This web site, sponsored by the Section 127 Coalition and hosted by the College and University Personnel Association (CUPA), has been created to as part of a continuing effort to have Internal Revenue Code Section 127, employee educational assistance, reinstated as a permanent part of the tax code. Section 127 allows any employer, public or private, to offer their employees up to $5,250 in tax free educational assistance for both undergraduate and graduate level courses. Both Republican and Democratic members of Congress and current and past Administrations have supported efforts to make section 127 a permanent part of the Internal Revenue Code.The mission of this web site is to provide visitors with important informational resources to educate, inform, and help them understand the applications and use of section 127. In this way, the Coalition hopes that this Web site will build support for the permanent reinstatement of section 127 for undergraduate and graduate courses.
Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO compared the: (1) criteria used by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) disability compensation program and federal and state workers' compensation programs to determine compensation; and (2) compensation individuals with selected work-related injuries and diseases would receive under VA's disability program and what they would receive for the same impairments under the Federal Employees' Compensation Act (FECA).GAO found that: (1) the VA disability compensation program and workers' compensation programs, including FECA, differ with respect to program goals, types of benefits provided, and eligibility requirements for benefits; (2) most workers' compensation programs provide separate cash payments for wages lost and permanent impairment, while VA provides compensation only for service-connected conditions, which need not be permanent; (3) unlike the VA program, workers' compensation programs emphasize returning employees to work while limiting employers' liability, and the vast majority who receive workers' compensation receive only medical benefits, not cash awards; (4) to be eligible for wage loss benefits under workers' compensation programs, workers must actually lose all or a portion of their wages for a specified minimum period of time, then they receive a portion, usually 66 and two-thirds percent, of their actual lost wages for the duration of the period that wages are lost; (5) to collect compensation for permanent impairments, workers must sustain permanent loss or loss of use of a body part or function, but they need not lose wages to receive compensation for their permanent impairments; (6) unlike workers' compensation programs, the amount of basic compensation veterans may receive is established by statute and is not based on their individual wage loss or usual wages, but it is based on the rating VA's Schedule for Rating Disabilities assigns to that veteran's specific condition; (7) all veterans whose conditions are assigned the same rating receive the same basic benefits amount; (8) unlike workers' compensation for permanent impairments, there is no limit on the length of time veterans can receive benefits or the total amount they can receive for permanent conditions; (9) the monthly cash benefits for permanent impairments under FECA for employees at the GS-12, step 1, salary level tend to be higher than the benefits under VA's disability program for the same types of conditions; (10) this is likely to be the case for those at higher, but not lower, salary levels under FECA because workers' compensation is based on workers' usual wages, whereas veterans' benefits are not; and (11) unless workers' compensation continues under the wage loss provision after the cash awards for permanent impairment and, the amount and present value of VA compensation could be higher than FECA's over the long term.
President Clinton Introduces FY98 BudgetOn February 6, 1997, President Clinton formally sent to Congress his five-year budget proposal . . .
The President's budget proposal contained several new health care provisions including a program to expand health care coverage to children:
- $740 million per year in grants to States to build on recent State programs involving insurers, providers, employers, schools and others. Estimated to cover one million children;
- Funds to extend one year of continuous Medicaid coverage to children, potentially helping one million children who would have otherwise lost coverage;
- Funds for school health centers and Consolidated Health Centers (CHCs) to expand services to working families and their children through school-based health clinics.
Clinton also proposed expanding health insurance for the families of workers who are in-between jobs. The FY98 budget would establish a national demonstration program to help States finance up to six months of health care coverage for the unemployed and their families.