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Yeaaahhh. . . . Amys Send a noteboard - 08/06/2010 05:22:10 AM
Good Luck with that.

The university my SO is attending has a required insurance policy that is only $120 a month and probably crappier coverage than your current policy. Fortunately we found a way around it this last year; this next year he's screwed and will have to pay up front. The bursar's office won't even waive the hold on the account if it's not paid and the insurance is the reason there is a hold. So two years ago we had to scrape because he couldn't use the library or most other services on campus. xx( When the university adopted the plan 2 or 3 years ago they said it was because there were too many students that were racking up health bills and unable to pay them. In other words the student health center wasn't getting paid by the insurance companies students were using. I know international students before the enacted policy had to have health insurance, but the one that was most popular wasn't paying their part of the coverage to the university's health center. . . .

Oh well.
Best of luck but you might have to bite the bullet and pay. Is there a way that can be used as a tax credit or deduction? Something so at least you're not getting 100% screwed over. Or if you take out additional loans for the health insurance, maybe it will be exempt from interest rates???


Amys
I do not know
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