City costs for Obamacare, tree trimming
This
city's costs associated with two disparate topics – the Affordable
Care Act, also known as Obamacare, and trimming some 11,000
municipally owned trees – merit attention this week.
Undergoing
“analysis” and “refinement” by the city's management staff
are potential extra expenses due to provisions of the 2010
Obamacare legislation and subsequent delays of some of the law's
mandates, according to oral and written reports presented to the City
Council.
Current
concern surrounds the health benefits provided the city's eight
permanent part-time employees working 30 hours per week, who are
labeled full-time by the Affordable Care Act.
The
law's “employer mandate” requiring the city to “extend an offer
of coverage to employees working 30 hours or more per week” was
to begin Jan. 1 this year but has been delayed to Jan. 1, 2015,
noted a city staff report.
Based on
the employer mandate, “the city must provide a health contribution
which is 60 per cent of the lowest single health premium offered
in the city's...plan,” the report stated.
Since
the city's lowest health premium is now $457.17 per month, the
required city contribution would be $274.30, according to city
figures. The city's present payment for the part-timers is $150 per
month toward the cost of a health plan.
A city
staff recommendation to implement the law's employer mandate ahead of
next year's Jan. 1 deadline was pulled from a Feb. 4 council agenda
by City Manager Mark Pulone “for future analysis and refinement of
the fiscal impact to the city.”
The
withdrawn plan would have raised the city's payment for permanent
part-time employees $125 monthly to reach the $275 level required by
Obamacare, which would have assisted the part-timers in meeting the
individual insurance mandate deadline of March 31 this year.
If
implemented, the amount provided each part-timer would be reduced to
the actual prem-ium cost if coverage is less than $275 per month.
The total annual cost would be $26,400.
Fortunately,
the annual expense to trim the city's approximately 11,000 trees on a
three-year cycle is holding steady, with the coming year's task
scheduled to be completed by an outside contractor without even an
allowable consumer price index increase from previous years.
Anaheim-based
West Coast Arborists won the city's tree trimming contract in 2011
with a bid 25 percent lower than the prior pact and is maintaining
that year's cost for a third of four possible one-year extensions.
The
rate is $46.50 per tree or $140 per tree for service requests outside
the normal three-year sequence, for a potential expenditure of
$512,953. About 10,000 trees are trimmed through Landscape
Maintenance Assessment District funding ($465,053 from 30 benefit
zone accounts, ranging from $400 to $80,000) and about 1,000 in parks
through Parks and Recreation Department funds ($47,900).
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