Bill Text: NY S02297 | 2017-2018 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Enacts the comprehensive motor vehicle insurance rate reform act; amends provisions applicable to automobile insurance rates including establishing a program for consumer information on insurers and establishing an office of public insurance advocate; revives previously expired provisions of law relating to automobile and property/casualty insurance rates.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2018-01-03 - REFERRED TO FINANCE [S02297 Detail]

Download: New_York-2017-S02297-Introduced.html


                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
                                          2297
                               2017-2018 Regular Sessions
                    IN SENATE
                                    January 12, 2017
                                       ___________
        Introduced  by  Sen.  PARKER -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Finance
        AN ACT to amend the executive law,  the  insurance  law  and  the  state
          finance  law, in relation to enacting the "Comprehensive Motor Vehicle
          Insurance Rate Reform Act"
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
     1    Section  1.  Short  title. This act shall be known and may be cited as
     2  the "Comprehensive Motor Vehicle Insurance Rate Reform Act".
     3    § 2.  The executive law is amended by adding a  new  article  44-A  to
     4  read as follows:
     5                                ARTICLE 44-A
     6                     OFFICE OF PUBLIC INSURANCE ADVOCATE
     7  Section 945. Office of public insurance advocate.
     8          946. Insurance consumer advocate.
     9          947. Powers and duties.
    10    § 945. Office of public insurance advocate. There is hereby created in
    11  the  executive  department  an  independent office of insurance consumer
    12  advocate (hereinafter referred to as "office") to represent  the  inter-
    13  ests of nonbusiness automobile insurance consumers in New York state.
    14    §  946. Insurance consumer advocate. 1.  The governor, with the advice
    15  and consent of the senate, shall appoint an insurance consumer  advocate
    16  (hereinafter referred to as "advocate") who shall serve as the executive
    17  director  of the office of insurance consumer advocate and shall receive
    18  an annual salary to be fixed by the governor within the amount available
    19  therefor by appropriation.
    20    2. (a) To be eligible to serve as advocate, a person must be  a  resi-
    21  dent  of  New  York state. The advocate shall be a person who has demon-
    22  strated a strong commitment and involvement in efforts to safeguard  the
    23  rights  of  the  public  and  who possesses the knowledge and experience
    24  necessary to practice effectively in insurance proceedings.
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD06671-01-7

        S. 2297                             2
     1    (b) A person is not eligible for appointment as advocate if the person
     2  or the person's spouse:
     3    (i)  is  employed  by  or participates in the management of a business
     4  entity or other organization regulated by the  department  of  financial
     5  services or receiving funds from the department;
     6    (ii)  owns  or controls, directly or indirectly, more than ten percent
     7  interest in a business entity or other  organization  regulated  by  the
     8  department  of financial services or receiving funds from the department
     9  of financial services or the office;
    10    (iii) uses  or  receives  a  substantial  amount  of  tangible  goods,
    11  services,  or  funds  from  the  department of financial services or the
    12  office, other than compensation or reimbursement authorized by  law  for
    13  the department of financial services or office membership, attendance or
    14  expenses.
    15    3. The advocate shall serve for a term of two years expiring on Febru-
    16  ary first of each odd-numbered year.
    17    4. It is a ground for removal from office if the advocate:
    18    (a)  does  not  have  at  the  time  of appointment the qualifications
    19  required by this section;
    20    (b) does not maintain during service as  advocate  the  qualifications
    21  required by this section;
    22    (c) violates a prohibition established by this section; or
    23    (d)  cannot  discharge the advocate's duties for a substantial part of
    24  the term for which the advocate is appointed because of illness or disa-
    25  bility.
    26    5. The validity of an action of the office is not affected by the fact
    27  that it is taken when a ground for removal of the advocate exists.
    28    6. (a) A person may not serve as the advocate or act  as  the  general
    29  counsel for the office of advocate if the person is required to register
    30  as a lobbyist pursuant to article one-A of the legislative law.
    31    (b)  A  person  serving  as  the advocate may not, for a period of two
    32  years after the date the person ceases to be an advocate, represent  any
    33  person  in  a proceeding before the superintendent of financial services
    34  or the department of financial  services  or  receive  compensation  for
    35  services  rendered  on  behalf of any person regarding a case before the
    36  superintendent of financial services  or  the  department  of  financial
    37  services.
    38    (c)  An officer, employee or paid consultant of a trade association in
    39  the field of insurance may not serve as the advocate or be  an  employee
    40  of the office.
    41    (d)  A  person  who  is  the  spouse  of  an officer, manager, or paid
    42  consultant of a trade association in the  field  of  insurance  may  not
    43  serve as the advocate and may not be an office employee.
    44    (e) For the purposes of this section, a trade association is a nonpro-
    45  fit,  cooperative,  and  voluntarily  joined  association of business or
    46  professional competitors designed to assist its members and its industry
    47  or profession in dealing with mutual business or  professional  problems
    48  and in promoting their common interest.
    49    §  947.  Powers  and duties. 1. The advocate, as executive director of
    50  the office, shall be charged with the responsibility  of  administering,
    51  enforcing  and  carrying  out  the provisions of this article, including
    52  preparation of a budget for the office, employing all necessary  profes-
    53  sional,  technical,  and other employees to carry out provisions of this
    54  article, approval of expenditures for professional services, travel, per
    55  diem, and other actual and necessary expenses incurred in  administering
    56  the  office.  Expenses  for the office shall be paid from the assessment

        S. 2297                             3
     1  imposed in section nine thousand one hundred ten of the  insurance  law.
     2  The  compensation of employees of the office shall be fixed by the advo-
     3  cate within the appropriation provided therefor.
     4    2.  The office shall file annually with the governor and the presiding
     5  officer of each house of the legislature a complete and detailed written
     6  report accounting for all funds received and  disbursed  by  the  office
     7  during  the preceding fiscal year. The annual report must be in the form
     8  and reported as part of the executive budget.
     9    3. All money paid to the office under this article shall be  deposited
    10  in the state treasury.
    11    4.  The  office  may  assess the impact of insurance rates, rules, and
    12  regulations on nonbusiness automobile insurance consumers  in  New  York
    13  state and, in its own name, may advocate on behalf of positions that are
    14  most  advantageous  to  a  substantial  number of insurance consumers as
    15  determined by the advocate.
    16    5. The advocate:
    17    (a) may appear or intervene as a matter of  right  before  the  super-
    18  intendent of financial services or department of financial services as a
    19  party  or  otherwise  on  behalf  of  insurance  consumers as a class in
    20  matters involving rates, rules, and  regulations  affecting  nonbusiness
    21  automobile insurance;
    22    (b) may initiate or intervene as a matter of right or otherwise appear
    23  in  any judicial proceeding involving or arising out of any action taken
    24  by an administrative agency in a proceeding in which the advocate previ-
    25  ously appeared under the authority granted by this article;
    26    (c) is entitled to access any records of the executive department that
    27  are available to any party in a proceeding before the superintendent  of
    28  financial services or department of financial services under the author-
    29  ity granted by this article;
    30    (d)  is entitled to obtain discovery of any non-privileged matter that
    31  is relevant to the subject matter involved in a proceeding or submission
    32  before the superintendent of financial services or department of  finan-
    33  cial services as authorized by this article;
    34    (e) may recommend legislation to the legislature that, in the judgment
    35  of  the  advocate,  would affect positively the interests of nonbusiness
    36  automobile insurance consumers;
    37    (f) may appear or intervene as a matter of right as a party or  other-
    38  wise  on behalf of nonbusiness automobile insurance consumers as a class
    39  in all proceedings in which the advocate determines that such  consumers
    40  need  representation,  except that the advocate may not intervene in any
    41  enforcement or parens patriae proceeding brought by the attorney  gener-
    42  al.
    43    6.  (a)  The  office  shall  prepare  information  of  public interest
    44  describing the functions of the office. The office shall make the infor-
    45  mation available to the public, lawmakers and  appropriate  state  agen-
    46  cies.
    47    (b)  The  office  shall  prepare  and  maintain  a  written  plan that
    48  describes how each person who does not speak  English  can  be  provided
    49  reasonable access to the office's programs.
    50    (c) The office shall prepare and distribute public education materials
    51  for consumers, legislators and regulators.
    52    (d) The office may participate in trade associations.
    53    § 3. Subsection (d) of section 2321 of the insurance law is amended to
    54  read as follows:
    55    (d)  Proceedings  pursuant to subsections (b) and (c) [hereof] of this
    56  section may be instituted upon the initiative of the  superintendent  or

        S. 2297                             4
     1  upon  written  application to the superintendent by any aggrieved person
     2  or organization, other than a rate service organization, for a  hearing,
     3  if  the  superintendent finds that the application is made in good faith
     4  and  that  the  grounds  otherwise  justify holding such a hearing which
     5  shall be held within fifteen days of  the  request;  provided,  however,
     6  that the superintendent shall hold such a hearing within fifteen days of
     7  an application therefor from the insurance consumer advocate established
     8  under article forty-four-A of the executive law. In the case of a denial
     9  of  an  application  for  a hearing filed by any aggrieved person or any
    10  other organization, the superintendent shall provide the reasons  there-
    11  for in writing to the applicant within fifteen days of such denial.
    12    § 4. Subsection (c) of section 2305 of the insurance law is amended to
    13  read as follows:
    14    (c)  Rates  filed  with the superintendent shall be accompanied by the
    15  information upon which the insurer supports the rate  as  set  forth  in
    16  subsection  (b) of section two thousand three hundred four of this arti-
    17  cle.  With respect to rates filed for nonbusiness  automobile  policies,
    18  such  filings  shall include all statistical data relied upon to support
    19  the filing and  such  other  information  as  the  superintendent  shall
    20  require.  Such  filings  and  supporting  information shall conform with
    21  standards of uniformity which  the  superintendent  shall  prescribe  by
    22  regulation  on or before the January immediately following the effective
    23  date of the chapter of the laws of two thousand seventeen  that  amended
    24  this subsection.
    25    §  5. Section 89-d of the state finance law, as amended by chapter 170
    26  of the laws of 1994 and subdivision 2 as amended by section 4 of part  T
    27  of chapter 56 of the laws of 2009, is amended to read as follows:
    28    §  89-d.  Motor  vehicle theft and insurance fraud prevention fund. 1.
    29  There is hereby established in the custody of the comptroller, a special
    30  fund to be known  as  the  "motor  vehicle  theft  and  insurance  fraud
    31  prevention fund".
    32    2.  Such fund shall consist of all moneys received by the state pursu-
    33  ant to subsection (b) of section nine thousand one hundred  ten  of  the
    34  insurance law that are transferred to the fund pursuant to paragraph one
    35  of subsection (e) of section nine thousand one hundred ten of the insur-
    36  ance  law  and  all other grants, bequests or other moneys appropriated,
    37  credited or transferred thereto from any other fund or  source  pursuant
    38  to law.
    39    3.  Moneys  in  the motor vehicle theft and insurance fraud prevention
    40  fund shall be kept separate and apart and shall not be  commingled  with
    41  any  other  moneys  in  the custody of the comptroller and shall only be
    42  expended herein and in such amounts as approved by the division  of  the
    43  budget.
    44    4.  [The]  Except as provided in this subdivision, the moneys received
    45  by such fund shall be expended pursuant to appropriation  only  to  fund
    46  provider  agencies  which  have been awarded grants by the motor vehicle
    47  theft and insurance  fraud  prevention  board  established  pursuant  to
    48  section  eight  hundred  forty-six-l  of  the  executive law. All moneys
    49  expended pursuant to this subdivision shall be for the reimbursement  of
    50  costs incurred by provider agencies; provided, however that no less than
    51  one  million two hundred thousand dollars shall be used for the purposes
    52  of creating, administering and operating the office of insurance consum-
    53  er advocate created pursuant to article forty-four-A  of  the  executive
    54  law.
    55    §  6.  Section  2329  of the insurance law, as amended by section 1 of
    56  part B of chapter 78 of the laws of 2014, is amended to read as follows:

        S. 2297                             5
     1    § 2329. Motor vehicle insurance rates; excess profits.  (a) In accord-
     2  ance with regulations prescribed by  the  superintendent,  each  insurer
     3  issuing  policies that are subject to article fifty-one of this chapter,
     4  including policies of motor vehicle personal injury liability  insurance
     5  or  policies  of  motor  vehicle  property damage liability insurance or
     6  insurance for loss or damage to a motor vehicle, shall establish a fair,
     7  practicable, and nondiscriminatory plan for refunding or otherwise cred-
     8  iting to those purchasing such policies their  share  of  the  insurer's
     9  excess  profit,  if  any,  on such policies. An excess profit shall be a
    10  profit beyond a percentage rate of return on net worth  attributable  to
    11  such  policies,  computed  in accordance with the regulation required by
    12  section two thousand three hundred twenty-three  of  this  article,  and
    13  determined by the superintendent to be so far above a reasonable average
    14  profit  as  to amount to an excess profit, taking into consideration the
    15  fact that losses or profits below a reasonable average profit  will  not
    16  be  recouped  from  such  policyholders. Each plan shall apply to policy
    17  periods for the periods January  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-four
    18  through  August  second, two thousand one, and the effective date of the
    19  property/casualty insurance availability act through June thirtieth, two
    20  thousand seventeen. In prescribing such regulations  the  superintendent
    21  may  limit  the duration of such plans, waive any requirement for refund
    22  or credit that he or she determines to be de minimis  or  impracticable,
    23  adopt  forms  of  returns  that  shall be made to him or her in order to
    24  establish the amount of any refund or credit due, establish periods  and
    25  times for the determination and distribution of refunds and credits, and
    26  shall  provide  that  insurers  receive  appropriate  credit against any
    27  refunds or credits required by any such plan for policyholder  dividends
    28  and  for return premiums that may be due under rate credit or retrospec-
    29  tive rating plans based on experience.
    30    (b)(1) On or before November first, two thousand nineteen, and annual-
    31  ly thereafter, the superintendent shall complete a recalculation of  the
    32  points  for  reasonable  rate  of  return and excess profits established
    33  under the regulations promulgated pursuant to this  section,  using  the
    34  most  recent six year period for which data is available. If such recal-
    35  culation results in a change in such points,  the  superintendent  shall
    36  immediately  adopt such points in regulation, and, if, under such recal-
    37  culation, excess profits have been realized, shall immediately  activate
    38  plans  for  refunding  or  otherwise  crediting to those purchasing such
    39  policies their share of insurers' excess profit, in accordance with  the
    40  regulations promulgated hereunder.
    41    (2)  On  or before December first, two thousand nineteen, and annually
    42  thereafter, the superintendent  shall  hold  a  public  hearing  on  the
    43  results  of  such  recalculation  and any actions instituted pursuant to
    44  this section as a result of such recalculation.  On  or  before  January
    45  first,  two thousand twenty, and annually thereafter, the superintendent
    46  shall send a transcript of the hearing to the legislature and  a  report
    47  on  the  results  of  such  recalculation  and any actions instituted as
    48  required by this section.
    49    (3) On or before October first, two thousand nineteen, the superinten-
    50  dent shall issue a request for proposals to conduct an independent audit
    51  and evaluation, with respect to  nonbusiness  automobile  insurance,  of
    52  insurer  compliance  with  and  the  superintendent's implementation and
    53  enforcement of the provisions of this section.  The superintendent shall
    54  provide the chairs of the assembly and senate  committees  on  insurance
    55  with  the responses to the request for proposals, and shall consult with
    56  such chairs on the selection of the firm to conduct the audit.

        S. 2297                             6
     1    Such audit shall be completed  and  a  report  submitted  by  November
     2  first,  two  thousand  twenty to the superintendent and the legislature.
     3  The scope of the audit shall include, but not be limited to:
     4    (i)  an  identification and evaluation of events and conditions influ-
     5  encing insurer profits, including, but  not  limited  to:  the  business
     6  climate and changes in economic conditions, including interest rates;
     7    (ii)  an  assessment  of  the  appropriateness  of the methodology for
     8  selecting a reasonable rate of return and excess profit threshold  under
     9  such regulation;
    10    (iii)  an  assessment  of  the feasibility of using individual insurer
    11  results rather than aggregate industry data for testing profitability;
    12    (iv) an assessment of the feasibility of averaging data over less than
    13  a six year period for measuring excess profits;
    14    (v) an assessment of  the  department's  activities  with  respect  to
    15  recalculating  the  points  for  reasonable  rate  of  return and excess
    16  profits;
    17    (vi) a recalculation of the points for reasonable rate of  return  and
    18  excess  profits  using the most recent six year period for which data is
    19  available; and
    20    (vii) an identification and evaluation of other states' excess profits
    21  laws, regulations, implementation of  such  laws  and  regulations,  and
    22  methodologies for calculating points for reasonable rate of return.
    23    The  report shall include, but not be limited to:  recommendations for
    24  changes to the law, regulations and implementation  and  enforcement  of
    25  such  provisions  based  on  the  findings of such audit and evaluation.
    26  Within three months of the receipt of such  report,  the  superintendent
    27  shall  hold a public hearing with regard to the department's response to
    28  the findings and recommendations of the report.
    29    § 7.  This act shall take effect immediately, provided, however,  that
    30  this  act  shall  apply  to  insurance contracts issued or renewed on or
    31  after such effective date, and shall apply at the next  required  policy
    32  period,  commencing  on  or  after  such date, to any insurance contract
    33  written prior to the effective date of this act.
feedback