Fresno Unified broke lifetime benefits promise after 2023 decision, retirees say
Some retired Fresno Unified employees say their simmering frustration with their health care benefits, which remain in limbo, stems back to the district’s 2023 decision to outsource retiree coverage to a profit-driven private insurer.
Thousands of retirees lost access to some of the region’s major local health care facilities
The disruption impacted about 6,200 retirees and dependents enrolled in the
Fresno Unified, for decades, has agreed to provide lifetime health insurance benefits to its retired employees and had done so for most of that period through its unorthodox self-funded insurance model.
But some retirees say their benefits have felt noticeably diluted after the school district replaced its preferred provider organization, or PPO, insurance plan in 2023 with for-profit Aetna’s Medicare Advantage Plan. While the district has said
“I was denied a CT scan before I had ankle surgery. The surgery was approved. The doctor ordered the CT scan. He has to have that CT scan before he can do the surgery,” said
Moore said though his doctor appealed, he had to pay upfront because he had to have the surgery. The insurance company was supposed to reimburse his payment, he said.
“I paid
For nearly five decades, Fresno Unified operated its own supplemental insurance, meaning the district’s
In 2005, when Fresno Unified neared bankruptcy and identified employee health benefits as a major expense, it established the Joint Health Management Board, which consists of union representatives and district administration, to oversee benefit spending and vendor performance.
“It has taken compromise. But since 2006, JHMB has outperformed the state’s average growth in medical spending by a cumulative total of more than
According to the most recently available Quarterly Health Fund Report, the first nine months of the 2021-22 fiscal year showed the fund had a budget surplus of more than
Though publicly available data noted the self-funded insurance model was solvent, the district’s governing board approved a contract in
The new plan enhanced benefits for retirees, including better hearing benefits, home visit services, non-emergency transportation, and Silver Sneakers fitness benefits, according to board meeting documents.
The annual estimated cost for 2023 was
Moore said Fresno Unified told retirees in writing that if retirees preferred to stay with their original Medicare plans, they would cease receiving further benefits from the district.
“They evaluated, allegedly for three years, never told anyone, and it was just simply announced in the spring of 2023,” Moore said. “And then
Retirees who opted out of the
The school district said in an email that both the old and new models provide retirees the option to enroll in a PPO plan or Kaiser Senior Advantage HMO plan, which remains unaffected. The district did not confirm whether notices were sent to retirees in 2023, though said the PPO plan offered to retirees “is better than the plan that our active employees currently enjoy.”
“The
Some retirees say Fresno Unified broke its promise to provide lifetime benefits to its retired employees. The perk was secured in a bargaining agreement with the school district.
“Our lifetime health benefits were negotiated as part of our collective bargaining agreement, so the fact that we were paid less than 17 other districts here in the
Brandt said the retirees were satisfied with the combination of Medicare and district’s PPO plan.
“We were able to manage quite well. We had small co-pays, but we didn’t have pre-authorizations at this level,” Brandt said. “Medicare has a very big list of authorizations.”
Brandt said the Medicare Advantage Plan does not provide retirees the same level of benefits they had before retirement. Though both plans are carried by
Medicare Advantage Plans have been criticized nationally for insurers’ misleading marketing tactics. According to a 2023 report by the
Moore, who once served as the president of the
At the
The district cited recent federal legislation and high medical usage as the reason for the rate increases, staff wrote in the recommendation.
District officials told the board that despite the stalled network dispute, if the contract were not approved, thousands of retired employees would lose their health insurance entirely.
“I told junior reps, I told anybody, I tried to communicate, you’re going to have problems because a lot of places in
©2026 The Fresno Bee. Visit fresnobee.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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