Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Insurance, Financial Services & Consumer Protection Committee | |
HB 1532
This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in
their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a
statement of legislative intent.
Brief Description: Establishing a program of market conduct oversight within the office of the insurance commissioner.
Sponsors: Representatives Kirby, Kenney, Moeller and Morrell; by request of Insurance Commissioner.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 2/8/07
Staff: Sarah Beznoska (786-7109).
Background:
Examinations by the Insurance Commissioner
Under the Insurance Code, the Insurance Commissioner is authorized to examine the affairs,
transactions, accounts, records, documents, and assets of insurers at least every five years. The
Insurance Commissioner is also authorized to examine other regulated entities. After
determining that an examination should be conducted, the Insurance Commissioner appoints one
or more examiners to perform the examination. In conducting an examination, the Insurance
Commissioner must be given access to accounts, records, documents, and files relating to the
subject of the examination.
Examination Reports
Within 60 days after completing an examination, the Insurance Commissioner makes a full
certified written report containing facts, conclusions, and recommendations. A copy of the report
is provided to the entity examined not less than 10 days and not more than 30 days prior to the
filing of the report for public inspection. If the examined entity requests in writing within this
time period, the Insurance Commissioner must hold a hearing to consider objections to the report
as proposed, and must not file the report until after the hearing and after any necessary
modifications in the report have been made. Within 30 days of this time period, the Insurance
Commissioner must consider the report, together with any written submissions or rebuttals and
any relevant portions of the examiner's workpapers and enter an order that may be appealed.
Examination Report Confidentiality
After adopting an examination report, the Insurance Commissioner must continue to hold the
content of the examination report as private and confidential information for a period of five days
except that the order may be disclosed to the entity examined. Thereafter, the commissioner may
open the report for public inspection so long as no court of competent jurisdiction has stayed its
publication. The Insurance Commissioner may withhold from public inspection any examination
or investigation report for so long as he or she deems it advisable.
Examination Costs
Examinations that take place within the state of any insurer domiciled or having its home offices
in the state, other than a title insurer, made by the Insurance Commissioner or the Insurance
Commissioner's examiners and employees must, except as to fees, mileage, and expense incurred
as to witnesses, be at the expense of the state.
Every other examination of any entity domiciled or having its home offices in this state that
requires travel and services outside this state, must be made by the Insurance Commissioner or
by designated examiners at the expense of the entity examined. A domestic insurer is not liable
for the compensation of examiners employed by the Insurance Commissioner for services outside
the state.
The entity examined must reimburse the state upon presentation of an itemized statement, for the
actual travel expenses of the Insurance Commissioner's examiners, their reasonable living
expense allowance, and their per diem compensation, including salary and the employer's cost of
employee benefits. Reimbursement must be at a reasonable rate approved by the Insurance
Commissioner.
NAIC Market Analysis
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) has established a variety of
working groups related to market analysis and coordinating market analysis between states. The
NAIC has also established Market Conduct Annual Statement procedures to create a uniform
system of collecting market-related information among participating states.
In September 2004, the NAIC adopted the Market Conduct Surveillance Model Law based
on a version put forth by the National Conference of Insurance Legislators.
Summary of Bill:
Overview
A market conduct oversight program is established within the Office of Insurance Commissioner
(Insurance Commissioner). Detailed provisions are included related to market analysis
procedures, market conduct actions, market conduct examinations, personnel and immunity for
personnel, access to records and information, penalties, and coordination with other state
insurance regulators.
Insurer is defined as every person engaged in the business of making contracts of insurance.
Health care service contractors, health maintenance organizations, fraternal benefit societies, and
self-funded multiple employer welfare arrangements are insurers.
Existing statutory provisions related to examinations are limited to financial analysis and
examination of insurers and other regulated entities.
Market Analysis Procedures
Market analysis is defined as a process whereby market conduct oversight personnel collect and
analyze information from filed schedules, surveys, required reports, and other sources to develop
a baseline understanding of the marketplace and to identify insurer patterns or practices that
deviate significantly from the norm or that may pose a risk to the insurance consumer.
Gathering Information
Generally, the Insurance Commissioner must collect and report market data information to the
NAIC's market information systems, including a complaint database system, an examination
tracking system, and a regulatory retrieval system. This information must be compiled and
submitted in a manner that meets NAIC requirements. Insurers must file annual market conduct
statements on NAIC forms unless there is not an existing form for a particular line of business.
The Insurance Commissioner has authority to grant an extension of time for filing if written
request for an extension is received at least five business days before the filing due date.
In conducting market analysis, the Insurance Commissioner must gather information from data
currently available, surveys, required reports, information collected by the NAIC, other sources
in both the public and private sectors, and information from within and outside the insurance
industry. The Insurance Commissioner has the authority to request insurers to submit necessary
data and information.
Analyzing Information
The Insurance Commissioner is required to analyze gathered information to develop a baseline
understanding of the marketplace and to identify insurers or practice for further review. The
Insurance Commissioner is required to the use the NAIC market regulation handbook as one
analytical resource.
The Insurance Commissioner must adopt rules creating a process for an insurer to verify
Washington-specific complaint information related to the insurer before using the complaint
information for market conduct surveillance or transmitting it to NAIC.
Market Conduct Actions
Market conduct action is defined as any of the full range of activities that the Insurance
Commissioner may initiate to assess and address the market conduct practices of insurers
admitted to do business in Washington, and entities operating illegally in Washington, beginning
with market analysis and extending to examinations. The Insurance Commissioner's activities to
resolve an individual consumer complaint or other report of a specific instance of misconduct are
not market conduct actions.
Continuum of Actions
A continuum of market actions is established for the Insurance Commissioner to use when
market analysis determines that further inquiry into a particular insurer or practice is needed. An
insurer must have reasonable opportunity to resolve matters that arise as a result of market
analysis to the satisfaction of the Insurance Commissioner before any additional market conduct
actions are taken.
Market conduct actions must be taken as a result of market analysis and must focus on general
business practices and compliance activities of insurers instead of identifying obviously
infrequent or unintentional random errors that do not cause significant consumer harm.
The actions include, but are not limited to:
The Insurance Commissioner is not required to follow a particular sequence of actions and is not
required to use all of the actions. However, except in extraordinary circumstances, the Insurance
Commissioner must select the least intrusive and most cost-effective action to provide necessary
consumer protection. The Insurance Commissioner must make reasonable efforts to coordinate
with other state insurance regulators.
The Insurance Commissioner may determine the frequency and timing of market conduct action,
depending on the specific market conduct action. The Insurance Commissioner may schedule
and coordinate multiple examinations simultaneously.
The Insurance Commissioner may examine or conduct a market conduct action on any managing
general agent or other person.
The Insurance Commissioner is required to adopt rules that are substantially similar to the NAIC.
Market Conduct Examinations
Market conduct examination is defined as the examination of the insurance operations of an
insurer licensed to do business in Washington and entities operating illegally in Washington to
evaluate compliance with applicable laws and regulations. A market conduct examination may
be either a comprehensive examination or a targeted examination.
When other market conduct actions do not sufficiently address issues, the Insurance
Commissioner may engage in market conduct examinations in accordance with the NAIC market
conduct uniform examination procedures and the NAIC market regulation handbook. If the
insurer to be examined is part of an insurance holding company system, the Insurance
Commissioner may also seek to simultaneously examine any affiliates of the insurer under
common control and management that are licensed to write the same lines of business in
Washington.
The Insurance Commissioner generally retains the authority to terminate or suspend any
examination to pursue other legal or regulatory action under the Insurance Code. Findings of fact
and conclusions made under any examination are prima facie evidence in any legal or regulatory
action.
Pre-Examination Requirements
A work plan must be prepared by market conduct oversight personnel prior to beginning a
market conduct examination. The work plan must consist of the following:
Within 10 days of receiving the work plan, insurers may request the Insurance Commissioner to
review any alleged conflict of interest of market conduct oversight personnel and non-insurance
department personnel assigned to a market conduct examination. A request for review must
specifically describe an alleged conflict of interest. The Insurance Commissioner must notify the
insurer of any action in response to a request for review within five business days of the request.
Market conduct examinations must use desk examinations and data requests before an on-site
examination. The Insurance Commissioner must use NAIC standard data requests.
Announcements of an examination must be sent to the insurer and posted on the NAIC's
examination tracking system as soon as possible but in no case later than 60 days before the
estimated commencement of the examination, unless the exam is conducted in response to
extraordinary circumstances. An announcement sent to an insurer must contain an examination
work plan and a request for the insurer to name its examination coordinator. If an examination is
expanded beyond original reasons provided to the insurer in the notice, the Insurance
Commissioner must provide written notice to the insurer explaining reasons for the expansion.
The Insurance Commissioner must conduct a preexamination conference with the insurer at least
30 days before beginning the examination.
The Insurance Commissioner must accept an examination report done by another state in lieu of
examining a foreign or alien insurer licensed in Washington except in situations where the
Insurance Commissioner determines that the other state does not have a comparable market
oversight system.
Examination Reports
Written report requirements are created that are similar to examination report requirements
contained in current law under current examination authority.
Before the conclusion of field work for a market conduct examination, the examiner-in-charge
must review examination findings to date with insurer personnel and schedule an exit conference,
in accordance with procedures in the NAIC market regulation handbook. No later than 60 days
after completion of a market conduct examination, the Insurance Commissioner must make a full
written report of each market conduct examination containing only facts, conclusions, and
recommendations.
The written report must be certified by the Insurance Commissioner or by the examiner-in-charge
of the examination, and must be filed with the Insurance Commissioner. The Insurance
Commissioner must provide a copy of the market conduct examination report to the person
examined not less than 10 days and not more than 30 days prior to filing the report for public
inspection. If the entity requests in writing, the Insurance Commissioner must hold a hearing to
consider objections to the report as proposed, and must not file the report until after the hearing
and until after any modifications in the report deemed necessary by the commissioner have been
made. The Insurance Commissioner has the authority to extend timeframes.
Examination Orders
Examination order requirements are established that are similar to requirements contained in
current law under current examination authority.
Within 30 days of the end of the period of time in which the entity examined has a copy of the
report prior to filing, the Insurance Commissioner must consider the report, together with any
written submissions or rebuttals and any relevant portions of the examiner's work papers and
enter an order:
An order must be accompanied by findings and conclusions from the Insurance Commissioner's
consideration and review of the market conduct examination report, relevant examiner work
papers, and any written submissions or rebuttals. An insurer's response must be included in the
commissioner's order adopting the final report as an exhibit to the order, but the insurer is not
obligated to submit a response. The order is a final administrative decision and may be appealed.
The order must be served on the company by certified mail, with a copy of the adopted
examination report. A copy of the adopted examination report must be sent by certified mail to
each director at the director's residential address.
After adopting the market conduct examination report, the Insurance Commissioner must
continue to hold the content of the examination report as private and confidential for a period of
five days, except that the order may be disclosed to the person examined. Thereafter, the
Insurance Commissioner may open the report for public inspection so long as no court of
competent jurisdiction has stayed its publication. However, the Insurance Commissioner may
withhold from public inspection any examination or investigation report for as long as he or she
deems it advisable. The Insurance Commissioner is not required to disclose any information or
records that show the existence or content of any investigation or activity of a criminal justice
agency.
If the Insurance Commissioner determines that regulatory action is appropriate as a result of any
market conduct examination, he or she may initiate any proceedings or actions.
Examination Costs
Cost and fee provisions are created that are similar to requirements contained in current law
under current examination authority.
Insurance Commissioner market conduct examinations that take place within the state of any
domiciled insurer, other than a title insurer, must be at the expense of the state, except for
witness fees, mileage, and expenses. If an examination of any entity domiciled or having its
home offices in this state requires travel and services outside the state, the travel and services
must be made by the Insurance Commissioner or by examiners designated by the Insurance
Commissioner at the expense of the person examined. However, a domestic insurer is not liable
for the compensation of examiners employed by the Insurance Commissioner for services outside
the state.
The Insurance Commissioner must present an itemized statement to the entity examined and that
entity must reimburse the state for the actual travel expenses of the Insurance Commissioner's
examiners, their reasonable living expenses allowance, and their per diem compensation,
including salary and the employer's cost of employee benefits. Reimbursement must be at a
reasonable rate approved by the Insurance Commissioner. Per diem, salary, and expenses for
employees examining insurers domiciled outside the state must be established by the Insurance
Commissioner on the basis of the NAIC's recommended salary and expense schedule for zone
examiners, or the salary schedule established by the director of the Washington Department of
Personnel and the expense schedule established by the Office of Financial Management,
whichever is higher.
The Insurance Commissioner may contract, in accordance with applicable state contracting
procedures, for qualified attorneys, appraisers, independent certified public accountants, contract
actuaries, and other similar individuals who are independently practicing their professions as
examiners. The Insurance Commissioner may do so even though those persons may from time to
time be similarly employed or retained by entities subject to examination. The compensation and
per diem allowances paid to contract persons must be reasonable in the market and time incurred.
The Insurance Commissioner must maintain active management and oversight of market conduct
examination costs, including costs associated with the Insurance Commissioner's own examiners,
and with retaining qualified contract examiners necessary to perform an examination. Any
agreement with a contract examiner must:
The Insurance Commissioner must review and affirmatively endorse detailed billings from the
qualified contract examiner before detailed billings are sent to the insurer.
Market Conduct Oversight Personnel
Qualifications
Market conduct oversight personnel must be qualified by education, experience, and, where
applicable, professional designations. The Insurance Commissioner may supplement in-house
market conduct oversight staff with qualified outside professional assistance.
Conflicts of Interest
Market conduct oversight personnel are deemed to have a conflict of interest, either directly or
indirectly, if they are affiliated with the management of, and have, within five years of any
market conduct action, been employed by, or own a pecuniary interest, in the insurer subject to
any examination. Market conduct oversight personnel are not automatically precluded from
being:
Immunity
Market conduct personnel are generally granted immunity for any statements made, or conduct
performed in good faith, while carrying out market conduct activities. In addition, no cause of
action arises for communicating or delivering information or data to the Insurance
Commissioner, the Insurance Commissioner's authorized representative, market conduct
oversight personnel, or an examiner, if the act of communication or delivery was performed in
good faith and without fraudulent intent or the intent to deceive.
Market conduct personnel, the Insurance Commissioner, authorized representatives, or an
appointed examiner are entitled to an award of attorneys' fees and costs if they are the prevailing
party in a civil cause of action for libel, slander, or any other relevant tort arising out of market
conduct activities.
If a claim is made or threatened, the Insurance Commissioner must provide or pay for the defense
of himself or herself and the examiner or representative, and must pay a judgment or settlement,
until it is determined that the person did not act in good faith or acted with fraudulent intent or
the intent to deceive.
Coordination with Other State Regulators
The Insurance Commissioner must share information and coordinate market analysis, market
conduct actions, and examination efforts with other state insurance regulators in accordance with
guidelines adopted by the NAIC.
If a market conduct examination or action performed by another state insurance regulator results
in a finding that an insurer should modify a specific practice or procedure, the Insurance
Commissioner must, in lieu of conducting a market conduct action or examination, accept
verification that the insurer made a similar modification in this state, unless the Insurance
Commissioner determines that the other state does not have laws substantially similar to those of
this state, or does not have a comparable market conduct oversight system.
Records, Information, and Confidentiality
Market conduct oversight personnel are granted free, convenient, and full access to all books,
records, employees, officers, and directors, including the details of third-party models or products
upon request, during regular business hours.
Each officer, director, employee, and agent of an insurer is required to facilitate and aid in a
market conduct action or examination. No waiver of any applicable privilege or claim of
confidentiality in the documents, materials, or information occurs as a result of disclosure to the
Insurance Commissioner, any employee of the Insurance Commissioner, or any agent retained by
the Insurance Commissioner to assist in the market conduct examination.
The Insurance Commissioner may take depositions, subpoena witnesses or documentary
evidence, administer oaths, and examine under oath any individual relative to the affairs of any
person being examined, or relative to the subject of any hearing or investigation. Witness fees
and mileage, if claimed, are allowed the same as for testimony in a court of record. Witness fees,
mileage, and the actual expenses necessarily incurred in securing attendance of witnesses and
their testimony must be itemized and paid by the person examined, or by the person at whose
request the hearing is held.
Provisions related to sharing and receiving documents are included. In order to assist in the
performance of the Insurance Commissioner's duties, the Insurance Commissioner may:
If certain data or documents are in the possession of the Insurance Commissioner or the NAIC,
the data or documents are considered confidential and privileged, and are exempt from public
disclosure. This applies to data and documents, including but not limited to working papers,
third-party models or products, complaint logs, and copies thereof, created, produced, or obtained
by or disclosed to the Insurance Commissioner, the Insurance Commissioner's authorized
representative, or an examiner appointed by the Insurance Commissioner in the course of any
market conduct actions or examinations, or in the course of market analysis by the Insurance
Commissioner, or obtained by the NAIC. These documents are not subject to the Public Records
Act, subpoena, or discovery. These documents are not admissible in evidence in any private civil
action.
If the Insurance Commissioner issues an examination report, the preliminary or draft report is
confidential and not subject to disclosure nor is it subject to subpoena or discovery. The
Insurance Commissioner maintains the authority to use a preliminary or draft market conduct
examination report and related information in furtherance of any legal or regulatory action, or to
release it in accordance with the Insurance Code.
An insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document in the possession of the Insurance
Commissioner is confidential by law and privileged, and must not be:
The disclosure of any self-evaluative audit document to the Insurance Commissioner does not
constitute a waiver of any privilege that may otherwise apply.
Documents, materials, or information obtained by the Insurance Commissioner during a market
conduct examination are exempt from public disclosure.
Fines and Penalties
Fines and penalties under the Insurance Code apply. The Insurance Commissioner must take into
consideration membership in best practices organizations, and the extent to which insurers
maintain regulatory compliance programs to self-assess, self-report, and remediate problems.
Other
The Insurance Commissioner must designate a specific person or persons within the Insurance
Commissioner's office to receive information from employees of insurers and licensed entities
concerning violations of laws or rules by their employers. These persons shall be provided with
proper training on handling this information. The information must be confidential and not open
to public inspection, and is exempt from public disclosure.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.