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December
21, 2001
Alabama
Department of Insurance Okays Administrative Fees for Agencies!
In
an announcement released today, AIIA President Malcolm Dunaway has requested
that all AIIA members be informed of this latest development. Dunaway says,
“For years Independent Agents have seen their slice of the economic pie
shrink. Associations are born from the common needs of many. Recently AIIA
announced a major savings to all agents by not having to send privacy notices
in Alabama. Now AIIA is proud to advise that agents can charge fees for
services beginning first of the year. Both of these actions are from efforts
of your Association. Your membership does pay!”
The
Alabama Insurance Department issued a bulletin December 20, 2001, granting
authority for an agent fee schedule to be effective January 1, 2002.
The bulletin was issued based on a provision in the Model Licensing Act
permitting agents to charge specific consumer fees as authorized by the
Insurance Commissioner in addition to the premium charges. The scheduled
fees may be charged at the discretion of the agent. Only the scheduled
fees may be charged and the maximum charges per transaction are listed
below. No fees, other than those authorized in the schedule, may be charged.
In addition, notice of any fee charges must be disclosed to the
consumer in writing prior to any policy transaction.
The authorized fee schedule is as follows:
New Policy Application Fee $25
Motor Vehicle Report $Cost
Client Office Payments $5
Application Rewrite $25
Reinstatement Fee $10
Photograph Fee $5
Homeowners Reinspection $25
These
administrative fees are separate and distinct from the insurance company's
premium and must be disclosed to consumers as a separate charge by the
producer.
AIIA
Director of Education and Technical Affairs Victor D. McCarley, CIC, states,
“Agents have long had extensive costs with regards to production, and with
a declining commission base, it has made it more difficult for agents to
do business. The new fee schedule should make it easier for them to do
business by easing some of the burden.”
Ken
McFeeters of PAC Insurance in Birmingham remembers the onslaught of new
business after the mandatory automobile insurance passed the Alabama, “A
year and a half ago, many of us realized the forthcoming challenge that
occurred from this regulation. I expressed my concerns to AIIA’s Executive
VP Ron Scott, and he was thinking the same thing. If you ever wonder what
the association does for its members, they definitely have legislative
power. Individually as agents, we could not have gotten this passed, but
through the Association collective, we have great influence.”
“Earlier
this year the efforts of AIIA allowed us to get an agent exemption from
mailing privacy notices to all of our agency clients. The mailing
costs for our members would have been astronomical. With the ability to
charge administrative fees on P&C contracts and other activities, this
has been a doubly rewarding year for our legislative and regulatory efforts,”
says AIIA Executive Vice President Ron Scott. “I think that all the
members can agree that the dues they pay for the association activities
are monies well invested.”
Auto-Owners
Verdict Reversed
Alabama
Supreme Court justices reversed a jury’s decision to award $1 million to
a Choctaw County man who sued his insurance company for not paying $2,000
in medical bills. In an opinion written by Justice Gorman Houston, the
court agreed with an appeal from Auto-Owners Insurance Co. that a Choctaw
County Circuit Court judge should have thrown the case out in the first
place. The case went to trial; jurors awarded David Abston $500,000 in
compensatory damages and $500,000 in punitive damages. Abston, who had
insurance through Auto-Owners, had charged the company with breach of contract,
bad-faith failure to pay and fraud because the company did not pay him
directly.
Citigroup
to spin off Travelers
Citigroup
announced a plan to spin off Travelers Property Casualty, creating a new,
publicly traded insurance company, as well as the return of Bob Lipp as
Chairman and CEO. Lipp’s return is essential to taking this new company
to the public because he knows the financial community, and they know him.
Lipp was a critical part of Travelers return to health in the 1990's. “The
spin off creates new opportunities for us to focus solely on challenges
in the property-casualty marketplace,” says Chuck Clarke of Travelers.
“As the events of the past year have demonstrated, the need for risk protection
has never been more important than it is now. And the strong partnerships
that we’ve forged over the years position us well to meet those challenges.”
According to Clarke, neither strategies nor priorities will be changing
as 2001 closes and 2002 begins. Travelers will continue to operate with
a focus on the needs of agents and their customers.
Alabama
Creates Two New Divisions in Department of Insurance
Alabama
Insurance Commissioner D. David Parsons announced the creation of two new
divisions within the state’s insurance department, the Division of Insurance
Fraud and the Market Conduct Division. The Division of Insurance Fraud,
which is officially effective January 1st, will be headed by Terry Raycraft
and will oversee fraud cases relating to insurance. Raycraft served as
Associate Counsel at the Department of Insurance for over 16 years. During
his tenure in the Legal Division, Raycraft prosecuted numerous cases of
insurance
fraud. Prior to joining the Insurance Department, he was in the private
practice of law. The commissioner also named Jack M. Brown to manage the
new Market Conduct Division. Brown will be responsible for organizing,
implementing and managing market conduct functions for the department.
Prior to his appointment, he supervised the financial field examiners for
the DOI.
GuideOne
Restructuring Due to Poor Homeowners
GuideOne
announced that they are no longer accepting new Homeowners applications
with effective dates of January 15, 2002, or later, claiming poor Homeowners
experience and poor year-to-date calendar losses. GuideOne will also be
reunderwriting each risk individually in their book of business and nonrenewing
those risks with the highest potential for loss. According to Bill Sammon,
AVP of Personal Lines Operations, GuideOne has taken substantial actions
in the past few years to improve loss ratios with no success. “We have
continued to be optimistic about this situation over the last several month
believing we would see the monthly loss ratios start to improve,” says
Sammon. “Unfortunately this has not happened. Hopefully we will see improvement
in 2002 and be able to get back to business.” Existing policy holders will
continue to be serviced if they should need a new policy due to their purchase
of a new home or a refinance. This does not effect Standard Auto or Commercial
Lines.
Selective
Ins. Group Joins Trusted Choice Branding Initiative as a Founding Partner
Selective
Insurance Group signed on as a founding sponsor of Trusted Choice, the
new consumer marketing brand created by IIAA, announces IIAA CEO Robert
A. Rusbuldt. Selective Insurance Group Inc, headquarter in Branchville,
N.J., is a holding company for five P&C insurance companies that offer
primary and alternative market insurance for commercial and personal risks.
Both A.M. Best and Standard & Poor’s insurance rating services rate
Selective Insurance Companies as A+. The consumer rollout of the Trusted
Choice Brand will begin next February with pilot markets in Louisville,
Ky, and Seattle/Tacoma Wash.
AIIA’s
Lauren Mashburn selected as “One to Watch”
ConventionSouth
has named Lauren Mashburn, AIIA’s Director of Education Administration,
as one of their Meeting Professionals to Watch in 2002. Selected for her
professionalism, creativity and dedication to the meetings and convention
industry, she was profiled in ConventionSouth’s December 2001 issue. Join
us in saying congratulations |