Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05503 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/01/2024

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 5503  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING INSURANCE MARKET CONDUCT AND 
INSURANCE LICENSING, THE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT'S 
TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS AND OTHER REVISIONS TO THE 
INSURANCE STATUTES AND CAPTIVE INSURANCE.  
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 
SUMMARY 
§ 1 — INSURANCE COMM ISSIONER’S ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY 
Allows the insurance commissioner to impose restitution, with interest, when someone 
violates the state’s insurance laws, regulations, or commissioner orders; allows the 
commissioner to ask the attorney general to file a court action to enforce the laws, 
regulations, or commissioner orders, impose a fine of up to $100,000 per violation, or 
order restitution with interest 
§ 2 — 30 DAYS TO TURN OVER DOCUMENTS 
Requires anyone requested to provide the Insurance Department with documents related 
to an investigation to comply within 30 days after the request 
§§ 3 & 4 — EXPIRATION DATE FOR CERTAIN INITIAL LICENSES 
Revises the expiration date for initial licenses issued to motor vehicle damage appraisers 
and casualty claims adjusters from June 30 in an odd-numbered year to two years after 
the licensee’s birthday that came before the license was issued 
§ 5 — GENERAL INSURANCE ASSESSMENT PROCE SS 
Removes the Office of the Healthcare Advocate from the Insurance Department’s annual 
process of assessing carriers for the general insurance assessment 
§§ 6, 7 & 12 — ELECTRONIC FILINGS IN LIEU OF PAPER FILINGS 
Removes requirements that insurers file copies of annual financial statements and audited 
financial reports with the insurance commissioner, allowing electronic filings to the NAIC 
to suffice 
§ 8 — NON-ENGLISH INSURANCE DOCUMENTS AN D 
TRANSLATIONS 
Requires insurers who file policies in a non-English language to certify that they comply 
with readable language requirements and bear the risks associated with any translations; 
allows the insurance commissioner to hire translation services at the insurer’s cost 
§ 9 — PHARMACY BENEF IT MANAGER REPORT DU E DATE 
Moves up the annual due date for PBMs to report rebate information to the insurance 
commissioner by one month; requires the commissioner to give the PBMs a copy of his  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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annual report to the Insurance and Real Estate Committee by 10 days before it is due to 
the committee 
§§ 10 & 16 — CONNECTICUT CLEARINGHOUSE REPEALED 
Repeals a requirement that the Health Reinsurance Association develop the Connecticut 
Clearinghouse on health insurance policies available in the state 
§ 11 — SMALL EMPLOYER DEFINITION 
Beginning January 1, 2025, updates the definition of “small employer” in the health 
insurance statutes to mean having no more than 50 employees 
§ 13 — INDEPENDENT REVIEW ORGANIZATION ACCREDITATION 
PERIOD 
Extends the accreditation approval or reapproval period for independent review 
organizations from two to three years 
§§ 14 & 15 — CAPTIVE INSURER CONVERSION OF PROTECTED 
CELLS 
Allows a captive insurer’s protected cell to convert into a new protected cell, incorporated 
cell, or captive insurance company without any impact on the protected cell’s assets, 
rights, benefits, obligations, and liabilities 
BACKGROUND 
 
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes numerous unrelated changes to insurance statutes, as 
summarized in the section-by-section analysis below. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024, unless otherwise stated below. 
§ 1 — INSURANCE COMM ISSIONER’S ENFORCEME NT 
AUTHORITY 
Allows the insurance commissioner to impose restitution, with interest, when someone 
violates the state’s insurance laws, regulations, or commissioner orders; allows the 
commissioner to ask the attorney general to file a court action to enforce the laws, 
regulations, or commissioner orders, impose a fine of up to $100,000 per violation, or 
order restitution with interest 
By law, the insurance commissioner must administer and enforce the 
laws regarding insurance companies and health care centers (i.e., 
HMOs). Relatedly, the law grants him the reasonable and necessary 
powers to protect the public interest. 
The bill explicitly allows the commissioner to order restitution of any 
amount obtained in violation of the state’s insurance laws, regulations, 
or commissioner orders, plus interest as allowed under another state  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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law. This is generally 10% interest per year (CGS § 37-3a). 
Additionally, whenever the commissioner finds and can show that a 
person has violated, or is about to violate, the state’s insurance laws, 
regulations, or commissioner orders, the bill allows him to ask the 
attorney general to bring an action in Hartford Superior Court for an 
injunction (permanent or temporary), restraining order, or other 
appropriate order; a penalty of up to $100,000 per violation; or 
restitution, with interest, for the amount the person obtained in 
violation of the laws, regulations, or commissioner orders. The 
commissioner is not required to post a bond in any court action brought. 
And if the commissioner prevails in court, the court may also order the 
state’s costs be paid as part of its order. (Under existing law, the 
commissioner may already request the attorney general to apply to 
Superior Court for a permanent or temporary order restraining a person 
from violating the insurance laws (CGS § 38a-16(b)).) 
§ 2 — 30 DAYS TO TURN OVER DO CUMENTS 
Requires anyone requested to provide the Insurance Department with documents related 
to an investigation to comply within 30 days after the request 
By law, the insurance commissioner may conduct investigations and 
hearings on any matter under the insurance laws. He may, among other 
things, order the production of books, records, papers, or documents for 
an investigation. 
The bill requires that anyone who receives a request for the 
production of books, records, papers, or documents comply with the 
order within 30 days after the date of the order. By law, if a person 
refuses to comply, the commissioner may ask the Superior Court to 
order compliance. 
§§ 3 & 4 — EXPIRATION DATE FOR CERTAIN INITIAL LICENSES 
Revises the expiration date for initial licenses issued to motor vehicle damage appraisers 
and casualty claims adjusters from June 30 in an odd-numbered year to two years after 
the licensee’s birthday that came before the license was issued 
Under current law, initial licenses for motor vehicle damage 
appraisers and casualty claim adjusters expire on the June 30 in an odd-
numbered year following the license issuance, unless sooner revoked or  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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suspended. The bill changes this expiration date to be two years after 
the licensee’s birthday that came before the date the license was issued, 
unless it was already revoked or suspended. By law, a licensee may 
renew the license every two years at the insurance commissioner’s 
discretion with payment of the required renewal fees.  
§ 5 — GENERAL INSURANCE ASSESSMENT PROCE SS 
Removes the Office of the Healthcare Advocate from the Insurance Department’s annual 
process of assessing carriers for the general insurance assessment 
By law, domestic insurers and HMOs pay an annual assessment to 
the Insurance Department to cover the expenses of the Insurance 
Department, Office of the Healthcare Advocate, and Office of Health 
Strategy, among other things.  
Under current law, the insurance commissioner and the Office of the 
Healthcare Advocate assess the entities following a process set in state 
law. The bill removes the Office of the Healthcare Advocate from this 
process, leaving the insurance commissioner to manage the assessment 
process. 
It also makes technical and conforming changes. 
§§ 6, 7 & 12 — ELECTRONIC FILINGS IN LIEU OF PAPER FILINGS 
Removes requirements that insurers file copies of annual financial statements and audited 
financial reports with the insurance commissioner, allowing electronic filings to the NAIC 
to suffice 
Current law requires domestic insurers, HMOs, and fraternal benefit 
societies to file copies of annual financial statements and audited 
financial reports with the insurance commissioner as well as 
electronically with the National Association of Insurance 
Commissioners (NAIC). The bill eliminates the requirement to submit 
these to the commissioner. Instead, it deems the companies’ electronic 
submissions to the NAIC, as required by law, to have been filed with 
the commissioner. 
§ 8 — NON-ENGLISH INSURANCE DOCUMENTS AN D 
TRANSLATIONS  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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Requires insurers who file policies in a non-English language to certify that they comply 
with readable language requirements and bear the risks associated with any translations; 
allows the insurance commissioner to hire translation services at the insurer’s cost 
By law, insurance policies filed with the Insurance Department must 
meet certain readability standards (e.g., Flesch reading ease scores and 
print specifications). As under current law, the bill allows insurers to file 
policies in any language. The insurer must certify that the policy 
complies with the readability standards or is translated from a policy 
that complies. 
The bill allows the insurance commissioner to hire a translation 
service to review a non-English-language policy filed by an insurer. The 
insurer that filed the policy must pay the cost of the translation. 
Alternatively, the commissioner may require the insurer to provide an 
English translated copy of the policy and a certification as to the 
accuracy of the translation. The bill requires the insurer to accept all risk 
associated with a translation. 
The bill also allows the commissioner to adopt implementing 
regulations. 
§ 9 — PHARMACY BENEF IT MANAGER REPORT DU E DATE 
Moves up the annual due date for PBMs to report rebate information to the insurance 
commissioner by one month; requires the commissioner to give the PBMs a copy of his 
annual report to the Insurance and Real Estate Committee by 10 days before it is due to 
the committee 
By law, each pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) must file a report 
annually with the insurance commissioner concerning prescription 
drug rebates. Under current law, the report is due by March 1. The bill 
moves up the due date to February 1, beginning in 2025.  
The law also requires the commissioner to report to the Insurance and 
Real Estate Committee, annually by March 1, an aggregation of the 
PBMs’ rebate reports. Under current law, the commissioner must give 
the PBMs an advanced copy of this report by February 1 annually. The 
bill instead requires him to give them the advanced copy by 10 days 
before he reports to the committee. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: January 1, 2025  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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§§ 10 & 16 — CONNECTICUT CLEARINGHOUSE R EPEALED 
Repeals a requirement that the Health Reinsurance Association develop the Connecticut 
Clearinghouse on health insurance policies available in the state 
Current law requires the Health Reinsurance Association to develop 
the Connecticut Clearinghouse as a resource for individuals and small 
employers to get information on health insurance policies and plans 
available in the state. The bill repeals this requirement. (The 
clearinghouse has largely been replaced by the health insurance 
exchange, Access Health CT.) 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 
§ 11 — SMALL EMPLOYER DEFINITION 
Beginning January 1, 2025, updates the definition of “small employer” in the health 
insurance statutes to mean having no more than 50 employees 
Beginning January 1, 2025, the bill defines “small employer” for 
purposes of the health insurance laws to mean an employer with an 
average of at least one and no more than 50 employees on business days 
in the prior calendar year and at least one employee on the first day of 
the group health insurance plan year. 
Current law extends the definition to no more than 100 employees, 
except that the insurance commissioner may postpone that definition to 
be consistent with the federal Affordable Care Act. The commissioner 
did that in Insurance Bulletin HC-106 (2015). So, in practice, the small 
employer definition has been no more than 50 employees since before 
2016. 
The bill removes the commissioner’s authority to postpone the 
change in definition. As a result, under the bill, from October 1, 2024, to 
December 31, 2024, a small employer is one that has no more than 100 
employees. This means plans covering between 50 and 100 employees 
must comply with the laws affecting small employers for a three-month 
period (e.g., rating requirements, mandatory benefits). 
§ 13 — INDEPENDENT REVIEW ORGANIZATION A CCREDITATION 
PERIOD 
Extends the accreditation approval or reapproval period for independent review 
organizations from two to three years  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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By law, the insurance commissioner maintains a list of accredited 
independent review organizations that are available to conduct regular 
or expedited external reviews of health insurance grievances. Under 
current law, an accreditation lasts two years. The bill extends this to 
three years. As under existing law, if the commissioner determines that 
an organization no longer meets the minimum requirements for 
accreditation, he must end its approval and remove it from the list of 
approved organizations. 
§§ 14 & 15 — CAPTIVE INSURER CONVERSION OF PROTECTED 
CELLS 
Allows a captive insurer’s protected cell to convert into a new protected cell, incorporated 
cell, or captive insurance company without any impact on the protected cell’s assets, 
rights, benefits, obligations, and liabilities 
Captive Insurer 
Generally, a captive insurer is an insurance company formed to 
insure or reinsure the risks of its owners, parent company, or affiliated 
company. The law allows several different types of captive insurers to 
be licensed and operate in the state, including a sponsored captive 
insurer. 
A sponsored captive insurer is an insurance company (1) for which 
one or more sponsors provide the minimum paid-in capital and surplus, 
(2) that insures its participants through separate participant contracts, 
and (3) that funds its liability to each participant through protected cells 
and separates each cell’s assets from that of other cells and the captive 
insurer as a whole. PA 23-15 allowed these protected cells to establish, 
with the insurance commissioner’s prior written approval, separate 
accounts and allocate assets to them, subject to certain requirements. 
Conversion of Protected Cell Allowed 
The bill allows sponsored captive insurers to convert protected or 
incorporated protected cells into one of the following other insurance 
company structures or types of accounts: 
1. a single protected or incorporated protected cell; 
2. a new sponsored captive insurer (including those licensed as a  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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special purpose financial captive insurer); 
3. a new special purpose financial captive, pure captive, agency 
captive, industrial insured captive, or association captive insurer; 
or 
4. a new risk retention group. 
Any conversion is deemed to (1) be a continuation of the cell’s 
existence, with all of its assets, rights, benefits, obligations, and 
liabilities, and (2) occur without any transfer or assignment of these 
assets, rights, benefits, obligations, and liabilities and without creating 
any reversionary interest in or impairment of them. The bill specifies 
that the conversion does not limit any rights or protections applicable to 
the cell or the sponsored captive that existed prior to the conversion. 
Conversion Process 
Under the bill, a sponsored captive must apply to the insurance 
commissioner and receive his prior written approval for the conversion. 
Additionally, the bill subjects the conversion to the existing laws 
regulating captives and the sponsored captive insurer’s plan of 
operation approved by the commissioner, without affecting the 
converted cell’s assets, rights, benefits, obligations, and liabilities.  
For cells that convert into an incorporated protected cell or a new 
captive insurer or risk retention group, the conversion must follow all 
existing business corporation or limited liability company laws that are 
applicable to the newly formed business or legal entity. 
BACKGROUND 
Legislative History 
The House referred the bill (File 378) to the Insurance and Real Estate 
Committee, which reported a substitute that replaced the underlying 
bill’s study of workforce shortages and workforce development with 
various insurance-related provisions. 
Related Bill 
SB 372 (File 570), favorably reported by the Appropriations  2024HB-05503-R010644-BA.DOCX 
 
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Committee, among other things, limits the type of domestic insurance 
entities required to pay the portion of the general insurance assessment 
that supports the budgets of the Office of the Healthcare Advocate and 
the Office of Health Strategy. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Commerce Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 21 Nay 3 (03/21/2024) 
 
Insurance and Real Estate Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 12 Nay 0 (04/23/2024)