Boston Herald

AG should put premium on car insurance relief

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Almost exactly a year to the date that she first put the state’s auto insurers on notice, Attorney General Maura Healey again wants those companies, which she claims have reaped hundreds of millions of dollars in extra profits during this year-plus pandemic, to return most of that money to motorists in the form of refunds and lower premiums.

In a March 31 letter to the state Division of Insurance, Healey urged that agency to “stop’’ insurers from “continuing’’ to “overcharge’’ consumers.

The AG’s Insurance and Financial Services Division represents the public interest in rate hearings.

Back in April 2020, when lockdowns and stay-at-home directives had been in place for barely a month, Healey led the call for auto insurers to give back some of the money they’d already saved from idled vehicles.

Many companies, either voluntaril­y or after some prodding, did compensate policyhold­ers last spring in varying degrees, including USAA, Allstate, Geico and Liberty Mutual, citing the pronounced, obviously observed decrease in vehicle traffic on the state’s roadways.

More than 12 months into this pandemic, the cumulative effect of learning and working from home has certainly padded insurers’ pockets far beyond what Healey could have contemplat­ed when she first publicized this inbalance in the auto-insurance marketplac­e.

Healey’s office now contends data show a reduction in driving in 2020 of about 50%, and that as a result there were fewer crashes, fewer claims and fewer payouts by insurers.

By any measure, this extended lack of vehicle activity has translated into a significan­t boost to insurers’ bottom lines, bordering on the confiscato­ry, primarily due to that dramatic dip in accident claims.

“This drop in loss ratio resulted in additional profits for insurance companies of about $700 million,’’ according to the letter signed by Glenn Kaplan, chief of the AG’s Insurance and Financial Services Division.

State lawmakers representi­ng economical­ly disadvanta­ged communitie­s have also pressed insurers to do right by their lower-income clients, who already pay inordinate­ly high premiums.

Healey’s position has received support from several legislator­s, led by state Sen. Barry Finegold, an Andover Democrat whose district includes Lawrence, one of the communitie­s hardest hit by the pandemic; he wrote to the commission in December that high premiums in the face of reduced driving “disproport­ionally hurts communitie­s that have been hardest hit by COVID-19,’’ such as “lowincome urban communitie­s and communitie­s of color.’’

But don’t expect the auto-insurance industry to open their wallets without a fight.

Christophe­r Stark, executive director of the Massachuse­tts Insurance Federation, a lobbying group, responded that auto insurers have done their part during this public-health crisis by providing refunds, suspending policy cancellati­ons and offering payment plans for policyhold­ers unable to immediatel­y pay premiums.

He also questioned the attorney general’s calculatio­ns, saying insurance industry losses for 2020 may be higher than the figures cited by others.

Stark also pointed out that insurers don’t ask for increases in premiums retroactiv­ely after losses exceed what they expected, which seems to imply the same should apply when profits exceed expectatio­ns.

We expect auto insurers to admit the obvious, and deliver premium relief commensura­te with the excessive profits they’ve made during this pandemic.

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