Premiums to go up for some recipients



Some seniors will have to pay up to 800 more a year for coverage.
WASHINGTON POST
WASHINGTON -- When new income-based premiums for Medicare's Part B program go into effect next month, some seniors will get an unwelcome surprise: Their monthly costs will be going up considerably more than expected because of the government's method of counting their income.
In addition to income from investments, pensions and wages, seniors will find that big but unusual windfalls -- from house sales, for instance, or from taking cash from an individual retirement account -- will also be included in government calculations.
As a result, an advocacy group for seniors says, tens of thousands of people will be counted as wealthy even though their continuing yearly income is modest. Some will be paying as much as 800 more a year for Part B coverage because they are deemed to be "higher income beneficiaries." This will be on top of the 93.50 a month standard premium that all recipients will pay.
No warning
"We are concerned that our members are just now finding out that the government is suddenly increasing seniors' Part B premiums without adequate warning," Shannon Benton, executive director of the Senior Citizens League, said in a statement.
"Making matters worse, some seniors will have a difficult time with the appeal process, perhaps having to drive hours to appear in person -- an option many seniors simply don't have available to them," she said.
Decrease
Mark Hinkle, a spokesman for the Social Security Administration, said that a small number of people will indeed have to pay more for their 2007 premiums because of large 2005 capital gains reported on their income tax returns. But he said that the premiums would go down in future years once the capital gains are no longer part of a recipient's tax return.
Congress, he said, listed a number of "life-changing events," such as divorce, death of a spouse or loss of a job, that could reduce a beneficiary's premium. But capital gains from the sale of a house or an IRA payout are not on the list, he said, and so are treated no differently than wages when calculating the premium.
On its Web site, Social Security details how Part B participants can question or challenge their new premium assessments.
Provisions for "means testing" the Medicare Part B program, starting in 2007, were included in the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003.