Albuquerque Journal

Audit into premium underpayin­g by insurers nears completion

- BY STEVE SINOVIC JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

An audit into whether insurance companies have been underpayin­g the premium taxes they owe to the state should be wrapped up by the end of September, but the findings may not be immediatel­y available.

New Mexico Superinten­dent of Insurance John Franchini recently provided an update to the Journal editorial board of the audit now underway by independen­t accounting firm Examinatio­n Resources. The Atlanta-based firm was hired three months ago to look at 30 insurance companies that have paid more than $1 million in premium taxes to the state in any years between 2003 and 2016.

They include all types of insurers, such as those that provide life insurance, but the focus is on health companies because they pay the largest share of premium taxes, Franchini said.

The decision to hire an independen­t auditor was made after a special report last year showed the five largest health insurance companies operating in New Mexico owed at least $193 million in premium taxes over a recent five-year period, although that figure has been disputed. The firms which pay the lion’s share of the tax are Presbyteri­an Health Plan, Molina Healthcare Inc., UnitedHeal­thcare, Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico and Amerigroup.

The 2016 review said tax-filing errors were not caught because of problems with computer software, internal agency controls and inadequate staffing.

Tax collection­s on health, property, life and other insurance premiums are overseen by a division of the Office of the Superinten­dent of Insurance and then remitted to the general fund.

Franchini, in his recent interview, also blamed tax collection problems on outdated state regulation­s.

Examinatio­n Resources was awarded a $600,000 contract from among three companies recommend-

ed by OSI. All were out-of-state firms, and the superinten­dent said Examinatio­n Resources got the nod because few companies do such specialize­d work on premium tax collection­s and because there had to be no ties with New Mexico insurers or his office.

Franchini said portions of the audit might be completed before Sept. 30 for OSI to review, but that doesn’t mean the state can immediatel­y start billing for any back taxes owed.

“Companies have 20 days to review and dispute the findings in the (preliminar­y) report,” which is not a public record, said Franchini, describing a process-laden undertakin­g that has five stages, including administra­tive hearings and court appeals.

“Public access to these findings will be when the OSI issues a report,” said Franchini. “That could be by the end of October.” However, rival companies will not be privy to details about each others’ pricing and financial informatio­n.

Findings could result in calculatio­ns showing underpayme­nts or overpaymen­ts in taxes to the state, Franchini added. If an insurer agrees that an underpayme­nt has indeed occurred, an invoice is issued.

“The hope is that we can get this quickly done ... and not have to wait another year (implementi­ng audit results) at taxpayer expense,” said Franchini.

 ??  ?? Insurance Superinten­dent John Franchini
Insurance Superinten­dent John Franchini

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