Washington Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler issued fines in December totaling $55,500 against insurance companies, producers, brokers, and individuals who violated state insurance laws and regulations.
See list of insurance companies that were fined
LifeWise Assurance Co., Mountlake Terrace, Wash.; fined $25,000
LifeWise didn’t provide the required transparency tools for student insurance plans, failed to explain the internal review officer will accept additional information for up to five business days, and failed to process two appeals within the required 30-day timeframe.
Aetna Life Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn.; fined $25,000
Aetna violated RCW 48.43.785(1) by denying 7,867 insurance claims for personal protective equipment.
FPA, an insurance education provider, issued attendance certificates that did not comply with Washington regulations, issued credits to producers that didn’t sign attendance registers, and submitted false class date information on an attendance roster.
Parker Smith & Feek, an insurance education provider, failed to keep attendance reports as required under Washington regulations, gave credits to producers that didn’t attend courses or respond to the number of polls for Washington producer education courses, and failed to conduct polls for courses as required under Washington regulations.
Source: Insurance Journal
[10:33 PM, 1/23/2023] Toby Moses: German Company Sued For Barring Non-U.S. Citizen From Roundup Settlement
A new U.S. lawsuit on Thursday accused Germany’s Bayer AG of illegally excluding a Virginia farmworker from a settlement over claims its Roundup weedkiller causes cancer, because she is not a U.S. citizen.
The complaint said Elvira Reyes-Hernandez, who used Roundup while working on tree farms before being diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in 2019, expected to share in a $412.8 million settlement with an average $120,000 payout.
But she said her law firms, who she is also suing, dismissed her from the case because of her Mexican citizenship in July 2021, seven months after they countersigned papers authorizing a payout.
Now represented by Public Citizen, the advocacy group founded by Ralph Nader, the 47-year-old plaintiff said Bayer, its Monsanto business and the law firms violated federal civil rights law by preventing her from recovering from her cancer, now in remission.
Reyes-Hernandez’s lawsuit filed in federal court in Abingdon, Virginia seeks unspecified damages and a requirement that Bayer let non-U.S. citizens, who comprise more than 70% of agricultural crop farmworkers, join in Roundup settlements.
“Her citizenship status has nothing to do with her right to recover for harm from Bayer’s products,” said Kathryn Youker, a lawyer from the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law who helped file the lawsuit.
In a statement, Bayer said Reyes-Hernandez’s lawsuit had no merit, and she was “no different” from other ineligible claimants.
“Bayer believes strongly in an inclusive, equitable and diverse culture and has no tolerance for racism or discrimination,” it added.
After her claim was rejected, Reyes-Hernandez found a new lawyer, and in July sued Monsanto in St. Louis County, Missouri. Her former law firms did not respond to requests for comment.
Bayer’s share price has fallen 44% since it paid $63 billion for Monsanto in June 2018, becoming the world’s largest supplier of seeds and pesticides but also inheriting liability for Roundup litigation.
In June 2020, Bayer agreed to settle much of that litigation for $10.9 billion. As of February 2022, about 107,000 of the 138,000 claims it faced had been settled or deemed ineligible.
Last June, the U.S. Supreme Court let stand awards of $87 million and $25 million against Bayer to people who blamed their cancer on its weedkillers.
The case is Reyes-Hernandez v Monsanto Co et al, U.S. District Court, Western District of Virginia, No. 23-00001.
Source: Insurance Journal