To receive this increase out of the blue is something they hadn’t planned for—so this is really a financial hardship.
(01/02/12) Unions representing more than 100,000 New York State employees are taking the state Department of Civil Service, the state's employee health plan, and Governor Andrew Cuomo to federal court over an increase in health insurance costs for retirees. Nora Flaherty has the details.
The unions
represent SUNY employees, state corrections officers, state troopers, police
investigators and other state workers. The groups
filed suit Wednesday. They’re arguing that a recent 2% increase in the
percentage of insurance premiums retirees have to pay is illegal. They say the
state isn’t allowed to increase what union members have to pay after they’ve
already retired.
Don
Feldstein is a spokesman for the United University Professions, which represents
4,000 SUNY retirees. He says that 2% increase could mean some retirees would
pay more than $1100 more per year for their health insurance. "These are retirees
obviously and most are on fixed incomes. And they’re having a hard enough time
making ends meet as it is. But then after October 1st to receive
this increase out of the blue is something they hadn’t planned for—so this is
really a financial hardship on them," Feldstein said.
Governor
Cuomo’s office didn’t return NCPR’s calls in time for this story, but the
Albany Times Union reports that a spokesman for the governor said higher health
costs have previously been passed along to retired workers and this boost
should be acceptable, too.
The Retired Public Employees’ association filed a similar
lawsuit in state court early in December. Feldstein says his union is hoping
the federal court will roll back the new increase.