A Manhattan judge is pressing pause on a controversial plan to push New York City government retirees onto a new privatized version of Medicare this fall – a major victory for critics of the switch.
Published: Jul 7, 2023
In a plan that city officials said would save some $600 million a year, municipal retirees were supposed to be moved from their existing coverage, a combination of traditional Medicare with supplemental coverage paid for by the city, onto a private Medicare Advantage plan run by Aetna this fall. City officials had scheduled the deadline to opt out for this coming Monday, but seniors who decided to stay on traditional Medicare would have had to waive their city benefits and pay for their health coverage themselves.
A group of retired city workers filed a lawsuit in late May arguing that the Adams administration would be diminishing care for retirees and violating city law by making them pivot onto the new Aetna-run plan.
On Friday, Judge Lyle Frank granted retirees’ petition to temporarily block the transition while the case is pending in court.
“As this matter deals with health decisions of an aging and a potentially vulnerable population, mostly on fixed incomes, any lapse in care for these people could lead to deleterious impacts,” Frank stated in his order.
“This is now the third time in the last two years that courts have had to step in and stop the city from violating retirees’ health care rights,” Marianne Pizzitola, president of the New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees, one of the lead plaintiffs, said in a statement. “We call on the city and the Municipal Labor Committee to end their ruthless and unlawful campaign to deprive retired municipal workers of the health care benefits they earned.”
Adams administration officials have argued that the new plan will not be inferior to retirees’ existing coverage, but that some doctors will not accept the new plan and that patients will need prior approval from Aetna for more types of medical services.
“We are extremely disappointed by this misguided ruling,” said Mayor Eric Adams' Deputy Press Secretary Jonah Allon via email. “The city’s Medicare Advantage plan, which was negotiated in close partnership with the Municipal Labor Committee, improves upon retirees’ current plans, including offering a lower deductible, a cap on out-of-pocket expenses, and new benefits, like transportation, fitness programs and wellness incentive.”
It’s the latest in the back-and-forth between Adams and city council members who have called his new policy needlessly bureaucratic.
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