For International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) members and their families covered by the ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan — the Taft-Hartley benefit fund jointly trusteed by ILWU and the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA). Longshore workers across Long Beach, the LA Harbor, San Pedro, Oakland, San Francisco Bay, Tacoma, and Seattle ports. We verify your ILWU-PMA benefits, file pre-certification with the Welfare Plan’s contracted administrator, and coordinate with Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act benefits when workplace context is involved.
In most cases, yes. The ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan is a Taft-Hartley benefit fund — a multi-employer trust jointly administered by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Association — that provides broad medical and behavioral-health benefits to longshore workers, retirees, and their families across the U.S. West Coast. The Welfare Plan covers medical detox, residential treatment, MAT, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient, and structured aftercare for substance-use treatment. Specifics depend on your eligibility category (Class A registered, Class B registered, Class C casual, retiree) and the Welfare Plan’s contracted behavioral-health administrator. Our utilization-review team verifies your ILWU-PMA benefits, identifies the current administrator, and walks through the pre-certification process.
If your card lists ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan, ILWU-PMA Coastwise Indemnity Plan, or the Welfare Plan’s regional sub-program, this is the verification path that applies to you.
The Welfare Plan provides extensive benefits for substance-use treatment, particularly for active-duty longshore workers whose physical and psychological work demands carry occupational stress that the Welfare Plan recognizes through coverage rules.
Specific authorization length depends on your eligibility category, the clinical assessment at intake, and any LHWCA workers’-compensation interplay. Medical necessity is documented in clinical language at every concurrent-review window.
What ILWU-PMA pays for and what actually changes a person’s life are not the same equation. We work the second one. Longshore workers arrive with specific work, life, and timing constraints — shift dispatch through the union hall, return-to-duty clearance from the Welfare Plan medical office, dock-clearance medical evaluations, LHWCA workers’-comp interplay, and the cultural reality of a tightly-knit working community where the dispatch hall and waterfront crew know each other.
The pieces above are what separate “covered” from “actually got better.” That’s the line we work above.
The ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan administration is fundamentally different from commercial-carrier UM. The Welfare Plan is governed by the Trust Fund Administrator under LMRA Section 302(c)(5) requirements, with utilization management performed by the Plan’s contracted behavioral-health administrator. Our utilization-review and billing team handles the full cycle including coordination with LHWCA workers’-comp benefits when applicable.
The decision to escalate is not commercial. It’s clinical. When a client is denied care that’s clinically indicated, we advocate for them — through every step above — to support coverage of the level of care our team believes is medically appropriate.
The ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan is governed by federal labor and ERISA law — state insurance law generally does not apply.
When we appeal a Welfare Plan denial, the appeal is built on the clinical documentation, federal MHPAEA, and the Welfare Plan’s own ERISA-required plan documents. All three matter.
A 28-day inpatient model isn’t the clinical recommendation. It’s the legacy insurance benefit. The National Institute on Drug Abuse, summarizing decades of research in its Principles of Effective Treatment, states that participation in treatment for less than 90 days is of limited effectiveness for most substance-use disorders, and that better outcomes are associated with longer durations of treatment.
This matters for longshore workers specifically. Dock work involves heavy machinery, ship-side crane operation, container-handling equipment, and overhead-load environments where impaired judgment carries serious physical-safety consequences. Return-to-duty clearance after substance-use treatment is taken seriously by the Welfare Plan medical office and the dispatch hall. The clinical-necessity case for extended residential — when indicated — leans on the NIDA evidence plus the safety-critical nature of waterfront work.
When concurrent review tries to cut a stay short, our UR and medical teams document the clinical reasoning — including return-to-duty readiness considerations — file the peer-to-peer request, and pursue Trust Board appeal when warranted.
The ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan covers longshore workers and their families across the U.S. West Coast ports. Some of the populations whose plans we commonly verify:
If your card lists ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan or any Local-specific identifier, our UR team can walk through the verification with you — including identification of which administrator currently handles the behavioral-health UM.
Three steps. No commitment.
In most cases, yes. The Welfare Plan covers medical detox, residential treatment, MAT, PHP, IOP, and aftercare for substance-use treatment. Coverage specifics depend on your eligibility category (Class A, B, C registered or casual, retiree) and the Plan’s contracted behavioral-health administrator.
Taft-Hartley benefit plans are multi-employer welfare benefit funds jointly administered by labor unions and employer associations under Section 302(c)(5) of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947. The ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan is jointly trusteed by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Pacific Maritime Association in equal proportion.
The Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA, 1927) provides federal workers’ compensation for longshore workers injured on the job — administered separately from the Welfare Plan. When substance use is connected to a workplace injury, near-miss, or dock-trauma event, LHWCA benefits may interplay with Welfare Plan coverage for treatment of resulting trauma or PTSD. Our team coordinates both when applicable.
Verification is confidential. Information is collected solely for benefit verification and is not shared with the ILWU local, the dispatch hall, the Welfare Plan office, or your employer without your specific written authorization. The Welfare Plan administrator handles your case under federal HIPAA + ERISA confidentiality rules. Return-to-duty clearance documentation is provided only when you authorize us to release it.
Most Welfare Plan eligibility categories cover medical detox when medically indicated. Authorization windows we typically see are 3 to 14 days. The Welfare Plan tends to authorize longer detox stays than commercial PPO carriers, particularly for benzodiazepine and severe alcohol withdrawal cases where the safety-critical nature of dock work matters.
Our medical director conducts a peer-to-peer review with the Welfare Plan administrator’s medical director. If the denial holds, internal appeals route through the Welfare Plan’s Trust Fund Administrator and ultimately the Trust Board (which includes ILWU and PMA representatives equally). When internal appeals are exhausted, ERISA-track external review and federal court review are available.
Most Welfare Plan members have MAT coverage for opioid use disorder (buprenorphine, naltrexone) and alcohol use disorder (naltrexone, acamprosate) when prescribed as part of a clinical treatment plan. Specific coverage and any pre-cert requirements depend on your eligibility category and the Plan’s prescription benefit structure.
Most Welfare Plan members have coverage for treatment of co-occurring psychiatric conditions alongside substance-use treatment when both are clinically indicated, per federal MHPAEA parity requirements. PTSD related to dock-injury or workplace trauma is specifically covered when documented.
Our UR team can have a written breakdown of your Welfare Plan coverage back to you within 30 minutes. Verification is confidential and does not route through the union hall or Welfare Plan office without your specific authorization.
References to the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA), the ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan, the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA), and individual ILWU Locals are made for informational purposes only; we are not affiliated with or endorsed by any of these organizations. Insurance acceptance is subject to benefit verification. Treatment outcomes vary by individual; statements about the authorization, peer-to-peer, and appeals process describe Gev’s Recovery’s standard practices and do not guarantee specific coverage decisions by your plan. Gev’s Recovery Center · 19448 Lassen St, Northridge, CA 91324 · CA DHCS license #191288AP.