I went to the meetings in 2007 when the new LLNS management promised that UC retirees, all of whom were having their health care switched to LLNS, would receive "substantially equivalent" benefits compared to what UC offered. In 2014 UC is offering some of its retirees (out of state, medicare eligible) an HRA plan that is identical to what the Lab offers its medicare-eligible retirees - except, UC puts 25% more cash into the HRA.
Is 25% the new "substantially equivalent"? or did management simply lie?
When asked about this at last Fall's health care meeting, the Lab rep just said, "Well, it's a tough budget year". She didn't mention that one of the first things the new management did was to cut their own health care costs. I guess that's okay, since you can always make the retirees pay more.
Tri-Valley Cares needs to be on this if they aren't already. We need to make sure that NNSA and LLNL does not make good on promises to pursue such stupid ideas as doing Plutonium experiments on NIF. The stupidity arises from the fact that a huge population is placed at risk in the short and long term. Why do this kind of experiment in a heavily populated area? Only a moron would push that kind of imbecile area. Do it somewhere else in the god forsaken hills of Los Alamos. Why should the communities in the Bay Area be subjected to such increased risk just because the lab's NIF has failed twice and is trying the Hail Mary pass of doing an SNM experiment just to justify their existence? Those Laser EoS techniques and the people analyzing the raw data are all just BAD anyways. You know what comes next after they do the experiment. They'll figure out that they need larger samples. More risk for the local population. Stop this imbecilic pursuit. They wan...
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LLNS has routinely welshed on the deal with retirees, and I find that particularly despicable. It's one thing to change the deal for new hires, who can evaluate the deal and decide to go somewhere else. Quite another thing to stiff people who worked for many years under written promises that are now being broken.
LLNS and its officers should be ashamed. I am.
I guess LLNS doesn't care about their reputation, or their "working employees", as long as the bonuses come rolling in.
Time for a new management company.
In the long, it was also NNSA and their idiots who lied and did not realize what a disaster they are creating.
Even Linton Brooks today admits that this did not go the way the were thinking.
A new management won't change things: Same tree different monkey.
No, the lab have to go back to not for profit status, get rid of NNSA
and go away from the corporate culture of Bechtel and Co.
But sadly, it won't happen.
They have been treating the retirees very poorly.
And they welshed on their commitment (made verbally and on slides) with the current employees to contribute to the pension...while forcing the current employees to contribute via a 14% pay cut.
Very disappointing.
January 17, 2014 at 5:29 PM
Sorry January 17, they fully realized the impact of their deceipt. DOE/NNSA hacks have been taking every opportunity to sock it to the "labbies" for as long as anyone can remember. It is hard for anyone who hasn't been there to understand the intensity of the jealousy of the feds. The glee in the Forrestal when privitization was mandated was pathetic. Congress stil doesn't seem to understand that no one in the Forestall can design a nuclear weapon; no one in the Forestall can certify a nuclear weapon; and no one in the Forestall can test a surrogate of a nuclear weapon. They (Forestall hacks) are as useless as tits on a boar (sorry Scooby, it is what it is).
If anyone in Congress were really interested in defending this nation by supporting its nuclear strike forces, they would clean house in DOE/NNSA, restore the sovereignty of the design labs, and publicly recognize the service to the country of their employees.
Are the Forrestal hacks as useless as NIF seems to be? At least they don't cost as much.
Take a good look at the November 2012 policy updates. We are losing benefits and FTE protections with each employment policy update. Yes we should question retirement and active employee benefits.
Don't assume if LLNS goes away our benefits will return. If and when a new LLC takes over (LLNS 2.0, LAWNS, LOOPS, etc.) the new company at a minimum will likely use a snapshot of our benefits at that moment as the new "baseline", not anything reassembling 2007 "substantially equivalent" to UC.
In other words, collectively speak up now or see our benefits ratcheted away into non-existence...
Right there is the mistake. Promises meaning nothing to LANS/LLNS.
Substantially non-equivalent...
Substantially non-equivalent...
January 20, 2014 at 7:22 PM
Interesting, since LANS also gives $300 per month, whether the retiree chooses a EPO, a PPO, or "National Medicare Supplement" (i.e., Medigap).
January 20, 2014 at 10:22 PM
Check again. Medicare Part A is free to everyone. Part D is only available through private insurance companies. For Part D, Medicare only charges directly for any additional premium payment you owe based on income over $85,000. Advantage plans that cover prescriptions include the basic Plan D premium. So your monthly cost is the Medicare Advantage premium, which includes drugs, plus the Part B premium ($104 up, depending on income) paid to the government, plus any Part D adjustment based on your income, also paid to the government.
January 21, 2014 at 8:18 PM
And what besides your cynicism would have led you to disbelieve? Because it wasn't in writing? It was. Remember all the feel-good promises and good-intentions gestures LLNS (and LANS) made during the competition? Were you actually there? If so and you stuck with the new contractor, then shut up. If you weren't there, shut up. If you were there and left before the new contract because you didn't believe it, good for you. Now shut up and go away.
Not true. From one of our recent Medicare bills for one retiree:
1.) current amount due for Part A and/or Part B = $209.80
2.) current amount due for IRMAA Part D = $31.10
total = $240.90
This is in addition to the $200/month for Kaiser Medicare Advantage per person.
So for one retiree, the health bill per month is = $439.70
For non-Medicare retirees the Kaiser plan costs $113/month (including spouse), which of course is a fantastic deal.
The LLNS retirement supplement is $2400/retiree and another $2400 per spouse, per year, so at least they cover the Kaiser bill.
The problem is that Medicare uses you tax return prior to retirement, so this will be "jacked up" by vacation payouts, and a UC payout of up to $50K. That pushes your Medicare premiums up.
Lesson, don't retire after you turn 65, retire at 60 if you can !
Not true. From one of our recent Medicare bills for one retiree:
1.) current amount due for Part A and/or Part B = $209.80
2.) current amount due for IRMAA Part D = $31.10
total = $240.90
This is in addition to the $200/month for Kaiser Medicare Advantage per person.
So for one retiree, the health bill per month is = $439.70
January 21, 2014 at 9:05 PM
It appears January 21, 2014 at 2:59 PM was indeed correct. Your numbers show a premium of $209.80 for Part B (not Part A which is free), and an adjusted premium increase of $31.10 for Part D, over the base premium. These must be paid to Medicare directly in addition to the Advantage premium paid to the insurer. This is completely consistent with January 21, 2014 at 2:59 PM and indicates that the income of the recipient (for 2012 as used by Medicare) was $107k - $160k.
Sounds like that person can easily afford the health care costs. The correct comparison is not to employee costs but to private insurance costs, which would be around $1000 per month for similar coverage.
For Medicare retirees, the health bill per month is = $439.70 + another $439.70 for the spouse = $879.40"
So where is it that Medicare retirees (those 65 and older under LLNS) are not being screwed ?
January 25, 2014 at 8:00 PM
If as a retiree you didn't get Medicare but had to buy private insurance, you would know what "being screwed" means. Uncle Sugar is taking care of you. No employer owes you lifetime medical insurance.
The first term means something.
The second term doesn't.
In a few years, I will go on medicade, and I would prefer a similar plan where I retain control and am not "managed" by Kaiser. What will I pay for me for similar full coverage? Sounds like its about $450 minus the $200.
I believe my wife and kids will continue coverage under LLNL family Blue Cross for about $500 per month.
So in summary, will the total family expense and coverage be about the same as a non-medicare and medicare covered retiree?
Thanks in advance.
I assume you meant Medicare, not Medicaid. Try medicare.gov. Be patient and read everything, then use their plan finder.