Jim Connolly
Against a backdrop of concern voiced by some insurance commissioners, consumer groups, and trial lawyers, a final vote to adopt an interstate compact that would create a single point of product filing was delayed by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners hours before the scheduled vote.
Instead, the NAIC will work on the document and then hold a public hearing on Nov. 12, it was decided during a meeting of the NAIC executive committee on Oct. 31. A vote is then scheduled for Nov. 18.
Work will focus on specific items including the length of time for a stay to exempt a state from a compact standard if that state has said that it is going to opt out of that standard.
Florida has expressed concern that it takes a minimum of six months to create an administrative ruling that would enable it to opt out of a compact standard and that the compact's exemptions are too short to cover the time it needs to achieve this end.
Michigan Commissioner Frank Fitzgerald says that work will focus on taking the needs of such states into account while retaining the "high bar" in the compact draft for opting out of a compact requirement.
Fitzgerald also says that looking at whether long-term care should be included in the draft is "beyond where we are going" in reviewing the compact.
While he says that meaningful input from consumer representatives is welcome, he adds that representation needs to "fall short of consumers becoming regulators" and that regulators must retain that role.
Fitzgerald notes that the public hearing on November 12 will be the fourth opportunity for public comment and at least the second time that consumer groups have had the opportunity to comment.
Further work on the draft will include a "fine-tuning" of language on the 'preemption' issue in relation to the authority of the compact, he continues.
A list of issues will be focused in order to keep discussion targeted on issues in question, Fitzgerald explains.