Louisiana to United HealthCare: Insurance Producer Commissions Must Be Paid

May 31, 2019

Louisiana Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon says United HealthCare Services Inc. and/or UnitedHealthcare Insurance Co., its subsidiaries and affiliates (collectively, “United”) can’t proceed with its intention to stop paying producer commissions on renewals of certain group health insurance products.

Donelon issued a cease and desist order to United, “to stop all efforts to implement such policy and to revise all applicable schedules of commissions and relevant rate and form filings to appropriately reflect the full commission payment required by law,” the commissioner stated in a release by the Louisiana Department of Insurance. “This action is meant to both protect Louisiana’s health insurance producers who are due compensation and preserve our authority in making sure insurers writing in Louisiana are in compliance with our laws.”

LDI was contacted in May by numerous producers who indicated that they had been notified of United’s intention to implement a zero-dollar schedule of commissions applicable to all policies sold to groups of greater than 100 insureds with an effective date on or after Sept. 1, 2019. Accompanying this notification was an inducement to work with United and affected insureds to negotiate a “replacement” agency fee to be paid by the insured to the producer and an offer by United to facilitate this payment.

Commissioner Donelon found this intention by United to be contrary to certain provisions of the Louisiana Insurance Code including LA. R.S. 22:855 and 22:1568, which provide:

  • An insurer that maintains a schedule of commission providing for a zero-dollar commission violates both its obligation to remunerate producers for selling its products and the statutory requirement to maintain one or more schedules of payable commission.
  • A schedule of commission with zero-dollar or minimal commission payment provides strong evidence that the insurer is impermissibly attempting to reclassify what is properly and mandatorily a commission as another form of payment. This behavior is a clear violation of R.S. 22:855(A)(1)’s requirement that the commission be included in the premium and may additionally violate the insurer’s obligation to pay tax on its annual premiums under R.S. 22:842, the prohibition on the payment of commissions to a non-licensed entity under R.S. 22:1557, the requirement that all payable commissions be reflected on the schedule of commission maintained pursuant to R.S. 22:1568 and that commissions be uniformly applied to all producers.
  • Simply reclassifying what is properly a commission to a fee does not actually convert the commission into another vehicle or relieve the insurer of its obligation to reflect the commission in its schedule or include it in its premium rate.

Source: Louisiana Department of Insurance

Topics Louisiana

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Latest Comments

  • June 12, 2019 at 2:57 pm
    JDT says:
    Kudos to Louisiana Insurance Commissioner! When carriers did this in TN on individual plans, no one stepped up to support the brokers.The big colorful carrier had filed, and c... read more
  • May 31, 2019 at 2:28 pm
    MrD says:
    Wow - wish other states had the guts to stand up to these carriers like Louisiana has done. That kind of stuff is going on with several health insurance carriers in several p... read more

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