Mayor Adams kills Medicare Advantage option that’d let NYC retirees stay on traditional coverage: ‘We do not intend to offer this’ [New York Daily News]
As his administration moves ahead with shifting retired city workers into a controversial Medicare Advantage plan, Mayor Adams will not authorize an implementation structure that would’ve given retirees the option to stay on traditional Medicare at no extra cost, a spokesman for the mayor said Wednesday.
The rejection came one day after the
“That approach would result in minimal savings, and undermine the city’s ability to continue providing high-quality, premium-free care to active employees and retirees,” Lutvak said of Option C. “As a result, we do not intend to offer this option to active employees or retirees.”
The push for putting retirees on an Advantage plan started in the fall of 2021 under former Mayor
Like de Blasio,
Thousands of retirees have countered they’d lose access to certain doctors, medical procedures and drugs under Advantage. They have pointed to federal studies showing that Advantage plans deny “medically necessary” care because, unlike traditional Medicare, they’re administered by private insurance providers who require preauthorization for some patients.
In response to lawsuits from a grassroots retiree group, courts blocked Adams’ administration from enacting the first iteration of its Advantage plan last year, ruling that a provision in it that would’ve levied
To circumvent that,
Against that backdrop, anti-Advantage retirees saw a glimmer of hope in Option C, which was tucked into Aetna’s newly released Advantage contract as one of three implementation paths
While retirees could stay on traditional Medicare under Option C without increased cost to them, Adams’ administration would have to pay
Lutvak would not say which option
Lutvak did reiterate that the only scenario under which the administration would be inclined to offer traditional Medicare — a setup that features a city-subsidized supplement known as Senior Care — is if retirees pay a premium for it.
“We support offering retirees the choice to remain in Senior Care while paying a monthly premium, but without the
“To date the mayor has never spoken with us, but if he had, I think he would tell me that he knew he was going to lose the next court battle and he had to put Option C in the contract to preserve doing business with Aetna,” said Pizzitola, whose group toppled the first Advantage plan in court last year and has indicated it will sue over the new plan, too. “This has always been about maximizing savings for the city and screwing retirees at the same time.”
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