Regulation and compliance
Regulation and compliance
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Margin compression and continued pricing erosion is pressuring the insurance industry to achieve top-line objectives in 2008, according to Ernst & Young's Global Insurance Center.
January 23 -
The Foundation for Health Coverage Education captured, on a single Web site database, government-sponsored programs to help consumers in need of health coverage. This may be just in time, as California is set to vote on a mandatory health insurance bill.
January 17 -
A new survey indicates mixed reactions to the reporting law.
January 1 -
Carriers can use technologies such as business process management to help navigate the regulatory maze.
January 1 -
Sircon Corp. an Okemos, Mich., provider of comprehensive producer lifecycle services for the insurance industry, announced a partnership with the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors - Pennsylvania (NAIFA-PA), a statewide trade association representing approximately 2,300 licensed professionals who provide life, health and multiline insurance and related financial services in Pennsylvania.
December 28 -
Insurance companiesincluding actuaries and IT executiveswill be under growing pressure to enhance their financial management system capabilities as they face changing financial reporting requirements, and more extensive risk management challenges in 2008.
December 20 -
Washington – A bill that would provide $100 million in grants to help local officials enforce building codes has been introduced into the House. Rep. Dennis Moore, D-Kan., sponsored the legislation, which is dubbed The Community Building Code Administration Grant Act of 2007.
December 14 -
Trenton, N.J.– A bill that will eliminate the requirements for auto insurance agents to provide quotes for all their companies and to provide three insurance scenarios to applicants has passed the New Jersey Legislature.
December 11 -
Boston–Lexington Insurance Co. enhanced its Employment Practices Liability (EPL) insurance offerings to include E-Discovery Response, a new endorsement designed to cover an insured’s payroll expenses incurred while retrieving electronically stored information requested during discovery in a covered EPL claim.
December 10 -
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Two teams of conferees headed by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd (D.-Conn.) and House Financial Services Committee Barney Frank (D.-Mass.) are meeting this week in an attempt to reconcile their differing visions on the extension of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act.
December 5 -
It's no secret that the insurance industry takes a relatively dire view of regulatory compliance. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX) is reported to have cost public companies across all verticals $35 billion last year. If the popular press is correct, that equates to 30,000 man-hours per company, per year, to comply. Although it's a given that promoting accurate bookkeeping (not cooked books) is simply best practice, the only companies seeming to benefit from compliance efforts are the pool of compliance-related technology solution providers.
December 1 -
Washington – An extension to the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) has passed the U.S. Senate. The measure was approved by unanimous consent. The original TRIA was passed in wake of 9/11 and is set to expire on December 31.
November 29 -
Tropics Software Technologies announced its new Director of Software Development, Robert Sillett. Sillett will concentrate his efforts on the new Tropics .NET platform. He has teamed up with the Tropics system designer and recruited consulting help to build a robust .NET architecture for the upcoming versions of Tropics software.
November 28 -
Washington — Insurance industry associations are obliging to a request for comments by the U.S. Treasury Department as it conducts a review of the regulatory structure associated with financial institutions. Several associations used the opportunity to reiterate their opposition to the creation of the optional federal charter (OFC) for the insurance industry. Senators Tim Johnson, D-N.D. and John Sununu, R-N.H., introduced the National Insurance Act of 2007 into the upper house in May.
November 27 -
Washington – An extension to the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) has passed the U.S. Senate. The measure was approved on Friday by unanimous consent. The original TRIA was passed in wake of 9/11 and is set to expire on December 31.
November 19 -
Washington – The Homeowners' Defense Act of 2007, introduced into the upper chamber by Senators Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and Bill Nelson, D-Fla., aims to address availability and affordability of natural disaster insurance.
November 15 -
Washington – A Bill to revamp the National Flood Insurance Program has left the Senate Banking Committee and is set for the floor. To the delight of many, the Senate version does not add coverage to wind losses to the program.
November 15 -
Kansas City, Mo. – The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) has responded to a letter from a coalition of consumer groups that questioned the impartiality of the recently adopted revisions to the NAIC Viatical Settlements Model Act with a letter of their own.
November 15 -
Bismarck, N.D. – A coalition of consumer representatives have asked the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) to revisit the recently adopted changes to the viatical settlement model law. In a letter, the group raised the specter of conflict of interest, and urged NAIC to strengthen its policy regarding it.
November 15






