wearing a helmet, he said.
At a city Health Insurance Committee meeting, City Clerk Kathy Haley said she was not sure if the notice of the added exclusions were handed out to city employees, the minutes of the meeting show.
Mayor George Hensley said a committee or an employee might consider different activities “hazardous.”
City Administrator Scott Noethlich agreed, but asked how one defined “hazardous.”
Representatives of the city’s health insurance administrator, Anchor Benefit, negotiated a settlement of ,750, which they will have to pay.
At a special meeting held Feb. 25, the committee recommended that the council accept Anchor Benefit’s negotiated discount with the understanding that Baker pays his remaining out-of-pocket maximum for the year of 4.74 and a 5 fee to negotiate the claims.
The tentative agreement further concluded that the basis of the recommendation was that Baker did not receive any head injuries and that he would have been injured even if he was wearing a helmet at the time of the crash.
However, it remains up to the city council to approve the deal.
Hensley said Monday that representatives of Anchor Benefit consulting had advised that this exclusion is not usually found in insurance policies, and Hensley believed the city would probably take a closer look at it.
Baker has since stopped riding a motorcycle, citing his love for his wife and five
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