The residency requirement is clearly stated. You agreed to meet that requirement. Pretty simple to understand that if you end up failing to meet that requirement, you don't qualify.What I consider not acceptable is your way of making the statement explicit or not and that is not going to change. This is one.
Second, unless said retro active effects/consequences are stipulated in the terms and conditions, communicated to and accepted by the signee / applicant as such - there is no reason whatsoever that I am subject to reimbursements which have not been communicated to me and agreed upon upfront. Specifically, these supposed retroactive effects are not stated in BC health care website, nor are they stipulated in the MSP application form I filled.
Regarding the justification that you seem to put forward, there are smarter way to prevent abuse from happening, for example increase the 2/3 month waiting period for enrollment to MSP - which I believe is in itself a sufficient and enough drastic safeguard - anything else is an overkill. Certainly not enroll client and let them learn (or be misinformed - this is yet to be sorted out) - after the facts - what the rules are when these same rules are stipulated nowhere except discussed confusingly on a forum of public and informal nature.
You are trying to treat this as a contract to a private company. Unfortunately that is not the case. Health "insurance" is a service that is covered by a government (in this case provincial).What I consider not acceptable is your way of making the statement explicit or not and that is not going to change. This is one.
Second, unless said retro active effects/consequences are stipulated in the terms and conditions, communicated to and accepted by the signee / applicant as such - there is no reason whatsoever that I am subject to reimbursements which have not been communicated to me and agreed upon upfront. Specifically, these supposed retroactive effects are not stated in BC health care website, nor are they stipulated in the MSP application form I filled.
Regarding the justification that you seem to put forward, there are smarter way to prevent abuse from happening, for example increase the 2/3 month waiting period for enrollment to MSP - which I believe is in itself a sufficient and enough drastic safeguard - anything else is an overkill. Certainly not enroll client and let them learn (or be misinformed - this is yet to be sorted out) - after the facts - what the rules are when these same rules are stipulated nowhere except discussed confusingly on a forum of public and informal nature.
For the bold part, where is this publicly accessible ?You are trying to treat this as a contract to a private company. Unfortunately that is not the case. Health "insurance" is a service that is covered by a government (in this case provincial).
And as such it has a set of publicly listed obligations (same like tax obligations). So since you have used the services you do fall under this law. And in this case they do not have to inform you specifically, as long as the set of rules is publicly accessible (on internet for example).
And just to be clear. Same rule would apply if you would tell yourself, that now you want to move to Alberta or Ontario. You would owe money to BC, because of your short stay over there.
Now what is the probability, that they will go after you?
The higher the bill the higher probability.
Are you in Canada right now? If you are in Canada,try telling the story you posted yesterday to the MSP call centre agent and see the official response. Then post the reply here.For the bold part, where is this publicly accessible ?
For the other poster, some are very good at defending what is blatant theft. Applying law / terms and conditions retro actively is illegal in many countries. There is nothing more to say to that poster. Period.
Here you go:For the bold part, where is this publicly accessible ?
For the other poster, some are very good at defending what is blatant theft. Applying law / terms and conditions retro actively is illegal in many countries. There is nothing more to say to that poster. Period.
I read this so many times. Please read my post. Because - do not take offense - this is becoming a circular discussion.Here you go:
So this is the law applicable to the health insurance
http://www.bclaws.ca/civix/document/id/complete/statreg/96286_01
Here is the extract that points to you:
Cancellation of beneficiary enrolment
7.4 (1)The commission may cancel the enrolment of a beneficiary as follows:
(a)on application by an adult beneficiary, effective on a date subsequent to the date of the application as determined by the commission;
(b)if the commission believes the beneficiary has ceased to be a resident, effective on the date the commission determines to have been the date that the beneficiary ceased to be a resident;
(c)if the commission determines that the beneficiary was not eligible for enrolment, effective on the date of enrolment as a beneficiary.
(2)Subsection (1) (a) does not apply for the purpose of requesting that the enrolment of a child described by section 7 (1) (b) be cancelled.
(3)If a beneficiary does not apply to renew enrolment in accordance with section 7 (2), the beneficiary's enrolment is cancelled effective on the date by which the beneficiary was required by the regulations to renew.
And then here is the earlier citated conditions under which you can apply
https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/health/health-drug-coverage/msp/bc-residents/eligibility-and-enrolment/are-you-eligible
A person must be a B.C. resident to qualify for medical coverage under MSP. A resident is a person who meets all of the following conditions:
* Eligible B.C. residents (citizens of Canada or persons who are lawfully admitted to Canada for permanent residence) who are outside B.C. for vacation purposes only, are allowed a total absence of up to seven months in a calendar year.
- must be a citizen of Canada or be lawfully admitted to Canada for permanent residence;
- must make his or her home in B.C.; and
- must be physically present in B.C. at least six months in a calendar year, or a shorter prescribed period.*
So as you can see all the rules are easily accessible online. And yes it will be retroactive for 2018 if you leave BC sooner.
And since it is a public act, nobody had to specially spell it out to you. All then need is to have it publicly accessible.
Good luck.
Unfrotunatelly system in EU is different from Canada and therefore you cannot compare it.I read this so many times. Please read my post. Because - do not take offense - this is becoming a circular discussion.
Where on earth is it EXPLICITLY stated that I will be obligated to reimburse medical treatment costs should I fail to meet the residency requirement for continued eligibility?
Saying that I will have to make reimbursement is called an "implied statement". Not stating explicitly the risks, is plain misinformation and abuse.
There is a lot of movement in EU actually on a totally different subject (protection of personal data) but of similar nature (abusive terms and conditions and misinformation) that led to a drastic change in privacy regulations all across EU. What I can say is that this beats them all.
Sorry if one of the conditions is to physically present in BC for 6 months (exceptionally for 5 months), then the only real circumstance I would see that would help you is if:Another flaw in the logic:
QUOTE
"if the commission determines that the beneficiary was not eligible for enrolment, effective on the date of enrolment as a beneficiary."
UNQUOTE
CONTEXT
Say my intent as of 1st jan 2018 is to settle as resident for a complete year in Canada .
Now circumstances have changed and for some reasons I cannot stay in Canada, I need to depart before the 6 month period would revolve.
I put forward that the following grounds are legitimate reasons to cancel eligibility retroactively:
- Misrepresentation of status
- Fallacious information provided
- Forged documents provided, etc.
But how could you determine that on 1st Jan 2018 I was not meeting the eligibility criteria due to an event which happened afterward?
This can only boil down to a completely different matter which is a misrepresentation of intent (good luck to prove it). Otherwise it is simple: this is just bogus logic.
Doesn't matter if it's emergency or not. How BC MSP works isn't the same as Denmark.I think if it's emergency then OP won't be charge this fee. OP are not going to make an emergency to hurt himself to get the benefit of the system. My experience in Denmark in 2015 summer, my daughter hurted her finger by wrongly closing the car door and we are told it's an emergency, Denmark won't charge any emergency fee for anyone including visitors or undocumented immigrants. Nice country!