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COBRA would allow health insurance to be purchased through the same healthcare company for whatever are the COBRA rates (usually higher than other insurance, I found), but the time for this is limited. I don't remember the length of the limit, but it is between 18 months & 3 years. The expense of continuing insurance under COBRA is high, so the only real reason a person would want it is if they're not eligible to obtain other insurance through thier own employer or private health insurance... generally, someone with health problems & no employment that wou dhave insurance as a benefit migth want this. The 18 month (or 3 year) COBRA period would officialy begin on the day teh divorce is final. The judge can order you to provide insuracne while the divorce is pending, and after it's final, through the end of the COBRA period, but anything beyond that, your insurer can't be forced to provide. If the jduge somehow ordered YOU to provide it without regard to going through your employer/COBRA and without regard to whether your ex is eligible for benefits, it sounds unfair and you need to object/appeal before it becomes set in stone (as teh price to insure an otherwise uninsureable person could be huge, and so allowing a mistake like this to et by without appealing it would be a serious problem once the COBRA eligibility runs out.) |