06-R 348
2006 -- H 7779 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 06/23/06
J O I N T R E S O L U T I O N
IN
OPPOSITION TO FEDERAL PREEMPTIVE INSURANCE REGULATORY MEASURES
Introduced
By: Representatives Kennedy, Lewiss, Shanley, Lally, and Lima
Date
Introduced: February 28, 2006
WHEREAS,
Regulation, oversight, and consumer protection have traditionally and
historically been powers reserved to state
governments under the McCarran-Ferguson Act of
1945; and
WHEREAS, State
legislatures are more responsive to the needs of their constituents and
the need for insurance products and regulation
to meet their state's unique market demands; and
WHEREAS, Many
states, including Rhode Island, have recently enacted and amended
state insurance laws to modernize market
regulation and provide insurers with greater ability to
respond to changes in market conditions; and
WHEREAS, State
legislators, the National Conference of Insurance Legislators, and the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners
continue to address uniformity issues between
states by the adoption of model laws that
address uniformity issues between states by the
adoption of model laws that address market
conduct, product approval, agent licensing, and rate-
deregulation; and
WHEREAS,
Initiatives are being contemplated by certain members of the United States
Congress that would destroy the state system of
insurance regulation and create unwieldy and
inaccessible federal bureaucracies – all without
consumer demand; and
WHEREAS, Many
state governments derive general revenue dollars from the regulation
of the business of insurance, including
$51,732,000 from total revenues generated in 2003 for the
State of Rhode Island budget according to the
United States department of Commerce Bureau of
Census and the National Association of Insurance
Commissioner's 2003 budget, not including
state licensing fees, employment taxes and other
business fees and taxes paid to the state of
Rhode Island by insurers; and
WHEREAS, These
initiatives would eventually draw premium taxes and general
revenues from the states; and
WHEREAS, Such
initiatives include optional federal charter proposals that would
bifurcate insurance regulation and allow
companies to evade important state consumer
protections and the State Modernization and
Regulatory Transparency (SMART) Act, which
would create mandatory federal insurance
standards preempting Rhode Island state law; now,
therefore be it
RESOLVED, That the
General Assembly of the state of Rhode Island and Providence
Plantations hereby expresses its strong
opposition to such federal legislation that would threaten
the power of state legislators, governors,
insurance commissioners, and attorney generals to
oversee, regulate and investigate the business
of insurance, and to protect consumers; and be it
further
RESOLVED, That the
Secretary of State be and he hereby is authorized and directed to
transmit duly certified copies of this
resolution to the members of Rhode Island's United States
House and Senate Congressional delegation in
Washington DC, the members of the United States
House of Representatives Committee on Financial
Services, and the United States Senate
Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs.
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LC02602/SUB
A
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