Kentucky Files Plan to Rehabilitate Schools’ Insurance Trust

November 18, 2013

The Kentucky Department of Insurance (DOI) has proposed taking over the management of the troubled funds used for school board workers’ compensation and property and liability claims.

DOI Commissioner Sharon P. Clark said the takeover plan will be at a much lower cost to the school districts than previous proposals.

These school funds have faced serious financial destabilization, with potentially significant and costly impact to the school boards.

DOI said its recommendation, if accepted, will save the state’s school boards at least $21 million over proposals submitted earlier this year.

Attorneys for the DOI filed petitions in Franklin Circuit Court asking that two of the Kentucky School Boards Insurance Trust’s (KSBIT) self-insured funds be placed in rehabilitation, which means DOI will directly manage the funds. If granted, Clark and her staff will have full control of the KSBIT funds as the workers’ compensation fund transitions to another entity and the property and liability fund is closed out.

The insurance commissioner is required by law to ask for a rehabilitation order when an insurer, including a self-insured group, meets certain conditions, including serious financial difficulty.

KSBIT has been operating under an ongoing deficit. In spite of directives and efforts to cure the deficit, the situation only worsened, triggering DOI’s action. The funds stopped writing new or renewal business on June 30, 2013. Since 2010, the funds have been under the management of the Kentucky League of Cities Insurance Services Association.

“The goal of this rehabilitation process is to ensure that payments to injured workers and coverage for property or liability claims are met in the most cost efficient manner possible for our school districts,” said Governor Steve Beshear.

The petitions seek approval of assessment plans totaling $48.5 million ($36 million for the workers’ compensation fund and $12.5 million for the property/liability fund). The DOI expects the court to set a hearing on the plans within the next 90 days.

Under the proposed rehabilitation plans, the claims liabilities of the workers’ compensation fund would be transferred to Kentucky Employers’ Mutual Insurance (KEMI) in a loss portfolio transfer.

Topics Workers' Compensation Kentucky

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Insurance Journal Magazine November 18, 2013
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