President’s Community Message
March 25, 2008
Student Health Insurance
Dear Friends,
I write to bring you up-to-date on our efforts regarding doctoral student health
insurance. Let me begin with some context. As you know, this issue
has been a matter of great concern for the last few years. Under the leadership
of the Office of Student Affairs, we’ve investigated a variety of group
plans that might provide affordable coverage for our students. High regional
rates have made that a difficult task. Plans with low premiums offer little
in the way of coverage; those that promise more comprehensive service charge
higher rates. The CUNY-GHI voluntary plan currently on offer attempts to
strike a balance, but its premiums remain burdensome.
Last fall, we explored a new approach. Then Provost Edwards researched
the insurance options available to students at the four SUNY University Centers.
She learned that at those campuses doctoral students who taught or provided compensated
service were eligible for subsidized insurance via the New York State Health
Insurance Plan (NYSHIP) for State Employees. We shared the results of Provost
Edward’s investigation with the leadership of the Chancellery, the PSC,
and the DSC and sought their assistance in achieving parity with SUNY in this
regard. I’m pleased to say that response from those quarters
has been very positive. Most significant, the Chancellor has pledged his support
and has contacted the leaders of the state legislature on behalf of this initiative. Further,
the university has included health insurance parity as a priority in its recently
proposed Master Plan.
The parity we seek, I emphasize, involves doctoral students who teach or provide
other instructional services at CUNY colleges; those, in other words, who receive
a paycheck from the State of New York. SUNY doctoral students who are not
in this category do not qualify for subsidized insurance. These students
are offered group plans; in some cases, Stony Brook for example, enrollment is
mandatory. The premiums for these plans are significantly lower than those
of the CUNY-GHI voluntary plan but not because the state subsidizes them. Rather,
they are more affordable, first, because, premiums outside the metropolitan area
are generally lower; second, because the four SUNY campuses have medical centers
which serve as a first line of care for students (each of the SUNY University
Centers assesses a student health fee); and third, because the SUNY insurance
pools, which include undergraduates as well as graduate students, are larger.
I am convinced that we are moving in the right direction and that we will ultimately
reach our goal, but the current fiscal circumstances of the state, and by extension
those of the university, are such that time-lines are disingenuous. What
I can tell you is that advancing this cause is and will remain at the top of
our priority list.
Warm regards,
Bill Kelly
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