How to Own Your Own Company in 5 Easy Steps
March 23rd, 2009 Posted in COBRA/State Continuation, Start-Ups, politics | No Comments »Why struggle for years grovelling at your boss’ feet for whatever tidbit is thrown your way? There has to be a better way! Now this may sound like a ShamWow commercial, but you can own your very own company in just five easy steps:
- Get fired from your job.
- Have your former employer fail to notify you of your COBRA or state continuation rights (thus you become uninsured).
- Come down with a terrible illness or injury and incur thousands of dollars in uninsured medical bills.
- Sue your former employer for failing to notify you of your right to continue on the company health plan.
- Take stock ownership of your former employer because they don’t have the cash to pay off your Mac-Daddy judgment!!!
Yep, it’s that easy. You just have to work for a company that doesn’t take its fiduciary duties seriously. President Obama just signed into law the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) which mandates that taxpayers cover 65% of COBRA premiums for involuntarily terminated individuals.
There are new Department of Labor notices that must be mailed to everyone who lost coverage since September 1, 2008. The deadline to send these notices is April 18, 2009. Let me know if your company might need some help (or not if you aspire to own them one day)…
The previous owner had built a cabin about 25 years ago aside the Hillabee creek. All the locals had told the guy he was crazy to build there, but he did so anyway. As it turns out, he picked the lowest spot within in several square miles – the junction of three creeks. When Hurricane Opel passed through many years ago the high water mark was about first floor ceiling level. To make a long story short, as pretty as it looks you would not want to spend the night in it (unless you like mice and don’t have any mold allergies).
So, building a new cabin was high on my list of things to do. Learning from the mistakes of my predecessor I picked a site on the highest hilltop. For most weekends throughout the spring and summer of 2007 my mother, son and I would put in six or eight hour days sawing and hammering. The site has no electricity so all the work was done with hand tools. 
Deborah Michael and I organized an informal breakfast meeting this morning between physician practice consultant, Mike Fleischman and insurance company executive, Don Weitzel. Oil and water under most circumstances, but productive in this setting.
Principal Edge seems to accommodate these issues in its promise to pay providers within 15 calendar days (not work days). Failing to do so may result in a penalty being paid to the provider. Innovative thinking for an insurance company!
My wife can breath easy now, there won’t be a Navy recruiter knocking at the door for me. This past Saturday some friends from the Fowler YMCA and I completed the 
As I reflect on the event and the 50 or so minutes that it took for us to complete it I am reminded that we are just amateurs, feeling all good about ourselves that we can do x amount of whatever in a certain amount of time. Odie and Otter, and guys like them, are out living very dangerous lives so we can go to work, kiss the wife and kids and think less about reality than we really should. In the end, we said our thank-yous and said that we appreciated the work that they are doing, but those words cannot express the true understanding of the sacrifices that the Navy SEALs make on our behalf. A pretty cool bunch of folks who we can only pretend to stand next to.
The boys played solid ball throughout the game. Blake, Dylan, and Trevor provided the core of the offense and had some phenomenal scores. 