IRMI Update—Issue #15

An E-mail Newsletter for Risk and Insurance Professionals
ISSN: 1530-7948
April 17, 2001

In This Issue

Message from the Editor

Colleague,

Prompted by the threat of federal intervention in insurance regulation stemming from the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services Modernization Act (GLBA), the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) is working hard to promote uniformity in insurance regulation within the United States. The application of 50 different sets of laws, regulations, and enforcement processes has built much costly inefficiency into the U.S. insurance industry, and these new efforts are intended to remedy it.

Great progress is being made in the areas of privacy, producer licensing, and policy form-and-rate filings. NAIC has developed a model privacy regulation for adoption by the states, a model producer licensing act containing multi-state reciprocity provisions, and a centralized Web-based system to automatically process appointments, terminations, and nonresident license applications on behalf of individual state insurance departments. Additionally, a process for providing a single point for product filings for all participating states, CARFRA, will be tested this year.

Our state regulators are to be commended for all the progress they've made in the last few years. Many of their changes will reduce insurance company and agent/broker costs and increase the speed in which new product introductions can be implemented. Other changes may also provide the insurance industry with more flexibility to respond to the needs of large commercial insureds without all the encumbrances of consumer protection regulations.

However, I worry that it will be impossible for the 50 states to ever develop the uniformity and coordination that could be obtained through regulation by a single regulatory system. The NAIC may generate uniform model acts and regulations, but it is unlikely that any state will adopt the acts or regulations without making at least some changes to them. While much more similarity between the states will result, important differences will still lead to inefficiency. Thus, I'm not convinced that the system can be fixed, and I wonder if we shouldn't just start over with a new centralized system that is run by Uncle Sam.

What do you think? Will the NAIC's worthy efforts bring the efficiency we need in insurance regulation? Or should we dump the entire system and start over? Should we have one system for personal lines and small commercial accounts and a different one for large commercial accounts? [See reader comments].

Have a great day.

Jack

Jack P. Gibson
President
IRMI

Attention Conference Videotape Customers!

We had a problem with our Web site and some of the orders for Construction Risk Conference videotapes were lost. If you ordered one or more tapes, please go online and input your order again. Alternatively, call 1-800-827-4242 and ask for a Customer Service Representative, and he or she will be glad to confirm your order. We apologize for the inconvenience.

Risk Tip

Environmental Risk Control Tactics. These tactics can help contractors and many other types of businesses control their environmental risks.

  • Provide secondary containment for aboveground storage tanks and drums containing liquid. In areas where there is heavy vehicular traffic, protect storage areas with impact barriers.
  • Perform lead and asbestos analyses before demolishing or repairing existing structures. Lead-based paint was widely used as recently as 1977 in residential homes and is still widely used for industrial applications. Similarly, asbestos-containing materials (insulation, floor tiles, and mastics) were also widely used, in some materials, until 1990. Handling or altering these materials may release dangerous levels of airborne particles that can impact workers and the public, or contaminate surrounding property.
  • Equip field vehicles with spill kits to contain spills. Have absorbent booms or granular absorbents on-hand to stop a spill from spreading and reaching a watercourse or a storm drain. Be certain that your employees are trained in how to use spill kit equipment and materials.
  • Ensure that field crews are trained to recognize hazards and dangerous conditions associated with their work. Field laborers and equipment operators are likely the ones who will cause an accident. These individuals will also have the first opportunity to react quickly to minimize the problem after it has occurred.

Scott Lodge
Senior Consultant
ECS Risk Control (an XL Capital company)
E-mail: LodgeS@ecsinc.com

Suggest a Risk Tip. Future issues of IRMI Update will include more risk tips from our readers. Send us a practical tip (less than 300 words) for identifying and managing risks, buying insurance, managing claims, or filling gaps in insurance coverages. We'll acknowledge your contribution as we did for Scott.

New Expert Commentary

We add new Expert Commentary to IRMI.com every week. There are now 127 articles on IRMI.com, and many more are in production. Below you'll find summaries of some recent additions with links to the articles.

  • Insurance Agency E&O Risk Control: The Question of Independent Contractors—There is an increasing trend for agencies to classify producers as independent contractors rather than employees. State and federal laws do not look favorably on these arrangements. This article explains the various tests used to determine the difference.
  • Cut-Through Provisions in Reinsurance Agreements—A cut-through provision allows a party not in privity with the reinsurer to have rights against the reinsurer under the reinsurance agreement. Learn how cut-through endorsements are attached, triggered, and employed, and how they may be unenforceable in some jurisdictions.
  • The Argentinean Insurance Market—Based on area, continental Argentina is the eighth largest country in the world, the second largest in Latin America. Learn about its insurance market—its composition, regulatory environment, and how various coverage lines are handled.

IRMI Products & Services

Pollution Coverage Issues. Need to know if gasoline is considered a "pollutant" under the CGL exclusion in California? Whether the owned property exclusion can be circumvented because of a threat to third-party property in New Jersey? This powerful reference helps you answer these and many more questions about pollution coverage under a general liability policy. It gives you every published state and federal appellate court decision forming the current judicial interpretation of commonly litigated issues involving coverage of pollution claims. The helpful charts group decisions according to whether they favor the insurer or insured, and also according to the rationales determining coverage and the fact situations out of which pollution claims arise. Attorneys, insurance practitioners, and risk management professionals will find it to be invaluable when litigating or negotiating coverage disputes.

How To Subscribe or Unsubscribe

A subscription to IRMI Update is absolutely free. Use the e-mail registration form to initiate or terminate your subscription.