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- Who is eligible for USERRA rights?
- The individual must hold or have applied for a civilian job. (Note: Jobs employers
can show to be held for a brief, nonrecurrent period with no reasonable
expectation of continuing for a significant period do not qualify for protection.)
- The individual must have given written or verbal notice to the civilian employer
prior to leaving the job for military training or service except when precluded by
military necessity.
- With limited exceptions, the individual must not have exceeded a 5-year
cumulative limit on periods of service.
- The individual must have been released from service under conditions other than
dishonorable.
- The individual must report back to the civilian job or submit a timely application
for reemployment within certain limits set forth in the statute.
- USERRA applies to voluntary as well as involuntary military service, in
peacetime as well as wartime.
- USERRA does not apply to state callups of the National Guard for disaster relief,
riots, etc., although state law may provide certain rights in such situations.
- The employer is entitled to proof that military duty of 31 days or more for which
an employee was granted a leave of absence was actually performed, upon the
employer's request.
- Employee benefits guaranteed by USERRA during military leave
- USERRA gives an employee the right to elect continued health insurance
coverage, for himself or herself and his or her dependents, during periods of
military service. For periods of up to 30 days of training or service, the employer
can require the person to pay only the normal employee share, if any, of the cost
of such coverage. For longer tours, the employer is permitted to charge the person
up to 102 percent of the entire premium. If the employee elects coverage, the right
to that coverage ends on the day after the deadline for him or her to apply for
reemployment or 18 months after the absence from the civilian job began,
whichever comes first.
- To the extent that an employer offers other non-seniority benefits (e.g., life
insurance coverage) to employees on furlough or a leave of absence, the employer
is required to provide those same benefits to an employee during a period of
service in the uniformed services.
- Employee benefits guaranteed by USERRA upon reemployment
- The right to immediate reinstatement of civilian health insurance coverage for the
employee and previously covered dependents. The health plan cannot impose a
waiting period and cannot exclude the returning employee based on preexisting
conditions (other than for those conditions determined by the Federal government
to be service-connected). This right is not contingent on an election to continue
coverage during the period of service.
- Credit for the period of military service for purposes of vesting, under either a
defined benefit or defined contribution plan.
- Credit for the period of military service for purposes of benefit computations
under a defined benefit plan.
- Make-up employer contributions for the period of military service under a defined
contribution plan. However, earnings and forfeitures need not be made up. Moreover,
to the extent that employer contributions are contingent on employee contributions, the
employee would need to make the employee contributions in order to get the employer
contributions.
- The repayment period for purposes of employee contributions or deferrals
under the two preceding paragraphs is the period beginning with the date
of reemployment and whose duration is three times the period of the
person's service in the uniformed services, such payment period not
to exceed five years.
- Issues
- For periods of 30 days or less, employer can charge employee only normal
employee's premium for health insurance, not employer's share. Are premiums
paid under a pretax premium plan or flexible benefit plan "employer" or
"employee" premiums for this purpose?
- Does the answer to the above question vary depending on whether the plan is
salary reduction, or involves a bonus which can be applied to health insurance
and/or flexible benefits in lieu of taking the cash?
Originally presented at the National Council on Teacher Retirement Annual Convention, Newport Beach, Calif., October, 1998
Copyright © by Calhoun Law Group, P.C. All rights reserved. Published on: Thursday, October 08, 1998 (4313 reads) Back to list of publications |