The New York State Workers’ Compensation Board has proposed a new funding
method to secure self-insurance claims.
If adopted by state lawmakers and Gov. Eliot Spitzer, the plan would release
nearly $2 billion in letters of credit and surety bonds to employers that are
self-insured, the board said earlier this week. Currently, New York has a “silo
approach” in which each employer posts a security deposit equal to its
outstanding workers’ comp claims.
Under the proposal, employers would participate in a guarantee pool, with
each employer’s contribution based on its credit rating and the amount of risk
it brings to the pool. The system would be used to guarantee claims should an
employer default on its workers’ comp obligations.
Reform legislation that the governor signed into law this year called for the
Workers’ Compensation Board to recommend a new system to guarantee workers’ comp
risks of individual self-insured employers.
There are 150 parent companies approved as individual self-insurers in New
York, the board said. They have 525,000 employees in the state with a combined
payroll of $27 billion.
Filed by Roberto Ceniceros of Business Insurance, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.