At my company, you can get medical coverage (ok, not great) for a co-spend
of about $92 a month.  I opted not to use it and stayed with Kaiser myself
where I pay about $265 a month out of my own pocket.  It would be nice if an
employee did not opt to take company sponsored health care for whatever
reason that they were credited something back. 


Sandra Clark
==============================
http://www.shayna.com
Training in Cascading Style Sheets and Accessibility


-----Original Message-----
From: Adam Churvis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2006 11:24 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Re: Employee compensation

What would you consider to be good medical coverage?

For example, we're all on Kaiser Permanente, which believe it or not has
been excellent for the past sixteen years, but it costs us about $727 per
month (plus $25 co-pay) between David's policy and the family plan for me,
Lisa, and the kids.  And you know this is just going to go up again big time
next year.

Continuing from my previous post, how does qualifying for coverage figure
into hiring?  What if a potential employee is turned down for coverage?  How
do companies handle that, typically?
Respectfully,

Adam Phillip Churvis
Certified Advanced ColdFusion MX 7 Developer BlueDragon Alliance Founding
Committee



Get advanced intensive Master-level training in C# & ASP.NET 2.0 for
ColdFusion Developers at ProductivityEnhancement.com

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Ian Skinner
  To: CF-Community
  Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2006 11:10 AM
  Subject: RE: Employee compensation


  A big one for me is Medical Coverage.  Good medical coverage.  I quote
nearly double for any position I have been recruited for that does not
include good medical coverage.  

  I've experience first hand this countries problem with the cost of health
care and lack of good universal medical coverage.

  The next important one for me would be retirement investing.  There are a
lot of options for this, but I would definitely consider a company that
matches retirement contributions in some way over one that does not - most
other factors being equivalent.

  Next on my list would be education incentives | reimbursements.  With the
ever changing landscape of our industry, a company that helps me learn and
stay on top of the technologies is one that I would feel is investing in me.

  --------------
  Ian Skinner
  Web Programmer
  BloodSource
  www.BloodSource.org
  Sacramento, CA

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  "C code. C code run. Run code run. Please!"
  - Cynthia Dunning

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