Archive for November, 2007

Feds To Scruggs: Gotcha!

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

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For insurers, the news is almost too good to be true! Richard “Dickie” Scruggs, scourge of the industry, the moving force behind a stampede of lawsuits over wind vs. water damage in Hurricane Katrina, was indicted yesterday on federal bribery charges.

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Will Barney Blink On TRIA?

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

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Rep. Barney Frank threw down the gauntlet last month on extension of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act, insisting that he would not be bullied by the U.S. Senate into abandoning his broader vision for the program and swallowing the more limited Senate bill at the 11th hour. But with the federal reinsurance backstop set to expire Dec. 31, the Senate showing no signs of caving in and a White House veto threat looming, will Barney blink rather than let TRIA pass into oblivion? I think he must and he will.

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Insurers Not Sorry To See Sen. Lott Go

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

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Property-casualty insurance groups offered gracious farewells following the news that Sen. Trent Lott would be leaving Congress before year’s end. But most industry lobbyists no doubt were breathing a sigh of relief, given the animosity the Mississippi Republican displayed after complaining about how he and his constituents were left out to dry on Hurricane Katrina homeowners claims.

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Next Year In Havana

Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

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I first heard the fascinating backstory of Alex Soto–who recently concluded his term as president of the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America–from a DVD he gave me of his “Black Bean Soup” speech about his boyhood in Cuba, his family’s escape to Florida after Fidel Castro seized power, and his longing these past 47 years to return home someday on his own terms. His story resonated with me–the son of a man who as a teenager had fled the Nazis in Poland to start a new life in New York. I offered my editing skills to help craft a personal essay out of his speech, which I would still like to see published in the consumer media. In the spirit of the season, I present here a slightly shorter version of his moving story, to remind us to give thanks for the blessings we enjoy living in a free country.

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Getting Old Beats The Alternative

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

If you think dealing with older insureds will be tough for auto insurers as reflexes, sight and hearing fail elderly drivers, imagine what challenges await workers’ compensation carriers as the Baby Boom generation goes bust! The only consolation for underwriters might be that they are not alone. Unlike with coverage for individual drivers, insurers get to share the responsibility for limiting the hazards facing our exploding senior population with risk managers.

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Who Will Insure Mr. Magoo?

Monday, November 19th, 2007

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When a live-action movie about Mr. Magoo was released with Leslie Nielson of “Naked Gun” fame playing the painfully nearsighted, accident-prone cartoon character in the late 1990s, groups representing the blind protested and secured some disclaimers from the producers at the end of the film. Will auto insurers fare any better if they take steps to respond to the exploding number of elderly drivers hitting the road?

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Battle Of The Bobs!

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

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A pair of heavyweight champions——Insurance Information Institute President Robert P. Hartwig and Consumer Federation of America Insurance Director J. Robert Hunter—battled over Hurricane Katrina claims, insurer profitability, federal terrorism reinsurance and other hot controversies in a five-round online debate, the main event in the National Underwriter Company’s first virtual conference. Read on for the blow by blow description, and weigh in with your own ringside commentary.

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Insurers Silent On Spitzer Licensing Scheme

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

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New York Governor Eliot Spitzer finally raised the white flag today on his controversial plan to allow undocumented aliens to get a driver’s license, which he had argued would not only have made the roads safer, but have lowered insurance costs as well. The knee jerk hostility against immigration in general overwhelmed any intelligent discussion of his claim that there would be fewer uninsured drivers–a debatable point about which insurers were silent.

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ERM Session Launches NU’s Virtual Conference

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

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National Underwriter launches its first “Virtual Conference & Expo” on Wednesday, Nov. 14, with a session on enterprise risk management, featuring the authors of “Enterprise Risk Management For Dummies”–the first of four sessions on the day. Also included will be a panel in which the three finalists in NU’s inaugural “Award For Excellence In Workers’ Comp Risk Management” will share the secrets of their success. Registration is free. (Thursday’s session features “The Battle Of The Bobs”–the debate between Bob Hartwig and Bob Hunter.) Click on for more details.

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Quotes Of The Week

Monday, November 12th, 2007

Did you ever wish you could be a fly on the wall at a meeting of major insurance company CEOs? For those interested in hearing some of the most provocative comments issued at last week’s NU Property-Casualty Executive Conference, read on, and feel free to speak out on any of the controversial issues they addressed.

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