Daily Press (Sunday)

Causey addresses criticism ahead of election

- By Corinne Saunders Staff writer

MANTEO — North Carolina Insurance Commission­er Mike Causey, after holding an insurance forum March 18 in Manteo, addressed public criticism in an interview with The Virginian-Pilot.

Causey is from Guilford County and has served as state insurance commission­er since 2017.

He won his three-way Republican primary March 5.

He faces Deomcrat Natasha Marcus, a three-term state senator from Mecklenbur­g County, in November.

Marcus has criticized Causey for making settlement­s that allow insurance rate increases.

“During his eight years in office, he has approved an unpreceden­ted number of rate hikes and refuses to hold public hearings,” Marcus wrote on her campaign website.

Causey told The Pilot that in looking at the history of rate filings, the Rate Bureau seems to be filing requests for increases more frequently in recent years.

He has also faced backlash over his support of the updated “consent to rate” legislatio­n, which went into effect in 2019.

“We’ve heard some pushback from consumers” about the aspect of consent to rate that allows insurance companies to charge several times over what is typically allowed, Causey said.

“The ‘not to exceed’ cap of 250% for residentia­l property and of 550% for auto physical damage will remain in effect,” Causey wrote in a June, 29, 2018, bulletin about consent to rate changes published by digital news magazine The Assembly.

Consumers have appreciate­d the aspect of consent to rate that eliminates the need for time-sensitive signatures for companies to not drop their policies, he said.

Causey also faced criticism for hiring political allies and friends for above-average rates, as reported The News & Observer in Raleigh.

The median salary for state employees is $56,252, according to a Jan. 16 article.

Since Causey took office in 2017, “a longtime friend and campaign supporter has been driving him at public expense from his Greensboro home to his Raleigh office and as far away as Santa Fe, New Mexico, earning as much as $84,000 in one year,” according to the report.

Causey called the article “false journalism” and “a political hit job.” But he didn’t disagree with the figures outlined, such as part-time driver Roger Blackwell’s $44-an-hour pay rate.

“The people of this state have more than gotten their money’s worth from what he’s contribute­d,” Causey said. In addition to driving, Blackwell has helped at different times with scheduling Causey’s events, speech-writing and serving as an adviser, Causey added.

He noted that Blackwell’s campaign contributi­ons of about $10,000 over 30 years “had nothing to do with this person being hired. He was the best qualified, and still is.”

When asked about John Woodard, another man he’d hired, Causey distanced himself.

The Department of Insurance terminated Woodard in July, according to a Nov. 2 News & Observer report.

“I met him at a couple of political events,” Causey said. “I would call him an acquaintan­ce.”

After Causey hired Woodard part-time, the department’s engineerin­g division hired him full-time to assess the risk on state-owned buildings and determine if the state had the proper amount of insurance on them.

“He’s a disgruntle­d employee,” Causey said. “If he didn’t do some of the work he claimed, he should repay the state for what he was paid.”

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