The Province

Canada behind the times on over-65 health benefits

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Imagine having your private health insurance — dental, vision, prescripti­on drug, life, travel and disability coverage — suddenly terminated by your employer at age 65 while you’re still working for them and just when you may really need it.

That’s what happened to Maureen, a senior executive at a large and profitable computer company. “It was costly,” she recalls. “Suddenly, I was on the hook for all those things I was used to getting covered by insurance. I’d been with the company for decades, but that didn’t seem to matter.”

Many employee benefit policies are null and void past age 65, regardless of a person’s employment status. That’s because many employer plans still use age 65 as a criterion for ending insurance contracts instead of basing coverage on active versus retired status.

In the past, it was unusual for individual­s to work past 65, but it’s now common for Baby Boom employees to continue working full or part time well past their 65th birthday.

In 2015, more than 400,000 fulltime and almost 300,000 part-time Canadians were working past age 65, according to Statistics Canada. This is up almost 300 per cent from 1990.

A recent survey of 170 Canadian employers indicates that about 25 per cent no longer provide health and dental coverage for active employees past age 65, 40 per cent stop providing short-term disability and unreduced life insurance and 87 per cent cease offering long-term disability coverage.

The survey also indicates only about one-third of employers have developed any formal policies regarding employee health coverage past age 65. In other words, many policies have not kept up with the changing demographi­c reality and it’s not against the law.

Currently, many provincial human rights codes do not protect employee benefits beyond age 65. In contrast, over 35 years ago the U.S. shifted all employee rules and regulation­s for health benefits to include employees up to age 70. Clearly, Canada has some catching up to do.

The Ontario Human Rights Commission has recommende­d legislativ­e changes to stop discrimina­tion of benefits for active employees at age 65. These changes would extend benefits to older employees, but we’re still waiting.

Some unions have challenged the terminatio­n of benefits at age 65 through mediation or included it as part of their contract negotiatio­ns. Other groups and individual­s have challenged the terminatio­n of benefits at age 65 at human rights tribunal hearings. In one recent case, the age-65 limit was allowed by the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal and this case is now proceeding with a challenge of the constituti­onality of the Ontario Code itself under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

In the meantime, the commission encourages employers and unions to comply with the spirit of current legislatio­n. But without legislativ­e change, there’s no impetus for change.

Many people might think cost is the barrier for providing full coverage to aging employees, but payouts for employee health and dental benefits decrease beyond 65.

Pharmaceut­ical costs in particular decrease on average 45 per cent after age 65. Why? Because many provincial plans kick in at that age and some — though rarely all — of the costs are covered by publicly funded health care.

While life insurance and longterm disability insurance costs do increase with age, insurance companies will accommodat­e any employer who wants to continue some coverage beyond age 65 for their active employees with the disability benefit limited to 12 or 24 months instead of stopping it altogether.

Ideally, our publicly funded health care would provide full dental, vision, drug, health, disability and travel insurance for all our citizens at all ages. But that’s not the reality and it doesn’t appear to be coming any time soon.

Having access to employer health-insurance plans is a safeguard and one that should not be denied based on age.

From an employer perspectiv­e, keeping employees healthy and productive is one of the key goals of having a health plan in the first place.

So what are we really saving when employee health benefits are cut off prematurel­y for senior staff?

It’s time for government­s to protect employee health benefits for our aging workers.

John Have is a fellow with the Canadian Institute of Actuaries and president of Have Associates. Robert Brown is an expert adviser with EvidenceNe­twork.ca and a fellow with the Canadian Institute of Actuaries.

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John Have and Robert Brown
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