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MONTGOMERY, Alabama ---State employees are expected to pay more for health insurance next year, but the amount of the increase or any cuts in benefits remains unclear. The State Employees ...
MONTGOMERY -- Alabama state employees who are obese or have three other health problems will eventually have to pay extra for health insurance if they don't try to control them.
The impact was also felt on the Alabama State Employees' Insurance Board, or SEIB, which manages state employees' health care, though to a lesser extent than on the much larger PEEHIP.
A new face will soon be appointed to serve as commissioner of the Alabama Medicaid Agency, Gov. Kay Ivey announced on ...
Driving without insurance in Alabama is considered a class C misdemeanor on the first offense and a class B misdemeanor on the second. In both cases, the state may suspend your driving privileges and ...
The head of the Alabama State Employee Retirement Board (SEIB) is retiring after 37 years in his post. William Ashmore, the board’s chief executive officer, said in a “transition” meeting ...
The CEO of the state board overseeing Alabama state employee insurance Wednesday reiterated his concerns about rising costs and potential funding shortfalls. The State Employee Insurance Board ...
Alabama teachers, much like state employees, have a defined benefit program through the Retirement System of Alabama, meaning they are guaranteed a certain amount of money in the form of a pension ...
The state has given its 37,527 employees a year to start getting fit -- or they'll pay $25 a month for insurance that otherwise is free.Alabama will be the first state to charge overweight state ...
That's the rationale that pushed Alabama to start charging state employees who don't act to address obesity, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, all of which raise the risks heart attacks ...
The state of Alabama will begin charging the obese among its 37,000 employees if they do not take advantage of their health care benefits to undergo screenings and improve their health in accord with ...
First time in years Alabama state workers' insurance was left largely unchanged.