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MEP overview
How MEPs are established and administered
What MEPs cover
Why MEPs are essential
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MEPs provide continuous benefits coverage
to workers as they change employment from one
contributing employer to another. This continuous
coverage is essential for workers in mobile,
seasonal industries like construction and entertainment.
Additionally, most plans allow for the accumulation
of revenues and "pay-direct" schemes to protect workers
and their dependents during periods of unemployment ñ
which is not uncommon in many of the industries represented.
A worker may be employed by a particular employer
for only a day, a week, a month or a few months,
to work on a specific project, and then move on
to work on another contributing employer's project.
Between jobs, he or she might be off work for a day,
a week, a month or longer. A worker may work for several
different employers over his or her working life, with
periods of unemployment between jobs.
Without a central plan covering all of his or her
work for multiple employers, workers could not have
ready access to the many necessary benefits provided
by MEPs. Frequent changes in employment would make
coverage by one employer impossible. Since most employers
are small they are incapable of maintain a separate
benefit plan.
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