FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 27, 2007
Sam Miller (850) 386-6668 ext 223
Gary Landry (850) 386-6668 ext 226
For the vast majority of policyholders, nothing will change
on October 1.
Policyholders will still maintain the insurance coverage
they had in place on September 30 for the duration of their contract.
Auto insurance policies are renewed every six months or
every year and as such, insurance companies will respect those valid contracts
for the duration of the contract period.
What will change is the statutory
requirement that drivers maintain a policy with PIP (personal injury
protection) and the requirement that motorists meet certain standards—pierce
the verbal threshold—before suing an at-fault driver or even their own
insurance company for losses, including pain and suffering.
By law, insurance companies must provide policyholders with
a renewal notice at least 45 days in advance of the expiration of a policy, and
that’s where some of the confusion is coming in.
In anticipation of the state law mandating PIP coverage
expiring on October 1, companies have different ways of handling the expiration
of PIP. Generally, however, companies
have included PIP coverage for any of the renewals that took place before
October 1, and in the renewal notices, have noted that PIP benefits will be
deleted from those policies effective October 1 if no action is taken by the
Legislature to extend PIP beyond the October 1 scheduled sunset.
Companies would then adjust the policyholder’s remaining
coverage premium and send the policyholder an amended declarations page to reflect
the policy changes.
In addition, companies are offering policyholders as a type
of replacement PIP coverage, the option of purchasing expanded Medical Payment
coverage limits to help pay medical expenses for the driver and any of his or
her passengers.
What is confusing many policyholders is the on-again,
off-again discussions regarding some sort of legislative re-enactment of PIP.
While the legislature seemed poised to allow PIP to expire
when lawmakers took no action on it in the regular session earlier this year,
it appeared PIP would expire on schedule on October 1.
It appears now that the Legislature has come to some sort of
an agreement to reenact and/or reform current PIP provisions when they return
to Tallahassee
in special session on October 3.
The
Senate and House have released bills currently under review. Each legislative chamber has scheduled
workshops in their respective insurance committees to discuss these bills which
basically re-enact PIP with some reforms designed to reduce fraud that the
insurance industry agrees is rampant.
Those workshops are set for October 2—two days
after current PIP law sunsets and because of how explosive this controversy has
been, it remains possible that the Legislature will deadlock once again and no
bill can be passed.
If lawmakers re-enact existing PIP law, reform it or create
a new state-mandated automobile insurance coverage law, some drivers in Florida will have been
without PIP coverage for a short period of time.
Therefore, the Legislature will have to consider how to get
those drivers in compliance with any new laws that may be enacted.
Expiration of the No-fault law will make it easier for
lawsuits to be filed following an accident.
Motorists who are sued will be protected by liability coverages if they
have this insurance and most insurance companies will obtain counsel and
represent the policyholder in the litigation as they do now.
In the meantime, questions abound about what will happen in
the coming days. Chief Financial Officer
Alex Sink has developed an excellent internet list of questions and answers
regarding life after no-fault expires.
It is located here: http://www.fldfs.com/NoFault/NoFault.asp.
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The Florida Insurance Council is Florida’s largest not-for-profit trade association representing more than 200 insurance companies that write more than $25 billion a year in premium volume and provide all lines of coverage.
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