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How to select a COBRA administrator
Untitled Document What to look for. What To Ask for. What to watch out for.

By Melanie Gipp and John Jenkins

The decision to outsource a Human Resource (“HR”) function to a Third Party Administrator is one not to be taken lightly. Outsourcing any HR job or process to another company has a significant impact on the way your business operates. Topping this list is COBRA administration. Everyday, companies of all sizes are adopting a Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) strategy when it comes to COBRA and it is the broker’s responsibility to help the employer make an informed decision.

According to the ERISA Industry Committee’s 2004 Position Paper, “the specificity of the new requirements pose substantial administrative and information technology burdens on plan sponsors under the best of circumstances. The burden will be greatest for employers that administer COBRA continuation coverage requirements internally rather than outsourcing this activity to a vendor.” But how does one select the best in class vendor?

For many companies, the due diligence used in the hiring process for employees are more developed and more detailed than the due diligence used in hiring a COBRA administrator. For something as important as COBRA, this has to change. This article offers helpful ideas and tips when interviewing potential COBRA administrators. Using the information in this article should help, even the largest of employers, identify and select the best administrator for their particular requirements.

There are many reasons a company may choose to outsource COBRA. For small to medium sized employers, the chief reasons are accessing experience, tapping into technical expertise and introducing consistency in the application of the regulations. For large organizations, risk management and economies of scale are added to the above list as drivers behind outsourcing COBRA.

When guiding your client through the search for a COBRA administrator, you want to make sure that employees, former employees, and their families’ rights are being communicated accurately, timely and professionally. Additionally, the administrator of COBRA must be scalable, flexible, and technologically advanced enough to meet an employers various COBRA needs. After all, the last thing your client wants to accomplish by outsourcing COBRA is to hire a company who is less flexible, less scalable and more labor-intensive than it's own internal department.

Further, you want to determine the administrator has the necessary staff and resources to handle your client’s COBRA efficiently. The administrators’ staff should be easy for the company’s staff to work with, offer first class customer service for Qualified Beneficiaries (after all they are your client’s former employees), and know more about COBRA than the employer does.

To start the selection process, you and you client need to identify a COBRA administrator who has proven and documented expertise and capabilities in these four areas:

A superior system for tracking and complying with COBRA and HIPAA nationally. The administrator's entire system must be as transparent to you, as if your staff were self-managing this employer obligation. You should not have to ask permission to see deeply and clearly into your own data. The client's data must be secure, available and protected. The system must be scalable and flexible enough to handle every request or need that your company will make over the course of the client relationship.

An increasing number of administrators are entering the COBRA BPO arena on a daily basis. As a broker, you must make sure the company your client engages to administer COBRA can deliver exceptional Return on Investment. BPO Outsourcing Journal’s 2002 National Survey revealed that, in best case scenarios, cost reductions associated with outsourcing an internal HR function could amount to a 50% to 60% when compared to building and maintaining a comparable in-house department.

Below is a partial list of items that should be used when comparing several COBRA administrators. The cost to outsource COBRA is approximately 4/100th of the total medical premium, however, the risk associated with this activity is significantly higher than you and your client might imagine. Consider there are Department of Labor penalties, Department of the Treasure excise tax penalties, costly premiums, uninsured claims, costly legal fees, plaintiff awards and loss of goodwill associated with COBRA lawsuits. When comparing several administrators, the marginal cost to hire the most competent administrator is a non-issue compared to the risk managed on your client’s behalf. This is not the place to bargain-shop!

Procedural

Process

Legal / Financial

IT / Technology

Not all COBRA administrators are created equal. Taking time to ask some or all of these questions will help to ensure you identify the very best administrator to exceed your client’s needs and expectations. This list can be used for all sources of COBRA administration services, including insurance carriers, TPA’s, insurance agencies, PEO’s, Associations or payroll providers.