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Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act: COBRA-Equivalent Benefit for LGBT Workers

The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986 provides workers and their families with a safety net when facing life-altering circumstances such as the loss of a job or the death of a sole provider. According to COBRA, group health plans sponsored by employers with 20 or more employees are required to offer workers and their families the opportunity to extend coverage in some circumstances when this coverage would have ended.  These circumstances include:

  • Voluntary or involuntary job loss (18 months);
  • A reduction in hours worked (18 months);
  • Transitioning between jobs (18 months);
  • Death, divorce or legal separation (36 months);
  • A child attaining an age which would otherwise no longer qualify her or him for coverage under the plan (36 months);
  • Entitlement to Medicare benefits (36 months); or
  • For those with retiree medical coverage, a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing by the employer (36 months).

When an employee with a different-sex spouse loses or leaves a job, employers are required to offer the employee – and the spouse – the opportunity to pay for continued health coverage for up to 18 months. But when a LGBT employee loses or leaves a job, federal law does not guarantee the opportunity to pay for continued coverage for a domestic partner (or a partner's children), even if the employer-sponsored plan originally covered that partner (or the partner's children). This is true even though the former employee – and not the employer – pays the premium for this temporary coverage.

Same-sex Spouses and Partners

Although COBRA does not mandate employers to provide these benefits to employees with same-sex partners or spouses, employers may nonetheless do so.  For example, the city of New York extends COBRA-equivalent coverage to the registered domestic partners of city employees. As of August 2007, the Workplace Project is aware of 505 employers that offer COBRA-equivalent coverage to same-sex partners of employees, including 217 of the Fortune 500.

Number and Percentage of Employers with COBRA-Equivalent Partner Benefits
Fortune 100 Fortune 500 Fortune 1000 AmLaw 200 Raw Totals
2008 Total 70 (70%) 217 (43%) 259 (26%) 103 (52%) 505 (—)

Employer Considerations

The costs of COBRA-equivalent benefits can be most easily compared to the cost of domestic partner benefits, which are minimal:

Employers should extend COBRA-equivalent benefits to LGBT employees to:

  • Remain as competitive as possible in a job market where employee attraction and retention often depends on the benefits offered;
  • Boost the morale, and therefore productivity, of LGBT employees who will know that they and their loved ones will be cared for;
  • Maintain a commitment to fairness and equality by reflecting this commitment in their benefits program; and
  • Enhance the employer's public image as a fair and equal place of employment.

What HRC is Doing

The Human Rights Campaign lobbies Congress for the guarantee of equal health care coverage under COBRA. HRC urges Congress to require employers to provide COBRA coverage to any beneficiaries covered under an employee's benefits plan – including a domestic partner – and encourages employers to offer continued coverage to all beneficiaries of their employee benefits plan.