Communications with Licensees.
The Office of the Insurance Commissioner (Commissioner) oversees licensing for professions including insurance producers, title insurance agents, adjusters, and surplus line brokers. Licensees must maintain a place of business where they principally conduct transactions, and are required to provide a mailing address to the Commissioner and notify the Commissioner of any address changes within 30 days. Any notice or written communication from the Commissioner to a licensee that directly affects the person's license must be sent by mail to the licensee's last address of record.
Licensees must promptly reply in writing to an inquiry from the Commissioner, and a response is considered timely if received by the Commissioner within 15 business days from the licensee's receipt of the inquiry. A licensee's failure to timely respond violates the Insurance Code, and may subject the licensee to adverse action against their license and fines.
Email Communications with Licensees.
Insurance producers, title insurance agents, adjusters, and surplus line producers are statutorily required to provide an email address to the Commissioner, and must inform the Commissioner of any change within 30 days. The Commissioner may send written communications to a licensee by email if:
The following are communications that directly affect a person's license and must be sent by mail:
Commissioner's Procedural Email Requirements.
When an email from the Commissioner requires a response, the Commissioner must:
Licensees must "timely respond" to an email from the Commissioner, and a response is considered timely if received by the Commissioner within 15 business days from the licensee's receipt of the inquiry. If the Commissioner follows required email procedures, and a licensee fails to respond in a timely manner, the licensee may be subject to fines or adverse action against their license only if:
If the Commissioner sends a licensee an email and is notified the email is undeliverable, the Commissioner must resend the notice once by mail to a person's last known address on record with the Commissioner.
The following communications from the Commissioner are not subject to procedural email requirements: (1) emails sent to an applicant prior to the issuance of a license, and (2) auto-generated system emails regarding a license application or license renewal processes.
Remedy Established.
A remedy is established for affected licensees to seek a refund of fines they incurred for email-based violations occurring before July 1, 2023. The following definitions are established:
The Commissioner must develop and implement a process for affected licensees to petition the Commissioner for the removal of related disciplinary investigations and orders from the affected licensee's public disciplinary records as a result of an email-based violation. A licensee petitioning the Commissioner for removal must provide documentation demonstrating that disciplinary investigations and orders on the licensee's records were the result of a violation occurring prior to July 1, 2023.
Upon receipt of a petition, the Commissioner must immediately:
The Commissioner must identify the amount of money collected as fines from affected licensees for email-based violations and refund the money to each affected licensee from the Commissioner's existing operating budget.
The substitute bill adds to the types of Commissioner communications that directly affect a person's license and must be sent by mail to a licensee's last address of record:
The substitute bill also excludes:
(In support) Insurance producers can be valued partners in insurance transactions. As a result of errors by the Commissioner, licensees have experienced financial consequences and had their insurance producer licenses jeopardized. It is difficult to invest the time and money to challenge a regulator like the Commissioner. Here in particular, the Commissioner took enforcement action against a licensee who did not receive the email the Commissioner said it sent, and the licensee had their license suspended. Evidence in an insurance producer's file of a suspended license can be devastating. Insurance companies may not renew your appointment, new companies may not appoint you, and other agents may use this in competition. Clients can look this up and question a licensee's integrity.
As background and context for this policy, under current law, insurance producers are allowed to charge a fee as part of insurance transactions. The Commissioner undertook a survey one to two years ago of licensed producers, about whether or not they charged a fee and how they disclosed that fee. Nothing in the survey indicated that a response was required to the Commissioner, and nothing in the survey indicated that if a response did not occur, disciplinary action could result from that failure to respond. Over the last 1-1/2 years, more than 100 agencies were fined with a failure to respond to the survey. It shouldn't happen that way. This policy starts the process for better communication that agencies and producers deserve from their regulator. It starts the process for those who were unfairly fined and unfairly dinged with a failure to respond when no response was required. The industry seeks a good relationship with the regulator, but in the end we have to find a way to get things right.
The Commissioner's process of using email and issuing insurance code violations to people for not responding is difficult to understand and challenging to navigate. In the present day, people use notifications like "read receipt" to confirm if someone receives an email. The Commissioner should make their email subject lines more clear and send a registered letter before taking action against a licensee. It should also refund people fined under the old email procedures.
(Opposed) None.