Thursday, May 10, 2012

Maryland Ends Notices for De Minimis Increases

By Staff Writer

April 13, 2012 • Reprints

NU Online News Service, April 13, 10:08 a.m. EDT

The Insurance Agents & Brokers of Maryland is applauding the state legislature’s passage of a law that no longer requires insurers to send notices for de minimis premium increases on commercial policies.

On April 9, the state’s General Assembly passed the legislation (SB 256 & HB 876) that the association says reduces “consumer confusion and industry frustration.”

The legislation amends a 2009 law that removed the state’s 20-percent threshold for notices of commercial-premium increases.

The 2009 law did not include an exemption for de minimis increases, which required insurers to send notices to policyholders for increases of as little as a few dollars or cents.

“This exemption will eliminate the headaches, customer confusion and loss of business that were triggered by notices of minimal increases,” says Henry “Butch” Bradley Jr., chairman of IA&B of Maryland.

The law exempts from the notice requirement premiums in excess of $1,000 with an increase over the expiring policy premium of the lesser of 3 percent or $300.

Under the law, commercial customers, including workers’ compensation policyholders, with premiums of less than $1,000 still will receive notices, as well as any customer whose premium increase is over $300.

The IA&B says it worked throughout the 2012 session to ensure the legislation’s passage and joined forces with several carrier groups, principally Selective Insurance, to advocate for the bill.

The law is scheduled to go into effect on Oct. 1.

Related Articles Bernanke Blames ‘Shadow-Banking’ System for Financial Crisis; Ties It to AIG % The Week in Quotes % Saturday Tornado Outbreak Likely for Southern, Central Plains % Florida, FEMA Working on Deal to Prevent NFIP Suspension in State % State Auto, CinFin Report Q1 Estimated Catastrophe Losses % Previous Chartis Offers PR Protection to Schools and Public Entities Next Assurant Explains Its Forced-Place Insurance Practices Amid Scrutiny Related Terms Agency Management 6894 Regulation/Legislation 3541 Commercial 1423 Commercial Business 637 Comments Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus. Featured Offers –

View the Original article