The LIA Health Alliance is the ultimate health insurance marketplace for small businesses and their employees and sole proprietors. The LIAHA offers small businesses and their employees a full menu of health insurance benefit plans from competing insurers: Emblem Health, GHI, HIP and Easy Choice Health Plan of NY. And these choices are offered directly to employees
The LIA Health Alliance offers coverage to companies located in Long Island’s Nassau and Suffolk Counties, New York City’s five boroughs, Westchester County, and Rockland County.
With employees contributing upwards of 30% towards the funding of their health insurance benefits, the LIAHA allows employees to use their contribution power to make consumer choices.
Employees select from affordable health insurance choices which include HMO, POS, EPO, PPO and High Deductible HRA & HSA benefit plans. With LIAHA, it’s easy for employees to compare insurers and benefit plans and make the consumer choices that meet their personal needs.
There is one universal enrollment form for employees and one simple bill for employers. The LIAHA also offers Dental, Medical Bridge and Vision plans, making the LIAHA the ultimate health insurance marketplace.
The LIA Health Alliance also offers sole proprietors benefit plans from competing insurers: Emblem Health, GHI, HIP, Easy Choice Health Plan of NY and UnitedHealthcare/Oxford.
Select! Don’t Settle!
LIA Health Alliance has one Stop Selling for General Agents and Brokers!...
There is one universal enrollment form for employees and one simple bill for employers. The LIAHA also offers Dental, Medical Bridge and Vision plans, making the LIAHA the ultimate health insurance marketplace.
In seeking federal money, New York estimated that one million people could obtain insurance through its exchange. In addition, said Josh Vlasto, a spokesman for Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, the exchange will lower the cost of coverage for many New York businesses.
In the individual and small-group markets, where many people now have no health insurance at all, it will be increasingly hard —if not outright illegal, once Secretary Kathleen Sebelius finishes issuing her largely unchecked decrees — to find the kinds of low-premium, high-deductible insurance plans that cost people less and give them more control over their own health-care dollars.