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Frerichs blasts Rauner’s AV

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* Treasurer Frerichs’ office has some big problems with the governor’s amendatory veto of Frerichs’ life insurance bill, HB302…

* When trying to prohibit the use of contingent fee auditors by the Treasurer, the Governor proposes to amend the wrong Act.

* In support of his amendment to shorten the period that insurers must review to see if they owe benefits because their insured died, the Governor relies on 1) an Illinois insurance regulation; 2) a US Supreme Court case; 3) the unfairness of distinguishing between insurers

Oops. BTIA™.

If you click here you’ll see the governor’s full AV language with commentary by the treasurer’s office. Click here for raw audio of Frerichs’ press conference.

* From Treasurer Frerichs’ press release

Currently, some life insurance companies do not pay death benefits when they know, or should have known, a customer died. Between 2011 and 2015, treasurer office audits found more than $550 million in death benefits that were not paid to grieving families in Illinois. Nationally, the figure is more than $7.4 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Rauner’s veto outlaws the audits. Without this enforcement tool, life insurers can act with impunity. “This is clear evidence that Gov. Rauner is lining corporate pockets with this veto,” Frerichs said.

There are three commonsense reasons why Rauner’s veto is wrong and his focus on contingency-fee auditors is misplaced.

Using contingency-fee auditors is a best-practice approach because it leverages expertise to maximize efficiency. Families receive every cent they are owed. Without the audits, insurance companies keep 100 percent of the death benefits.

“Rauner vetoed this bill because he wants to stop auditors who have successfully found hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid life insurance benefits. However, auditors never get a penny of your loved one’s life insurance policy,” Frerichs said. “All Rauner did was take away the tool that allowed us to return $550 million to grieving families.”

More is at stake than just unpaid life insurance policies.

For example, without a veto override, the treasurer’s office would lose its ability to effectively look at the books of large banks, such as Wells Fargo, to confirm it did not inappropriately keep funds from bank customers. Or the ability to look at Sprint and Radio Shack to confirm each has paid out all rebate checks issued as an incentive to make a purchase.

posted by Rich Miller
Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:05 am

Comments

  1. Is there any way to tell if GCR has a financial interrst in any life insurers doing business in Illinois?

    Comment by Harry Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:14 am

  2. Best Team In America strikes again. This was kind of like the veto of the Comptroller’s transparency bill but with more incompetence.

    Comment by Chicago Cynic Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:28 am

  3. Assuming Frerichs is correct about Rauner’s motivation for the AV, an override ’should’ be a no-brainer.

    Comment by Cubs in '16 Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:30 am

  4. Hmmmmmm….one has to wonder. Maybe GCR had it in with some unscrupulous insurance companies. Think of it, someone dies and it goes into some database. GCR collects 50% of the policy value, family (if any) gets 0%. No one the wiser….

    Comment by How Ironic Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:34 am

  5. @ myself at 11:34

    Meant to note that GCR had it in with the nursing homes they control. What better way to make a few bucks under the table, on top of what they had already hosed the families for.

    Comment by How Ironic Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:36 am

  6. Great reporting, Rich. Really lets the reader get a sense of both sides of the issue.

    Comment by nice Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:37 am

  7. “Sure, the effect may have been fleeting. But, for a brief moment one cold January morning, our prohibition on the use of contingent fee auditors was glorious.”

    -BTIA

    Comment by thechampaignlife Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:41 am

  8. “$550 million in death benefits that were not paid to grieving families in Illinois.”

    Is it to late for the legislature over-turn the governor’s AV on life insurance bill?

    It took me almost 5- years with the help of IL’s State Insurance Dept to get my parent’s life insurance. The legislature need to over-ride Rauner’s AV!

    Comment by Mama Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:50 am

  9. Another goofy AV that will kill the bill.

    Comment by Norseman Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 11:56 am

  10. Serious question - contingency fee auditors generally receive a portion of the money that they identify and collect. Yet, the Treasurer’s release says that “families receive every cent they are owed.”

    Would the auditors receive a portion of the life insurance proceeds as payment or does the state assume that cost so the family receives the entire life insurance benefit?

    Comment by 4 percent Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 12:40 pm

  11. @4 percent

    Great question! Unfortunately not the type of nuance that’s tolerated in a blog post containing a copy/pasted press release and a joke.

    Comment by nice Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 1:20 pm

  12. nice, nobody’s stopping you from commenting even though you’re masking your IP address via the Netherlands.

    Comment by Rich Miller Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 1:24 pm

  13. in amsterdam for the week. want me to bring some greenery back to springfield?

    Comment by nice Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 2:12 pm

  14. Nice: That type of “nuance” is obviously “tolerated” here or you wouldn’t have seen it above. Very common experience on this blog, where much detailed expertise is expressed.

    Would you like to occasionally add something of value?

    Comment by walker Wednesday, Aug 30, 17 @ 2:24 pm

  15. Yes, there are some insurance companies that are holding death benefits while awaiting a claim. Not sure that is impunity. Let’s not forget that Illinois uses Unclaimed Property funds to fund the public employee’s pension trust which has a deficit recently reported at $251 Billion. Are all motivations/drivers of this legislation on the table and being discussed?

    Comment by impartialthinker Thursday, Aug 31, 17 @ 8:59 am

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