
North American Bancard Introduces Health Care Plan
Updated May 7, 2003
North
American Bancard has introduced for its agent partners the NAB Health
Benefits Plan, a comprehensive health care program that encompasses
medical, dental, vision, life and long-term care insurance.
Participants can pick and choose the type of coverage that suits their
individual needs. North American Bancard pays 50% of the premium. The other half
is paid by the participating agent through an automatic deduction from
the participant’s monthly residual earnings. In addition to individual
coverage, the plan also offers options for extended coverage to family
members with the added cost for family benefits paid by the agent. Eligibility is determined by number of merchant accounts. Each
participating agent must have 30 active merchant accounts to enroll in
the NAB plan and must sign a minimum of 30 new approved merchants per
quarter to maintain eligibility. “Health care was desperately needed in the industry,” said
Marc Gardner, President of North American Bancard. “Many industries
outside of ours provide benefits to agents that sell goods and
services. No one was offering these benefits to independent sales
agents, so we decided to do it. And by doing so, we have added value to
our program. "Everyone out there offers value in some way. North American
Bancard differentiates itself from its competitors by providing
superior products, services and, now, health care benefits.” The program first was presented at the recent North American Bancard agent expo in Orlando.
“Having the opportunity to be enrolled in this health care
program has garnered me significant savings,” said Brian Roth, a sales
agent in the New York area who has worked with NAB for more than three
years. “Not only has North American Bancard been a pleasure to work
with, but they have provided me with exposure to a great benefits plan
that I haven’t seen before in this industry.” The NAB Health Benefits Plan is available in all 50 states. To
find out more about the program or apply, call 1-800-BANCARD, ext. 1015
or visit www.nabancard.com.
Visa ($2 Billion), MasterCard ($1 Billion) Settle with Retailers
Visa
USA and MasterCard International have reached separate settlement
agreements with Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., Sears Roebuck & Co. and
millions of other retailers in the class-action antitrust lawsuit
involving debit cards. Combined, the associations will pay the
retailers nearly $3 billion, lower their debit transaction fees and
change their "honor all cards" policies. The retailers filed the lawsuit against Visa and MasterCard in
1996. They claimed that as part of an "honor all cards" policy, Visa
and MasterCard were violating antitrust laws by forcing merchants to
accept more costly offline debit cards, which require a signature,
rather than less expensive online debit cards, which require a PIN.
Visa and MasterCard argued that the policy was in the best interest of
consumers. MasterCard was the first to settle with the retailers in a
surprise move just as the trial was set to begin on Monday, April 28,
2003 in Brooklyn, NY. Details of MasterCard’s settlement began to leak
out following the announcement even though U.S. District Court Judge
John Gleeson asked all parties to keep information quiet in the
interest of the trial. MasterCard agreed to pay the retailers about $1
billion, reduce the debit card fees it charges them and eliminate its
"honor all cards" policy. MasterCard will establish a separate interchange rate for
MasterCard debit transactions (it previously blended credit and debit
into a single interchange rate). The new rate will be about one-third
less than the current rate. Gleeson referred to MasterCard’s move to settle as an "11th
hour" decision and, for a while, it appeared that Visa would stand
trial alone. Gleeson had postponed opening arguments for the trial until
Wednesday, April 30; however, on Wednesday morning he announced that
Visa and the retailers were involved in "earnest and good faith
efforts" to reach a settlement and that court would be adjourned until
later in the week. On Wednesday night, under increasing pressure following
MasterCard’s surprise settlement, Visa announced it also had agreed to
settle. Visa will pay the retailers $2 billion and, like MasterCard,
will reduce its debit card fees. Visa also agreed to modify its "honor
all cards" policy by giving retailers the choice of accepting either
online of offline debit cards, beginning in January 2004. Both of the associations will lower their transaction fees
beginning August 1, 2003. They will pay $25 million of the settlements
immediately and will pay out the remaining balances over 10 years. The months leading up to the trial were far from lackluster.
In January 2003, the associations asked Gleeson to throw out the
antitrust class-action lawsuit, arguing that the retailers failed to
provide sufficient evidence showing the associations were involved in a
conspiracy to monopolize the debit card market. The judge declined
their request in April in a 16-page document, saying he believed there
was evidence, both "direct and circumstantial," from which a jury could
find a conspiracy. Gleeson’s decision served as a partial summary judgment for
the retailers, agreeing with the claim that they were forced to abide
by the associations' "honor all cards" policy, but he decreed that it
was up to a jury to decide if this policy was in violation of antitrust
laws. In March, MasterCard asked for a separate trial. Gleeson denied that request as well.
Many experts believe that by settling first, MasterCard got what
it wanted, which ultimately was separation from Visa, the Wall Street
Journal reported. MasterCard’s debit program is smaller than Visa's,
and by extricating itself from Visa MasterCard would have to pay less
in damages to the retailers. Now that Visa has settled, too, the real issue could be with
revenue of the associations' member banks. Since retailers will be
charged less in fees and will have the freedom to use less costly
PIN-based debit card networks such as STAR, Pulse or NYCE to route
transactions, they also will pay less to banks and less to MasterCard
and Visa.
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