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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Oct 30 2015

Full Issue

GM Contract Would Improve Newer Workers' Health Coverage, Could Raise Employee Spending

The agreement with the UAW, which still awaits a union ratification vote, provides better coverage for the 11,000 people who were hired since October 2007. But the union members could face higher costs if the plan is affected by the "Cadillac" tax scheduled to take effect on generous health plans in 2018.

Detroit Free Press: UAW-GM Deal Would Improve Newer Workers' Health Plan

UAW negotiators bargained significantly better health care coverage for about 11,000 General Motors workers hired since October 2007 and the automaker will pay for most of it. But if a majority of 52,700 workers ratify the tentative agreement reached last weekend, they could face more out-of-pocket expenses, if the company gets hit by a new tax, dubbed the "Cadillac Tax," that looms in 2018 if lobbyists lose their efforts to have it repealed. (Gardner, 10/29)

Meanwhile, the federal government is announcing an expansion of coverage to domestic partners.

The Washington Post: Eligibility For Federal Employee Long-Term Care Insurance To Expand

Opposite-sex domestic partners would gain the right to apply for a long-term care insurance program for federal employees under the same terms now applying to same-sex partners, under a policy change to be published Friday. Rules from the Office of Personnel Management represent another step in the evolution of eligibility for benefits associated with federal employment in recent years, some driven by the Obama administration and others by court rulings. (Yoder, 10/29)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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