TOWN OF LOCKPORT — Municipal retirees age 65 and older are being assigned to Medicare supplemental health insurance plans.
According to Supervisor Marc Smith, the shift away from traditional town-paid plans will save about $50,000 a year while maintaining or improving the health benefits of 18 retirees.
“It’s a great way to continue a benefit for people who’ve worked hard for our community,” Smith said Tuesday. “The last thing we want is to be forced, like GM, to cut off our retirees.”
Medicare-eligible retirees are being enrolled in a Blue Cross Blue Shield health plan whose premiums are paid by the federal government.
Smith said the town will provide secondary coverage to pay the portions of bills not covered by Medicare, up to the coverage levels offered in the town’s plans.
The switch was explained to retirees before it was effected, and retirees consented, Smith said.
“Overall, I think everyone was quite pleased,” he said. “I would enroll my own parents in this, it’s that good.”
By shifting older retirees into Medicare, the town will save anywhere from $4,600 to $10,600 per retiree per year.
Town-paid Blue Cross Blue Shield plans cost, on average, $8,000 for single-person coverage and $14,000 per family plan, while the Medicare supplemental plan will cost the town $3,400 per person, Smith said.
One advantage of the Medicare plan that is retirees and their spouses can each be covered singly, rather than by more costly family health plans. Another is that by removing older retirees from the town’s experience-rated risk pool, the town can better hold down future cost increases for insuring active employees, Smith said.
The Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare plan offers retirees some benefits not provided in the town plans, such as enhanced vision coverage and reimbursement of health club membership fees.
“It’s comparable or enhanced coverage, depending on what plan (retirees) had before,” Smith said. “It’s what you’d call a win-win situation.”
The town has possessed the legal right to shift retirees to Medicare for at least several years, thanks to language in both its labor union agreements and the town employee handbook. Smith figures past administrations didn’t exercise the option out of concern it would be perceived as abandoning retirees.
“What stopped it until now, I think, is mostly the fear that people would get less (coverage) than they currently have, and that’s really not the case,” he said.
Perhaps surprisingly, while federal law has said all along that Medicare is the primary health insurance for Americans 65 and older, municipalities routinely purchase traditional plans for their retirees, and neither they nor their insurers have sought reimbursement from Medicare. It’s taken federal incentives to insurers to get them out actively promoting Medicare, Smith said.
The City of Lockport spent $1.75 million on health insurance for 152 retirees in 2006. This year, there are about 130 insured retirees, who have the right to lifetime city-paid coverage, and the majority are enrolled in the costliest plan offered. A single premium costs the city $5,100 and a family premium costs $14,500, according to City Clerk Richard Mullaney.
The city also is looking at a Medicare shift, but that remains to be worked out with both retirees and active-employee unions, Mayor Michael Tucker said.
While the unions do not represent retirees, their consent on the city’s single-carrier insurance package is required before expired contracts are negotiated. The savings wrought from insurance adaptations is what will pay for employee raises, he said.
The city has shown a few proposed Medicare-primary plans to select retirees for their feedback, Tucker added.
“We’re trying to find out what’s best for us and best for them,” he said. “We don’t have any intention of leaving them out of the loop.”
In the town, the Medicare transition is nearly complete for 12 of 18 retirees, according to Smith. Another six, who live out of state, will be enrolled in a new, national Blue Cross Blue Shield Medicare plan in about 60 days, he said.
The town’s retiree health benefit varies by the retiree. Depending on their hire date, some have lifetime town-paid coverage and others have it for as many years as they worked for the town.
Contact reporter Joyce Miles at 439-9222, ext. 6245.
Communities
TOWN OF LOCKPORT: Retirees shifted to Medicare
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Newfane's Apple Blossom Fest has something for everyone
An apple a day may keep the doctor away and the apple blossoms of Niagara County are cause for celebration. Sunday’s Apple Blossom Festival will lure hundreds of visitors to step back in time to the good old days.
The Newfane Historical Society’s annual event takes place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the museum grounds at the corner of West Creek and Ide roads. Admission and parking are free, and families can while away a sunny afternoon perusing everything from antique tractors to a Civil War encampment.
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NFTA targets Lockport bus routes for closure
Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority’s proposed service reductions would eliminate all bus service from, to and within greater Lockport.
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Library adds online selections
Library card holders can check out and download e-books anytime, anywhere by visiting lockportlibrary.org. Patrons can download to a personal computer, Mac and many mobile devices, according to librarian Claire McDonough.
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Mayor Maedl
Julia A. Maedl is stepping away from politics after 19 years of service to the Village of Middleport in 2001.
Maedl, who was a village trustee for nine years and village mayor for 10 years, will not seek re-election. She says she will remain very active, however.
Since the death of her husband, Robert Maedl in 2008, the Middleport mayor has been running Maedl Woodcrafts. She is on the tourist committee, chair of business association and trustee of Middleport United Methodist Church. She sings in the choir and is in charge of Harvest dinner and chicken barbecue. She manages 28 apartments. -
Memorial tree program off to a good start
The town’s new memorial tree program has been growing quickly.
Councilwoman Cheryl A. Antkowiak said the program is being done with Stedman’s Nursery of Newfane. Residents who wish to have a tree planted will receive an information packet from Stedman’s as well as a map of Day Road Park showing where each of the 85 trees are located. Stedman’s sells the trees along with a plaque if the resident wants one to be put up. -
New recycling bins available soon
Town residents could have some new bins to go along with its new recycling incentive program.
At Monday’s work session meeting, Town Board members approved the purchase of new recycling bins. The town placed an order of 1,000 of the 18 gallon bins for $8,845 and another order of 200 of the 32 gallon bins for $3,110. The large bins are 31 and a half inches in height and 22 inches in diameter.
Both sets of bins will be blue in color and the 32 gallon bins will come with lids.
The 18 and 32 gallon bins were produced by Otto Environmental Services in Charlotte, N.C., a company Supervisor Marc R. Smith said the town has used before for bins. The company still has a rubber stamp with the town logo on it. -
Library names new director
Beverly Federspiel, Director of the City of Tonawanda Public Library, has been appointed as the new Director of the Lockport Public Library.
Federspiel, 49, will succeed Marie Binderman, who is retiring, on Feb. 28.
“I’m excited,” said Federspiel, who has been at the Tonawanda Library three years after serving at the Buffalo and Erie County Central Library for 18 years. “I’ve always loved the Lockport building and the community is very supportive. There are lots of opportunities out there.” -
Winterfest, take two
Winterfest was a big success last year and Winterfest 2011 may even be bigger Saturday at Royalton-Hartland Elementary School and the Hartland Bible Church.
“Last year was the first year and well over 650 people attended, that’s a huge response for an inaugural event,” said Helen Feron, the chairman of the steering committee. “This year we expect more.”
Entertainment and activities are scheduled from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. including a basket auction at the Hartland Bible Church at 3 p.m., where Magician Robert Geckler will also perform at 2:15 p.m.
The event is geared towards school aged children and free to children 10-and-under. Admissiong is $3 for adults and includes Chinese auction tickets. -
High school project coming along
Construction on Lockport High School is continuing throughout the winter months. Construction crews work on a scaffold on the west side of the building, which is the Locust Street side. The school is undergoing a $23.5 million capital improvement project that includes adding a fitness center, a six classroom addition and completely renovate the auditorium into a brand new fine arts center. The auditorium will also have stage work completed, new music rooms, a renovated foyer and a new entrance on the Locust Street side. There will be improvements made to ventilators and mechanical systems, an art gallery, new windows, as well as new padding and bleachers in the gymnasium. The technology wing also will be updated, and the library renovated to make room for a computer lab. Also, bathrooms will be added nearby. The entire project is expected to be completed in September.
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Going green
With a symbolic “shot heard ‘round the community,” Lockport’s historic Kenan Center Arena unveiled its new artificial turf indoor soccer field and renovated “annex.”
About a dozen local dignitaries were on hand Thursday night at special dedication ceremony, attended by about 200 parents and soccer players, who wasted little time putting two new soccer fields to work.
The new turf installation was part of a larger arena capital project, which included the renovation of the arena’s adjacent annex room, which was gutted last year to create almost 6,000 square feet of additional space. Parts of the old artificial turf field were used to cover the new, smaller soccer field in the annex.
Lockport Mayor Michael Tucker lauded the Kenan’s effort and others who joined in to make the $106,000 capital improvement project — more than 10 years in the making — a reality. Funders include the Kenan soccer players, who raised about $60,000 selling candy, the Grigg-Lewis Foundation, the Kenan Arts Council, Rotary Club of Lockport and the Lockport Lions Club. - More Communities Headlines
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