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CUNY Grad Students Deserve the Same Health Insurance as SUNY Grad Students

by EZitani


With the Demo­c­ra­tic cam­paigns focus­ing on the sub­tle dif­fer­ences between Sen­a­tor Clinton’s plat­form of manda­tory (but “afford­able”) health insur­ance for all and Sen­a­tor Obama’s plat­form of manda­tory insur­ance for chil­dren and “afford­able” insur­ance for all, the lan­guage used in their debates reminds me so much of our own strug­gle as CUNY grad­u­ate stu­dents for ade­quate and afford­able health insurance.

In addi­tion to being a grad­u­ate stu­dent in His­tory at the CUNY Grad­u­ate Cen­ter and an adjunct in His­tory at Hunter Col­lege, I also work at the GC as a part-time stu­dent admin­is­tra­tor in the Office of Stu­dent Affairs, help­ing my fel­low grad­u­ate stu­dents deter­mine whether or not they are eli­gi­ble for Healthy NY or Fam­ily Health Plus, the New Yotk State pub­lic health insur­ance pro­grams, or if they can afford (or should bother to buy) the GHI or NAGPS stu­dent insur­ance plans. The irony of my employ­ment is that even though I hold two jobs at CUNY, one of which is as a health insur­ance advo­cate, I myself remain under-insured because all I can afford is a basic hos­pi­tal­iza­tion policy.

Because of my job in Stu­dent Affairs, peo­ple often ask me why CUNY stu­dents enroll in pub­lic health insur­ance pro­grams many times these peo­ple are fac­ulty, GC staff, or new, unsus­pect­ing grad­u­ate stu­dents. They are shocked when I tell them that CUNY does not offer its under­grad­u­ate or grad­u­ate stu­dents manda­tory, afford­able, or even ade­quate health insur­ance. The real kicker is that for some rea­son, the other uni­ver­sity sys­tem in our state, SUNY, does offer com­pre­hen­sive, afford­able, and manda­tory cov­er­age to its grad­u­ate stu­dents. The annual pre­mium for indi­vid­u­als at SUNY is $114.96 and for fam­i­lies is $996.72 (http://www.sunysb.edu/hr/benefits/state/student_premiums.shtml). Com­pared to the GHI insur­ance offered to CUNY Stu­dents, which costs $2,396.76 per year for indi­vid­u­als and $6,830.88 for fam­i­lies we are get­ting a raw deal. Many stu­dents can­not afford GHI, and many oth­ers find it grossly inad­e­quate. SUNY stu­dents get vision, den­tal, and pre­scrip­tion drugs; CUNY stu­dents do not. The NAGPS insur­ance offered by CUNY is priced by age; many stu­dents over 35 can­not afford it and many oth­ers find the reim­burse­ments to be inad­e­quate and dif­fi­cult to obtain.

This dis­par­ity is out­ra­geous. I am sad­dened that the options avail­able to CUNY grad­u­ate stu­dents (many of whom are employ­ees of the State of New York through the CUNY sys­tem) are inad­e­quate and gen­er­ally unaf­ford­able. I encour­age every­one to fol­low Pres­i­dent Kelly’s email request and go to www.supportcuny.org to encour­age leg­is­la­tors to treat CUNY stu­dents with more equity. Hope­fully a deci­sion will be made to include CUNY stu­dents in the SUNY pro­gram an obvi­ous solu­tion to a seri­ous disparity.

In the mean time, CUNY grad­u­ate stu­dents are left with the deci­sion between inad­e­quate and over-priced stu­dent health insur­ance (GHI or NAGPS) and the NY state pub­lic pro­grams. While I know that Albany must be thrilled to hear that some CUNY stu­dents are tak­ing advan­tage of Healthy NY or Fam­ily Health Plus, I can tell you that most can’t afford or don’t qual­ify for one of the two pro­grams offered. In my expe­ri­ence, CUNY grad­u­ate stu­dents with fel­low­ships receive stipends of between roughly $13,000 and $20,000/year, which is only slightly higher than the require­ments to qual­ify for the free state plan, Fam­ily Health Plus, and yet not enough to afford the approx­i­mately $2,772/year for the indi­vid­ual stan­dard Empire Blue­Cross Plan with pre­scrip­tion drug cov­er­age through Healthy NY. Addi­tion­ally, there are many stu­dents who elect to sign their chil­dren up for the Child Health Plus pub­lic insur­ance, while they them­selves, as par­ents, remain unin­sured or under-insured because of the pro­hib­i­tive costs of NY state pub­lic health insur­ance and CUNY stu­dent insur­ance. Ask­ing CUNY stu­dents to rely on NY state pub­lic insur­ance is irre­spon­si­ble; most don’t qual­ify or can’t afford it.

Many stu­dents at the CUNY Grad­u­ate Cen­ter serve either as adjunct lec­tur­ers at the other CUNY col­leges or as admin­is­tra­tors in the var­i­ous CUNY offices, or both (like me). We are poorly paid in both salary and ben­e­fits, while Albany saves money by not hav­ing to exclu­sively employ full-time, com­pet­i­tively salaried pro­fes­sors and admin­is­tra­tors (after all, why buy the cow when you can get the milk at a dis­count?). While the Pro­fes­sional Staff Con­gress union offers some adjuncts health insur­ance (after two semes­ters of ser­vice), the grad­u­ate stu­dents teach­ing as part of CUNY (state-funded) fel­low­ship pack­ages are excluded from this ben­e­fit while they per­form the same tasks as those who are paid as adjuncts and receive ben­e­fits from the PSC.

The issue of “afford­abil­ity” that has arisen in the Demo­c­ra­tic nom­i­na­tion debates touches a raw nerve with me every day in the Office of Stu­dent Affairs as I explain the lim­ited health insur­ance options to count­less, dis­ap­pointed grad­u­ate stu­dents. If Sen­a­tor Clin­ton thinks that her own state’s Healthy NY pro­gram is “afford­able” she’s mis­taken. I haven’t seen any fig­ures from Sen­a­tor Obama gaug­ing what “afford­able” means to him, but I hope whomever wins the nom­i­na­tion will con­sider the fact that any­thing over $50/month is NOT afford­able for those on lim­ited incomes. If Clin­ton thinks that Healthy NY is afford­able and CUNY thinks that GHI is afford­able they both are wrong. SUNY’s insur­ance for grad­u­ate stu­dents is afford­able and should serve as a model for CUNY.

Every­one in the GC com­mu­nity should fol­low Pres­i­dent Kelly’s advice and lobby Albany to include CUNY in the SUNY pro­gram, or offer a com­pa­ra­ble ben­e­fit to CUNY grad­u­ate stu­dents. While this would not solve the issue of health insur­ance for CUNY under­grad­u­ates, at least it would be a start.

PS: I wel­come any GC stu­dent who needs help wad­ing through the sea of under­whelm­ing health insur­ance options to con­tact me at the Office of Stu­dent Affairs: (212) 817‑7408 or ezitani@​gc.​cuny.​edu. Until ade­quate, afford­able insur­ance is offered, we can sit down together to weigh the dif­fer­ences of the pub­lic and stu­dent options so that you can make an informed deci­sion that will best serve your and your family’s needs. You can also eval­u­ate your options at: http://www.gc.cuny.edu/current_students/StudentHealth/index.htm#C.

Posted by EZitani on Mar 15th, 2008 and filed under Opinion. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response by filling following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

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