[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 5, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 5CFR890.502]

[Page 481-485]
 
                    TITLE 5--ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL
 
          CHAPTER I--OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT (CONTINUED)
 
PART 890_FEDERAL EMPLOYEES HEALTH BENEFITS PROGRAM--Table of Contents
 
                Subpart E_Contributions and Withholdings
 
Sec.  890.502  Withholdings, contributions, LWOP, premiums, and direct premium 

payment.

    (a) Employee and annuitant withholdings and contributions. (1) 
Employees and annuitants are responsible for paying the enrollee share 
of the cost of enrollment for every pay period during which they are 
enrolled. An employee or annuitant incurs a debt to the United States in 
the amount of the proper employee or annuitant withholding required for 
each pay period during which they are enrolled if the appropriate health 
benefits withholdings or direct premium payments are not made.
    (2) An individual is not required to pay withholdings for the period 
between the end of the pay period in which he or she separates from 
service and the commencing date of an immediate annuity, if later.
    (3) Temporary employees who are eligible to enroll under 5 U.S.C. 
8906a must pay the full subscription charges including both the employee 
share and the Government contribution. Employees with provisional 
appointments under Sec.  316.403 of this chapter are not considered 
eligible for coverage under 5 U.S.C. 8906a for the purpose of this 
paragraph.
    (4) The employing office must calculate the withholding for 
employees whose annual pay is paid during a period shorter than 52 
workweeks on an annual basis and prorate the withholding over the number 
of installments of pay regularly paid during the year.
    (5) The employing office must make the withholding required from 
enrolled survivor annuitants in the following order. First, withhold 
from the annuity of a surviving spouse, if there is one. If that annuity 
is less than the amount

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required, withhold to the extent necessary from the annuity of the 
youngest child, and if necessary, from the annuity of the next older 
child, in succession, until the withholding is met.
    (6) Surviving spouses who have a basic employee death benefit under 
5 U.S.C. 8442(b)(1)(A) and annuitants whose health benefits premiums are 
more than the amount of their annuities may pay their portion of the 
health benefits premium directly to the retirement system acting as 
their employing office, as described in paragraph (d) of this section.
    (b) Procedures when an employee enters a leave without pay (LWOP) 
status or pay is insufficient to cover premium. The employing office 
must tell the employee about available health benefits choices as soon 
as it becomes aware that an employee's premium payments cannot be made 
because he or she will be or is already in a leave without pay (LWOP) 
status or any other type of nonpay status. (This does not apply when 
nonpay is as a result of a lapse of appropriations.) The employing 
office must also tell the employee about available choices when an 
employee's pay is not enough to cover the premiums.
    (1) The employing office must give the employee written notice of 
the choices and consequences as described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and 
(ii) of this section and will send a letter by first class mail if it 
cannot give it to the employee directly. If it mails the notice, it is 
deemed to be received within 5 days.
    (2) The employee must elect in writing to either continue health 
benefits coverage or terminate it. (Exception: An employee who is 
subject to a court or administrative order as discussed in Sec.  
890.301(g)(3) cannot elect to terminate his or her enrollment as long as 
the court/administrative order is still in effect and the employee has 
at least one child identified in the order who is still eligible under 
the FEHB Program, unless the employee provides documentation that he or 
she has other coverage for the child(ren).) The employee may continue 
coverage by choosing one of the following ways to pay and returning the 
signed form to the employing office within 31 days after he or she 
receives the notice (45 days for an employee residing overseas). When an 
employee mails the signed form, its postmark will be used as the date 
the form is returned to the employing office. If an employee elects to 
continue coverage, he or she must elect in writing one of the following:
    (i) Pay the premium directly to the agency and keep the payments 
current. The employee must also agree that if he or she does not pay the 
premiums currently, the employing office will recover the amount of 
accrued unpaid premiums as a debt under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this 
section.
    (ii) If the employee does not wish to pay the premium directly to 
the agency and keep payments current, he or she may agree that upon 
returning to employment or upon pay becoming sufficient to cover the 
premiums, the employing office will deduct, in addition to the current 
pay period's premiums, an amount equal to the premiums for a pay period 
during which the employee was in a leave without pay (LWOP) status or 
pay was not enough to cover premiums. The employing office will continue 
using this method to deduct the accrued unpaid premiums from salary 
until the debt is recovered in full. The employee must also agree that 
if he or she does not return to work or the employing office cannot 
recover the debt in full from salary, the employing office may recover 
the debt from whatever other sources it normally has available for 
recovery of a debt to the Federal Government.
    (3) If the employee does not return the signed form within the time 
period described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the employing 
office will terminate the enrollment and notify the employee in writing 
of the termination.
    (4)(i) If the employee is prevented by circumstances beyond his or 
her control from returning a signed form to the employing office within 
the time period described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, he or she 
may write to the employing office and request reinstatement of the 
enrollment. The employee must describe the circumstances that prevented 
him or her from returning the form. The request for reinstatement must 
be made within 30 calendar

[[Page 483]]

days from the date the employing office gives the employee notice of the 
termination. The employing office will determine if the employee is 
eligible for reinstatement of coverage. When the determination is 
affirmative, the employing office will reinstate the coverage of the 
employee retroactive to the date of termination. If the determination is 
negative, the employee may request a review of the decision from the 
employing agency (see Sec.  890.104).
    (ii) If the employee is subject to a court or administrative order 
as discussed in Sec.  890.301(g)(3), the coverage cannot terminate. If 
the employee does not return the signed form, the coverage will continue 
and the employee will incur a debt to the Federal Government as 
discussed in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (b)(2)(ii) of this section.
    (5) Terminations of enrollment under paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of 
this section are retroactive to the end of the last pay period in which 
the premium was withheld from pay. The employee and covered family 
members, if any, are entitled to the temporary extension of coverage for 
conversion and may convert to an individual contract for health 
benefits. An employee whose coverage is terminated may enroll upon his 
or her return to duty in pay status in a position in which the employee 
is eligible for coverage under this part.
    (c) Procedures when agency under-withholds premiums. (1) An agency 
that withholds less than the amount due for health benefits 
contributions from an individual's pay, annuity, or compensation must 
submit an amount equal to the uncollected employee contributions and any 
applicable agency contributions to OPM for deposit in the Employees 
Health Benefits Fund.
    (2) The agency must make the deposit to OPM as soon as possible, but 
no later than 60 calendar days after it determines the amount of an 
under-deduction that has occurred, regardless of whether or when the 
agency recovers the under-deduction. A subsequent agency decision on 
whether to waive collection of the overpayment of pay caused by failure 
to properly withhold employee health benefits contributions will be made 
under 5 U.S.C. 5584 as implemented by 4 CFR chapter I, subchapter G, 
unless the agency involved is excluded from 5 U.S.C. 5584, in which case 
any applicable authority to waive the collection may be used.
    (d) Direct premium payments for annuitants. (1) If an annuity, 
excluding an annuity under subchapter III of chapter 84 (Thrift Savings 
Plan), is too low to cover the health benefits premium, or if a 
surviving spouse receives a basic employee death benefit, the retirement 
system must provide written information to the annuitant or surviving 
spouse. The information must describe the health benefits plans 
available, and include the opportunity to either:
    (i) Enroll in a health benefits plan in which the enrollee's share 
of the premium is less than the annuity amount; or
    (ii) Pay the premium directly to the retirement system.
    (2) The retirement system must accept direct payment for health 
benefits premiums in these circumstances. The annuitant or surviving 
spouse must continue direct payment of the premium even if the annuity 
increases to the extent that it covers the premium.
    (3) The annuitant or surviving spouse must pay the retirement system 
his or her share of the premium for the enrollment for every pay period 
during which the enrollment continues, except for the 31-day temporary 
extension of coverage. The individual must make the payment after each 
pay period in which he or she is covered using a schedule set up by the 
retirement system. If the retirement system does not receive payment by 
the due date, it must notify the individual in writing that continued 
coverage depends upon payment being made within 15 days (45 days for 
annuitants or surviving spouses residing overseas) after the notice is 
received. If no subsequent payments are made, the retirement system 
terminates the enrollment 60 days after the date of the notice (90 days 
for annuitants or surviving spouses residing overseas). An annuitant or 
surviving spouse whose enrollment terminated due to nonpayment of 
premium may not reenroll or reinstate coverage unless there are 
circumstances beyond his or her control as provided in paragraph (d)(4) 
of this section.

[[Page 484]]

    (4) If the annuitant or surviving spouse is prevented by 
circumstances beyond his or her control from paying the premium within 
15 days after receiving the notice, he or she may ask the retirement 
system to reinstate the enrollment by writing the retirement system. The 
individual must describe the circumstances and send the request within 
30 calendar days from the termination date. The retirement system will 
determine if the annuitant or surviving spouse is eligible for 
reinstatement of coverage. When the determination is affirmative, the 
retirement system will reinstate the coverage retroactive to the date of 
termination. If the determination is negative, then the individual may 
request a review of the decision from the retirement system, as 
described in Sec.  890.104.
    (5) Termination of enrollment for failure to pay premiums within the 
time frame described in paragraph (d)(3) of this section is retroactive 
to the end of the last pay period for which payment was timely received.
    (6) The retirement system will submit all direct premium payments 
along with its regular health benefits premiums to OPM according to 
procedures established by OPM.
    (e) Procedures for direct payment of premiums during LWOP after 365 
days. (1) An employee who is granted leave without pay (LWOP) under 
subpart L of part 630 of this chapter (Family and Medical Leave) after 
365 days of continued coverage under Sec.  890.303(e) must pay the 
employee contributions directly to the employing office and keep 
payments current.
    (2) The employee must make payments after the pay period in which 
the employee is covered according to a schedule set up by the employing 
office. If the employing office does not receive the payment by the date 
due, it must notify the employee in writing that continued coverage 
depends upon payment being made within 15 days (45 days for employees 
residing overseas) after the notice is received. If no subsequent 
payments are made, the employing office terminates the enrollment 60 
days after the date of the notice (90 days for enrollees residing 
overseas).
    (3) If the enrollee was prevented by circumstances beyond his or her 
control from making payment within the timeframe in paragraph (e)(2) of 
this section, he or she may ask the employing office to reinstate the 
enrollment by writing to the employing office. The employee must file 
the request within 30 calendar days from the date of termination and 
must include supporting documentation.
    (4) The employing office determines whether the employee is eligible 
for reinstatement of coverage. When the determination is affirmative, 
the employing office will reinstate the coverage of the employee 
retroactive to the date of termination. If the determination is 
negative, the employee may request the employing agency to review the 
decision as provided under Sec.  890.104.
    (5) An employee whose coverage is terminated under paragraph (e)(2) 
of this section may enroll if he or she returns to duty in a pay status 
in a position in which the employee is eligible for coverage under this 
part.
    (f) Uniformed services. (1) Except as provided in paragraph (f)(2) 
of this section, an employee whose coverage continues under Sec.  
890.303(i) is responsible for payment of the employee share of the cost 
of enrollment for every pay period for which the enrollment continues 
for the first 365 days of continued coverage as set forth under 
paragraph (b) of this section. For coverage that continues after 365 
days in nonpay status, the employee must pay, on a current basis, the 
full subscription charge, including both the employee and Government 
shares, plus an additional 2 percent of the full subscription charge.
    (2) As provided by 5 U.S.C. 8906(e)(3), an employing agency may pay 
both the Government and employee contributions and any additional 
administrative expenses for the cost of coverage for the employee and 
the employee's family for a period of 24 months for employees called or 
ordered to active duty in support of a contingency operation on or after 
September 14, 2001. The payment of Government and employee contributions 
and any additional administrative expenses authorized by this section 
only applies to employees while they are serving in support of a 
contingency operation, and eligibility for these payments terminates 
when

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the employee ceases to be on orders for a contingency operation. Payment 
of these contributions and expenses is solely at the discretion of the 
employing agency.

[33 FR 12510, Sept. 4, 1968]

    Editorial Note: For Federal Register citations affecting Sec.  
890.502, see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the 
Finding Aids section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.