PIANY Legislative Agenda Gets Boost From Senate Action
The Professional Insurance Agents of New York State has focused upon several issues in its Position Paper – in play now as the Budget appears completed and the session turns to other legislation.
As we go to press, PIANY is thanking Sen. James L. Seward, R-51, and the state Senate for passing S.3960/A.7012, a bill that would amend the Insurance Law Section 2123 “to allow insurance producers who maintain an active membership in a professional insurance association to receive continuing-education credit, per a biennial period”. The bill defines “statewide professional insurance producer association” as “an association that has been in existence for at least 10 years and derives its membership from individuals who received their insurance producers’ licenses from the superintendent of insurance for the New York State Department of Financial Services”. Several statewide insurance associations have endorsed the bills.
“PIANY supports S.3960/A.7012 and any bill that would reform the insurance producer licensing process to make CE compliance and renewals easier,” said PIANY President Fred Holender, CLU, CPCU, ChFC, MSFS. “This bill recognizes that insurance producers—who are involved in a professional association, such as PIANY—are knowledgeable about the insurance industry and it would reward them for their professionalism by granting them six CE credits every other year. This would lessen the burden that many agents feel when they are trying to maintain their licenses in various states and insurance classes. The association urges the Assembly to vote on and pass this legislation.”
Piany Hails Removal of Onerous Items in Executive Budget Proposal
The Professional Insurance Agents of New York State is pleased to have defeated a proposal to enact massive and unwarranted penalty increases for violating the state’s Insurance Law, while protecting insurance consumers against insurance adjusters who are convicted of felonies, both of which were proposed originally in the executive budget.
The budget proposal for a 900 percent increase in Insurance Law penalties—from $1,000 per offense to $10,000 was dropped when lawmakers finalized New York’s $168 billion spending plan for 2018-19 on Saturday. The final budget does not include any increase or change in the current penalties under the Insurance Law. The final budget also left out licensing for insurance adjusters who have been convicted of a felony, which PIANY had opposed.
“For the second consecutive year, the New York State Department of Financial Services tried to increase fines by an unnecessarily large amount,” said PIANY President Fred Holender, CPCU, CLU, ChFC, MSFS. “Changing the fines from $1,000 to $10,000 could be detrimental to smaller insurance agencies. PIANY is working to protect the insurance producers and the insurance-buying community, and we are pleased that lawmakers recognized the burden of the fees and the danger of licensing adjusters convicted of felonies.”
Eliminating the state budget fee increase was one of the items on PIANY’s 2018 legislative agenda (pia.org/IRC/qs/qs_other/QS31003.pdf). The association also has worked toward: producer licensing reform; eliminating bait-and-switch practices; scaffold law/tort reform; cybersecurity regulations; eliminating the 30-day rule for the New York State Insurance Fund and permitting commission payments through the NYSIF; and standardizing hurricane deductible triggers for coastal home insurance policies.