Department of Insurance in Need of Stronger Oversight and Enforcement Authority
SACRAMENTO — Senator Ben Allen (D-Pacific Palisades) introduced SB 1209 today, a landmark legislative proposal sponsored by Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, to give the California Department of Insurance long needed enforcement authority when insurers fail to comply with Report of Examination directives. The bill closes a major gap in existing law by requiring admitted insurers to correct violations identified during financial and market conduct examinations within an agreed upon timeframe or face penalties following a hearing.
“Identifying systemic problems should always be followed by immediate corrective action,” said Senator Allen. “The Department of Insurance has been utilizing important tools, over decades, to analyze and scrutinize insurance industry practices, but has lacked needed authority that would result in more timely solutions. Closing this enforcement gap will more efficiently protect ratepayers and ensure they are being more appropriately covered and cared for.”
Under current law, the Department examiners may identify serious problems in an insurer’s operations, governance, financial, rating, underwriting or claims practices. These examinations are one tool the Department may utilize to safeguard consumers and maintain a stable insurance market. However, the Department does not have any authority to compel companies to immediately fix those issues, absent taking enforcement action in some cases.
SB 1209 modernizes California’s oversight framework by ensuring that examination findings lead to real and more immediate corrective action that protects consumers and strengthens the long-term health of the insurance market. The bill closes this gap in enforcement by giving the Department of Insurance greater authority that requires insurers to follow through on critical examination directives in a timelier fashion.
SB 1209 would:
- Require insurers to comply with Report of Examination directives within a defined timeframe;
- Authorize the Department to assess penalties if companies fail to correct identified violations;
- Provide due process protections through a hearing before penalties are imposed;
- Strengthen the Department’s ability to enforce existing statutes and regulations that protect policyholders.
Commissioner Lara emphasized the urgency of strengthening oversight at a time when climate driven disasters and emerging risks are putting unprecedented pressure on the insurance system.
“This bill builds on the reforms we’ve advanced to help companies anticipate emerging risks and address long term solvency challenges before they harm Californians in an already fragile market,” said Commissioner Lara. “As climate change and new technologies reshape insurance, SB 1209 gives us the modern oversight tools needed to keep coverage reliable and our market stable.”
The legislation is part of California’s broader effort to modernize our insurance regulatory system, improve market stability, and protect consumers as climate driven disasters, inflation, and global reinsurance pressures reshape the insurance landscape.
SB 1209 will be heard in its respective policy committee for a vote in the coming weeks.