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The Honolulu Advertiser

Updated at 10:52 a.m., Thursday, December 18, 2003

HMSA won’t drop client barbers after all

By Dan Nakaso
Advertiser Staff Writer

Barbers who formed a hui 42 years ago to buy cheaper health insurance were stunned by a letter last week saying Hawai'i’s largest health insurer now wants to drop them at the end of December.

"Now when we’re old, they don’t need us," said Harold Nakamoto, 75, the president of the Hawai'i Barber and Barber Stylists Association, which comprises 1,000 Hawai'i barbers and stylists. "Our medical bill gets high when we get older and they’re trying to get rid of us because they’re not making money."

The letter, signed by Hawaii Medical Service Association enrollment manager Tracey Villeza, went to 50 barbers with HMSA coverage. It offered no explanation for canceling their coverage.

After an inquiry from The Advertiser, Cliff Cisco, HMSA’s senior vice president, said HMSA will not cancel the barbers’ coverage after all.

HMSA offered the barbers coverage as employers, Cisco said, and such groups are supposed to have unemployment insurance numbers.

Even though the law requiring unemployment insurance numbers was passed in 1974, the barbers’ situation wasn’t discovered until an audit this year, Cisco said.

He could not explain why it took HMSA officials so long to discover the discrepancy. And he could not immediately say whether HMSA has sent similar cancellation letters to other employer groups.

Nakamoto said he was told earlier by HMSA officials that the 50 barbers were no longer eligible for coverage — despite a 42-year relationship — because they do not have workers’ compensation coverage.

All but one or two of the barbers, however, are sole proprietors who have no employees, Nakamoto said.

And they are therefore not required to comply with rules governing such things as workers’ compensation, the prepaid healthcare act and temporary disability insurance, said James Hardway, assistant to the state director of labor and industrial relations.

Business owners with employees are required to have an unemployment insurance number so the state can track their compliance, Hardway said.

"Those laws were put in place for employers with employees," Hardway said. "It doesn’t make sense for us to track coverage or provide coverage in an area where there are no employees."

Yesterday, longtime barbers such as Gary Lee of A-Plus Barber in Kane'ohe were worrying about what they would do if HMSA canceled their coverage in two weeks.

Lee pays $650 a month for health coverage for himself and his wife. Despite the cost, Lee does not want to switch to Hawai'i’s other major health insurer, Kaiser Permanente, because he wants to stay with his longtime doctor.

"The letter says our coverage is going to be canceled at the end of year," Lee said yesterday before HMSA’s latest decision. "That’s very, very short notice. We’re all terribly upset about this. We need medical coverage. Who do we go to?"

Reach Dan Nakaso at dnakaso@honoluluadvertiser.com or 525-8085.