnesses. However, they declined to do so for certain other employees in the same situation.
No other employee who was hired during my 2 years there ever qualified for the individual plan. Another employee ended up getting her own individual plan after a year+ of no coverage, and the company pays the premium on it. The company still boasts to new hires that they offer medical benefits.
Is this practice illegal? It never sat right with me and now that I'm no longer there, I'd really like to know if what they're doing is against the law.
When I was hired at my last job, medical benefits were supposed to kick in after 30 days. It was not explained to me that the company had each employee apply for an individual health plan that the company would then pay the premium on. My application for health coverage was rejected due to my medical history so I had no coverage until I got married a year later and went on my husband's plan. At that point, the company wrote me a separate check every month to compensate for the after-tax cost my husband was charged for my health coverage. In the year without coverage, they reimbursed me for any office visits or medications I needed for general illnesses. However, they declined to do so for certain other employees in the same situation.
No other employee who was hired during my 2 years there ever qualified for the individual plan. Another employee ended up getting her own individual plan after a year+ of no coverage, and the company pays the premium on it. The company still boasts to new hires that they offer medical benefits.
Is this practice illegal? It never sat right with me and now that I'm no longer there, I'd really like to know if what they're doing is against the law.