An Act To Amend the Audit and Enforcement Functions of the Workers' Compensation Board
Sec. 1. 24-A MRSA §4438, sub-§1, ¶I, as enacted by PL 2009, c. 129, §4 and affected by §13, is amended to read:
(1) The Workers' Compensation Board finds that the association was prevented from complying with the Maine Workers’ Compensation Act of 1992 because the association was unable in the exercise of reasonable diligence to obtain the records of the insolvent insurer; or
(2) The Workers' Compensation Board finds that the association was prevented from complying with the Maine Workers’ Compensation Act of 1992 because of circumstances beyond its reasonable control.
Sec. 2. 39-A MRSA §153, sub-§9, as amended by PL 2005, c. 603, §3, is further amended to read:
Sec. 3. 39-A MRSA §358-A, sub-§1, as enacted by PL 1997, c. 486, §8, is amended to read:
The report must contain specific data regarding compliance, including benchmarks measuring individual insurer's, self-insurer's, or 3rd-party administrator's compliance with the provisions of this Act and any penalties assessed. Benchmarks must be developed by the board with input from insurers, self-insurers and 3rd-party administrators and other parties the board considers appropriate. The board shall also report on the utilization of troubleshooters, advocates and retained legal counsel, with correlating outcomes.
Sec. 4. 39-A MRSA §359, as amended by PL 2009, c. 129, §11 and affected by §13, is further amended to read:
§ 359. Audits; ongoing evaluation
If as a result of an examination and after providing the opportunity for a hearing the board determines that any compensation, interest, penalty or other obligation is due and unpaid to an employee, dependent, service provider or any other entity, the board shall issue a notice of assessment detailing the amounts due and unpaid in each case and shall order the amounts paid to the unpaid party or parties.
SUMMARY
This bill amends the audit and enforcement functions of the Workers' Compensation Board.
1. It eliminates the duty of the board to monitor the claims handling practices of insurers, self-insurers, the Maine Insurance Guaranty Association and 3rd-party administrators and eliminates the monitoring program.
2. It requires that, in order for the board to audit an insurer, self-insurer, the Maine Insurance Guaranty Association or a 3rd-party administrator, the board have probable cause to believe that an insurer, self-insurer, the Maine Insurance Guaranty Association or a 3rd-party administrator has not met an obligation under the Maine Workers' Compensation Act of 1992.
3. It eliminates the board's authority to assess penalties on employers, insurers or 3rd-party administrators that engage in a pattern of questionable claims-handling techniques or repeated unreasonably contested claims.