Unclaimed Property: NCOIL Panel Backs Model Changes

July 18, 2011 at 08:00 PM
Share & Print

WASHINGTON BUREAU — An arm of the National Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL) wants to respond to concerns about life insurers' unclaimed practices by updating NCOIL's 2010 Beneficiaries' Bill of Rights Model.

Members of the NCOIL Life Insurance & Financial Planning Committee approved that approach Friday in Newport, R.I., at the group's summer meeting.

California Controller John Chiang created a wave of interest in life insurance unclaimed Moneyproperty by announcing that a contract auditor, Verus Financial L.L.C., Waterbury, Conn., had helped identify about $20 million in unclaimed property at just one life insurer and was conducting similar reviews of about 20 other insurers.

The committee hopes to have revisions to the bill of rights model ready for a presentation to the NCOIL executive committee in November.

Robert Damron, the immediate past president at NCOIL, Troy, N.Y., and a Democratic state representative from Kentucky, has proposed the amendments.

The amendments would require insurers to periodically check the Social Security Death Master File database to identify dead life insurance policy holders and dead owners of retained asset accounts (RAA).

Insurers would have to check the Social Security Death Master File both to find beneficiaries and pay any unclaimed benefits.

Damron is also proposing changes to the existing model law that would require insurers to use the same review procedures for both annuities and life insurance and–if a beneficiary were not found within 45 days–to remit unclaimed proceeds to states, subject to a dormancy period that would begin when a dead

owner or dead account holder was first identified.

Most states require insurers to turn funds in dormant accounts over to the state after a dormancy period of 3 to 4 years.

"Updating the [NCOIL] model will ensure that carriers fulfill their obligations to policyholders and payments to beneficiaries," Damron says in a statement about the proposed changes.

An RAA is an account similar to a checking account that a life insurer uses to provide life insurance death benefits.

Executives from MetLife Inc., New York (NYSE:MET), reported during recent hearings in Florida on "asymmetrical" unclaimed property practices — or use of the Death Master File to find dead annuity benefits receipients but not dead life insurance policyholders — that MetLife is holding about $12 billion in RAA assets.

RAAs have come up in discussions of unclaimed property because consumer advocates and others have asked whether life policy beneficiaries are aware of all of the death benefits remaining in the RAAs.

NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2024 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.

Related Stories

Resource Center