| Chapter 318 |
| 2024 -- H 7283 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 06/25/2024 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO INSURANCE -- PRODUCER LICENSING ACT |
Introduced By: Representatives Kennedy, Azzinaro, O'Brien, Solomon, Edwards, Kazarian, and Casimiro |
| Date Introduced: January 26, 2024 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Sections 27-2.4-2, 27-2.4-4 and 27-2.4-16 of the General Laws in Chapter |
| 27-2.4 entitled "Producer Licensing Act" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 27-2.4-2. Definitions. |
| The following definitions apply to For purposes of this chapter: |
| (1) “Business entity” means a corporation, association, partnership, limited liability |
| company, limited liability partnership, or other legal entity;. |
| (2) “Contracted producer report” means the annual report that all insurers contracting with |
| insurance producers must provide to the department on or by March 1 listing each insurance |
| producer to whom the insurer paid one hundred dollars ($100) or more in commissions for the |
| preceding calendar year of January 1 to December 31. The department shall prescribe the form and |
| manner of reporting. |
| (32) “Department” means the department of business regulation;. |
| (43) “Home state” means any state or territory of the United States, or the District of |
| Columbia, in which an insurance producer maintains his or her their principal place of residence or |
| principal place of business and is licensed to act as an insurance producer;. |
| (54) “Insurance” means any of the lines of authority set forth in this title;. |
| (65) “Insurance commissioner” means the director of the department of business regulation |
| or his or her the director's designee;. |
| (76) “Insurance producer” means a person required to be licensed under the laws of this |
| state to sell, solicit, or negotiate insurance;. |
| (87) “Insurer” means: (i) any Any person, reciprocal exchange, interinsurer, Lloyds |
| insurer, fraternal benefit society, and any other legal entity engaged in the business of insurance, |
| including insurance producers; (ii) notwithstanding Notwithstanding §§ 27-19-2, 27-20-2, 27- |
| 20.1-2, 27-20.2-2, 27-20.3-2, and 27-41-22, all of whom shall be engaged in the business of |
| insurance for the purpose of this chapter, nonprofit hospital and/or medical service corporation, a |
| nonprofit dental service corporation, a nonprofit optometric service corporation, a nonprofit legal |
| service corporation, a health maintenance organization as defined in chapter 41 of this title or as |
| defined in chapter 62 of title 42, or any other entity providing a plan of health benefits subject to |
| state insurance regulation; and (iii) an An organization that for consideration assumes certain risks |
| for an insured. Insurer organizations may include corporations, stock companies, mutual |
| companies, risk retention groups, reciprocals, captives, Lloyds associations, and government |
| residual plans. |
| (98) “License” means a document issued by this state’s insurance commissioner |
| authorizing a person to act as an insurance producer for the lines of authority specified in the |
| document. The license itself does not create any authority, actual, apparent, or inherent, in the |
| holder to represent or commit an insurance carrier;. |
| (109) “Limited line credit insurance” includes credit life, credit disability, credit property, |
| credit unemployment, involuntary unemployment, mortgage life, mortgage guaranty, mortgage |
| disability, guaranteed automobile protection (gap) insurance, and any other form of insurance |
| offered in connection with an extension of credit that is limited to partially or wholly extinguishing |
| that credit obligation that the insurance commissioner determines should be designated a form of |
| limited line credit insurance;. |
| (1110) “Limited line credit insurance producer” means a person who sells, solicits, or |
| negotiates one or more forms of limited line credit insurance coverage to individuals through a |
| master, corporate, group, or individual policy;. |
| (1211) “Limited lines insurance” means those lines of insurance that the insurance |
| commissioner deems necessary to recognize for purposes of complying with subsection § 27-2.4- |
| 10(e);. |
| (1312) “Limited lines producer” means a person authorized by the insurance commissioner |
| to sell, solicit, or negotiate limited lines insurance;. |
| (1413) “NAIC” means the National Association of Insurance Commissioners;. |
| (1514) “Negotiate” means the act of conferring directly with or offering advice directly to |
| a purchaser or prospective purchaser of a particular contract of insurance concerning any of the |
| substantive benefits, terms, or conditions of the contract, provided that the person engaged in that |
| act either sells insurance or obtains insurance from insurers for purchasers;. |
| (1615) “Person” means an individual;. |
| (1716) “Resident” means a person who either resides in Rhode Island or maintains an office |
| in Rhode Island where the business of producing insurance is transacted and designates Rhode |
| Island as the residence for purposes of licensure;. |
| (1817) “Sell” means to exchange a contract of insurance by any means, for money or its |
| equivalent, on behalf of an insurance company;. |
| (1918) “Solicit” means attempting to sell insurance or asking or urging a person to apply |
| for a particular kind of insurance from a particular company;. |
| (2019) “Terminate” means the cancellation of the relationship between an insurance |
| producer and the insurer or the termination of an insurance producer’s authority to transact |
| insurance;. |
| (2120) “Uniform application” means the current version of the NAIC uniform application |
| for resident and nonresident insurance producer licensing. |
| 27-2.4-4. Fees. |
| (a) Fees required by this chapter shall be as follows: |
| (1) Initial insurance producer license: $ 55.00; and |
| (2) Annual insurance producer renewal: $ 55.00; and. |
| (3) Annual contracted producer report: $ 30.00 (per producer). |
| (b) The insurance commissioner may by rule or regulation specify fees for letters of |
| certification, clearance letters, duplicate licenses, and any other documents as well as fees for |
| services and documents provided by or on behalf of the department that are reasonably determined |
| by the insurance commissioner. |
| 27-2.4-16. Notification to insurance commissioner of termination. |
| (a) Termination for cause. An insurer or authorized representative of the insurer that |
| terminates the appointment, employment, contract, or other insurance business relationship with an |
| insurance producer shall notify the insurance commissioner within thirty (30) days following the |
| effective date of the termination, using a format prescribed by the insurance commissioner, if the |
| reason for termination is one of the reasons set forth in § 27-2.4-14 or the insurer has knowledge |
| the insurance producer was found by a court, government body, or self-regulatory organization |
| authorized by law to have engaged in any of the activities in § 27-2.4-14. Upon the written request |
| of the insurance commissioner, the insurer shall provide additional information, documents, |
| records, or other data pertaining to the termination or activity of the insurance producer. |
| (b) Termination without cause. An insurer or authorized representative of the insurer that |
| terminates the appointment, employment, or contract with a producer for any reason not set forth |
| in § 27-2.4-14, shall notify the insurance commissioner within thirty (30) days following the |
| effective date of the termination, using a format prescribed by the insurance commissioner. Upon |
| written request of the insurance commissioner, the insurer shall provide additional information, |
| documents, records, or other data pertaining to the termination. |
| (b)(c) Ongoing notification requirement. The insurer or the authorized representative of |
| the insurer shall promptly notify the insurance commissioner in a format acceptable to the insurance |
| commissioner if, upon further review or investigation, the insurer discovers additional information |
| that would have been reportable to the insurance commissioner in accordance with subsection (a) |
| of this section had the insurer then known of its existence. |
| (c)(d) Copy of notification to be provided to the insurance producer. |
| (1) Within fifteen (15) days after making the notification required by subsections (a) and |
| (b)(c) of this section, the insurer shall mail a copy of the notification to the insurance producer at |
| his or her the producer's last known address. If the insurance producer is terminated for cause for |
| any of the reasons listed in § 27-2.4-14, the insurer shall provide a copy of the notification to the |
| insurance producer at his or her the producer's last known address by certified mail, return receipt |
| requested, postage prepaid, or by overnight delivery using a nationally recognized carrier. |
| (2) Within thirty (30) days after the insurance producer has received the original or |
| additional notification, the insurance producer may file written comments concerning the substance |
| of the notification with the insurance commissioner. The insurance producer shall, by the same |
| means, simultaneously send a copy of the comments to the reporting insurer, and the comments |
| shall become a part of the insurance commissioner’s file and accompany every copy of a report |
| distributed or disclosed for any reason about the insurance producer as permitted under subsection |
| (e)(f) of this section. |
| (d)(e) Immunities. |
| (1) In the absence of actual malice, an insurer, the authorized representative of the insurer, |
| an insurance producer, the insurance commissioner, or an organization of which the insurance |
| commissioner is a member and that compiles the information and makes it available to other |
| insurance commissioners or regulatory or law enforcement agencies shall not be subject to civil |
| liability, except as provided in this section, and a civil cause of action of any nature shall not arise |
| against these entities or their respective agents or employees, except as provided in this section, as |
| a result of any statement or information required by or provided pursuant to this section or any |
| information relating to any statement that may be requested in writing by the insurance |
| commissioner, from an insurer or insurance producer; or a statement by a terminating insurer or |
| insurance producer to an insurer or insurance producer limited solely and exclusively to whether a |
| termination for cause under subsection (a) of this section was reported to the insurance |
| commissioner, provided that the propriety of any termination for cause under subsection (a) of this |
| section is certified in writing by an officer or authorized representative of the insurer or insurance |
| producer terminating the relationship. |
| (2) In any action brought against a person that may have immunity under this chapter for |
| making any statement required by this section or providing any information relating to any |
| statement that may be requested by the insurance commissioner, the party bringing the action shall |
| plead specifically in any allegation that subdivision subsection (d)(e)(1) of this section does not |
| apply because the person making the statement or providing the information did so with actual |
| malice. |
| (3) This chapter shall not abrogate or modify any existing statutory or common law |
| privileges or immunities. |
| (e)(f) Confidentiality. |
| (1) Any documents, materials, or other information in the control or possession of the |
| department that is furnished by an insurer, insurance producer, or an employee or agent of the |
| insurer or insurance producer acting on behalf of the insurer or insurance producer, or obtained by |
| the insurance commissioner in an investigation pursuant to this section, shall be confidential by law |
| and privileged, shall not be subject to chapter 2 of title 38, shall not be subject to subpoena, and |
| shall not be subject to discovery or admissible in evidence in any private civil action. The insurance |
| commissioner is authorized to use the documents, materials, or other information in the furtherance |
| of any regulatory or legal action brought as a part of the insurance commissioner’s duties. |
| (2) Neither the insurance commissioner nor any person who received documents, materials, |
| or other information while acting under the authority of the insurance commissioner shall be |
| permitted or required to testify in any private civil action concerning any confidential documents, |
| materials, or information subject to this chapter. |
| (3) In order to assist in the performance of the insurance commissioner’s duties under this |
| chapter, the insurance commissioner: |
| (i) May share documents, materials, or other information, including the confidential and |
| privileged documents, materials, or information subject to this chapter, with other state, federal, |
| and international regulatory agencies, with the NAIC, its affiliates or subsidiaries, and with state, |
| federal, and international law enforcement authorities, provided that the recipient agrees to |
| maintain the confidentiality and privileged status of the document, material, or other information; |
| (ii) May receive documents, materials, or information, including confidential and |
| privileged documents, materials, or information, from the NAIC, its affiliates or subsidiaries and |
| from regulatory and law enforcement officials of other foreign or domestic jurisdictions, and shall |
| maintain as confidential or privileged any document, material, or information received with notice |
| or the understanding that it is confidential or privileged under the laws of the jurisdiction that is the |
| source of the document, material, or information; |
| (iii) May enter into agreements governing sharing and use of information consistent with |
| this subsection (f); |
| (iv) No waiver of any applicable privilege or claim of confidentiality in the documents, |
| materials, or information shall occur as a result of disclosure to the commissioner under this section |
| or as a result of sharing as authorized in this chapter; |
| (v) Nothing in this chapter shall prohibit the insurance commissioner from releasing final, |
| adjudicated actions including for cause terminations that are open to public inspection pursuant to |
| chapter 2 of title 38 to a database or other clearinghouse service maintained by the NAIC, its |
| affiliates or subsidiaries; and |
| (vi) If the department releases to an unauthorized third party any documents, materials, or |
| other information provided to the department pursuant to this section, then the department shall be |
| subject to a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000) after a hearing on this violation brought |
| in the Superior Court. |
| (f)(g) Penalties for failing to report. An insurer, the authorized representative of the |
| insurer, or insurance producer that fails to report as required under the provisions of this section or |
| that is found to have reported with actual malice by a court of competent jurisdiction may, after |
| notice and hearing, have its license or certificate of authority suspended or revoked and may be |
| fined in accordance with § 42-14-16. |
| SECTION 2. Sections 27-10-1.1 and 27-10-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 27-10 entitled |
| "Claim Adjusters" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 27-10-1.1. Definitions. |
| (a) “Adjuster” means an individual licensed as either a public company or independent |
| adjuster. |
| (b) “Catastrophic disaster” according to the Federal Response Plan, means an event that |
| results in large numbers of deaths and injuries; causes extensive damage or destruction of facilities |
| that provide and sustain human needs; produces an overwhelming demand on state and local |
| response resources and mechanisms; causes a severe long-term effect on general economic activity; |
| and severely affects state, local, and private sector capabilities to begin and sustain response |
| activities. A catastrophic disaster shall be declared by the President of the United States, the |
| governor of the state, or the insurance commissioner. |
| (c) “Company adjuster” means a person who: |
| (1) Is an individual who contracts for compensation with insurers or self-insurers as an |
| employee; and |
| (2) Investigates, negotiates, or settles property, casualty, or workers’ compensation claims |
| for insurers or for self-insurers as an employee. |
| (d) “Department” means the insurance division of the department of business regulation. |
| (e) “Home state” means the District of Columbia and any state or territory of the United |
| States in which the adjuster’s principal place of residence or principal place of business is located. |
| If neither the state in which the public independent or company adjuster maintains the principal |
| place of residence, nor the state in which the adjuster maintains the principal place of business, has |
| a substantially similar law governing adjusters, the adjuster may declare another state in which it |
| becomes licensed and acts as a public an independent or company adjuster to be the “home state.” |
| (f) “Independent adjuster” means a person who: |
| (1) Is an individual who contracts for compensation with insurers or self-insurers as an |
| independent contractor; or |
| (2) Investigates, negotiates, or settles property, casualty, or workers’ compensation claims |
| for insurers or for self-insurers as an independent contractor. |
| (g) “Insurance commissioner” means the director of the department of business regulation |
| or his or her the director's designee. |
| (h) “NAIC” means the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. |
| (i) “Public adjuster” means any person who, for compensation or any other thing of value |
| on behalf of the insured: |
| (1) Acts or aids, solely in relation to first-party claims arising under insurance contracts |
| that insure the real or personal property of the insured, other than automobile, on behalf of an |
| insured in negotiating for, or effecting the settlement of, a claim for loss or damage covered by an |
| insurance contract; |
| (2) Advertises for employment as a public adjuster of insurance claims or solicits business |
| or represents himself or herself themself to the public as a public adjuster of first-party insurance |
| claims for losses or damages arising out of policies of insurance that insure real or personal |
| property; or |
| (3) Directly or indirectly solicits business, investigates or adjusts losses, or advises an |
| insured about first-party claims for losses or damages arising out of policies of insurance that insure |
| real or personal property for another person engaged in the business of adjusting losses or damages |
| covered by an insurance policy, for the insured. |
| (j) “Uniform individual application” means the current version of the National Association |
| of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) Uniform Individual Application for resident and nonresident |
| individuals. |
| 27-10-2. Persons exempt. |
| The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to the following: |
| (1) An attorney at law admitted to practice in this state, acting in his or her their professional |
| capacity as an attorney; |
| (2) Either an insurance producer of a domestic insurance company or an insurance producer |
| duly licensed by the insurance commissioner, when the insurance producer adjusts, or assists in the |
| adjustment of, claims arising only under policies of insurance or fidelity or surety bonds negotiated, |
| solicited, or effected by him or her or by the insurance producer, whether the insurance producer is |
| a person, partnership, or corporation, for which he or she acts they act; |
| (3) A person who negotiates or settles claims arising under a life or health insurance policy |
| or an annuity contract; |
| (4) A person employed only for the purpose of obtaining facts surrounding a loss or |
| furnishing technical assistance to a licensed adjuster, including photographers, estimators, private |
| investigators, engineers, and handwriting experts; |
| (5) An individual who is employed to investigate suspected fraudulent insurance claims |
| but who does not adjust losses or determine claims payments; |
| (6) A person who solely performs executive, administrative, managerial, or clerical duties, |
| or any combination thereof, and who does not investigate, negotiate, or settle claims with |
| policyholders, claimants, or their legal representative; |
| (7) A licensed healthcare provider or its employee who provides managed care services as |
| long as the services do not include the determination of compensability; |
| (8) A managed care organization or any of its employees or an employee of any |
| organization providing managed care services so long as the services do not include the |
| determination of compensability; |
| (9) A person who settles only reinsurance or subrogation claims; |
| (10) A person who investigates, negotiates, or settles life, accident and health, annuity, or |
| disability insurance claims; |
| (11) An individual employee, under a self-insured arrangement, who adjusts claims on |
| behalf of their employer; |
| (12) A person authorized to adjust workers’ compensation or disability claims under the |
| authority of a third-party administrator (TPA) license pursuant to chapter 20.7 of this title 27; |
| (13) A person who adjusts claims for portable electronic insurance offered pursuant to |
| chapter 2.7 of this title 27. |
| SECTION 3. Section 27-13.1-7 of the General Laws in Chapter 27-13.1 entitled |
| "Examinations" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 27-13.1-7. Cost of examinations. |
| (a) The total cost of the examinations shall be borne by the examined companies and shall |
| include the following expenses: |
| (1) One hundred fifty percent (150%) of the total salaries and benefits paid to the examining |
| personnel of the banking and insurance division engaged in those examinations less any salary |
| reimbursements; |
| (2) All reasonable technology costs related to the examination process. Technology costs |
| shall include the actual cost of software and hardware utilized in the examination process and the |
| cost of training examination insurance personnel in the proper use of the software or hardware; |
| (3) All necessary and reasonable education and training costs incurred by the state to |
| maintain the proficiency and competence of the examining insurance personnel. All these costs |
| shall be incurred in accordance with appropriate state of Rhode Island regulations, guidelines, and |
| procedures. |
| (b) Expenses incurred pursuant to subsections (a)(2) and (a)(3) of this section shall be |
| allocated equally to each company domiciled in Rhode Island no more frequently than annually |
| and shall not exceed an annual average assessment of three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) |
| five thousand dollars ($5,000) per company for any given three (3) calendar year period. All |
| revenues collected pursuant to this section shall be deposited as general revenues. That assessment |
| shall be in addition to any taxes and fees payable to the state. |
| SECTION 4. Section 27-20.7-7 of the General Laws in Chapter 27-20.7 entitled "Third- |
| Party Health Insurance Administrators" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 27-20.7-7. Responsibilities of the insurer. |
| (a) If an insurer utilizes the services of an administrator, the insurer shall be responsible for |
| determining the benefits, premium rates, underwriting criteria, and claims payment procedures |
| applicable to the coverage and for securing reinsurance, if any. The rules pertaining to these matters |
| must be provided, in writing, by the insurer to the administrator. The responsibilities of the |
| administrator as to any of these matters shall be set forth in the written agreement between the |
| administrator and the insurer. |
| (b) It is the sole responsibility of the insurer to provide for competent administration of its |
| programs. |
| (c) In cases where an administrator administers benefits for more than one hundred (100) |
| certificate holders on behalf of an insurer, the insurer shall, at least semi-annually, conduct a review |
| of the operations of the administrator. At least one of these reviews shall be an on-site audit of the |
| operations of the administrator. |
| SECTION 5. Section 42-14-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-14 entitled "Department |
| of Business Regulation" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 42-14-5. Superintendents of banking and insurance. |
| (a) The superintendents of banking and insurance shall administer the functions of the |
| department relating to the regulation and control of banking and insurance. |
| (b) Wherever the words “banking administrator” or “banking commissioner” or “insurance |
| administrator” or "commissioner" or “insurance commissioner” occur in this chapter or any general |
| law, public law, act, or resolution of the general assembly or department regulation, they shall be |
| construed to mean superintendent of banking and superintendent of insurance except as delineated |
| in subsection (d) below. |
| (c) “Health insurance” shall mean “health insurance coverage,” as defined in §§ 27-18.5-2 |
| and 27-18.6-2, “health benefit plan,” as defined in § 27-50-3, and a “medicalMedicare supplement |
| policy,” as defined in § 27-18.2-1 or coverage similar to a Medicare supplement policy that is issued |
| to an employer to cover retirees, and dental coverage, including, but not limited to, coverage |
| provided by a nonprofit dental service plan as defined in § 27-20.1-1(3). |
| (d) Whenever the words “commissioner,” “insurance commissioner,” “health insurance |
| commissioner,” or “director” appear in Title title 27 or Title title 42, those words shall be construed |
| to mean the health insurance commissioner established pursuant to § 42-14.5-1 with respect to all |
| matters relating to health insurance. The health insurance commissioner shall have sole and |
| exclusive jurisdiction over enforcement of those statutes with respect to all matters relating to |
| health insurance except for purposes of producer licensing or producer appointments. |
| (e) Whenever the word “director” appears or is a defined term in title 19, this word shall |
| be construed to mean the superintendent of banking established pursuant to this section. |
| (f) Whenever the word “director” or “commissioner” appears or is a defined term in title |
| 27, this word shall be construed to mean the superintendent of insurance established pursuant to |
| this section except as delineated in subsection (d) of this section. |
| SECTION 6. Chapter 27-2.4 of the General Laws entitled "Producer Licensing Act" is |
| hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
| 27-2.4-14.1. Appointments. |
| (a) An insurance producer shall not act as an agent of an insurer unless the insurance |
| producer becomes an appointed agent of that insurer. An insurance producer who is not acting as |
| an agent of an insurer is not required to become appointed. |
| (b) To appoint a producer as its agent, the appointing insurer shall file, in a format approved |
| by the insurance commissioner, a notice of appointment within fifteen (15) days from the date the |
| first insurance application is submitted. An insurer may also elect to appoint a producer to all or |
| some insurers within the insurer's holding company system or group by the filing of a single |
| appointment request. |
| (c) An insurer shall pay an appointment fee, in the amount and method of payment set forth |
| in a regulation promulgated for that purpose, for each insurance producer appointed by the insurer. |
| (d) An insurer shall remit, in a manner prescribed by the insurance commissioner, a renewal |
| appointment fee in the amount set forth in a regulation promulgated for that purpose. |
| SECTION 7. This act shall take effect upon passage except for section 1 which shall take |
| effect on January 1, 2025. |
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| LC004393/SUB A |
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