WHO’S AT FAULT FOR HIGH AUTO INSURANCE RATES?
August 10th,
2017
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
WHO’S AT FAULT FOR HIGH AUTO
INSURANCE RATES?
Year after year, Louisiana sits at the top of the list for the
most expensive state in the nation for auto insurance. Insure.com
just released a new
study showing the Bayou State in a neck and neck race with Michigan to maintain
it’s honor for average costs that tops $2000 a year.
When political courage wanes and politicians
search for a quick fix to age-old problems, they often seek out a scapegoat to
blame. “Passing the buck” on someone else is standard operating procedure in
the halls of congress as well as the state legislature in Baton Rouge.
The legal profession has always been an easy
mark for the culpability. Many people agree with Shakespeare when he said, “the
first thing you do is to kill all the lawyers.” Now barristers in the
Bayou State have become the whipping boys for insurance officials and a few
legislators, in efforts to divert attention from their own ineptitude of
failing to address the real causes for high insurance rates in Louisiana.
Of course there is
a great need to address the high cost of auto rates. This week, insurance
officials announced that, voila–they had found the quick fix that will cause
the cost of insurance for Louisiana drivers to plummet. Simply put, blame
it on the lawyers. That’s right. Greedy lawyers are working in
concert with cooperating judges to see that plaintiffs who are injured in auto
accidents get big verdicts.
In Louisiana, any lawsuit with an award that
can exceed $50,000 requires a jury trial, unless both sides agree otherwise. A
few legislators and insurance officials, who more often than not dance to the
tune of the insurance industry, want to allow jury trials in all litigated
cases. The problem for those who are injured and decide to sue is that
they face drastically higher costs, which have to be paid up front.
Insurance company attorneys can beat them down with piles of motions all
related to picking a jury.
Anderson Cooper on
CNN has done a series of reports (all available on line) about how the nation’s
top auto instance companies purposely drag out jury trials in an effort to wear
down — financially and physically — those damaged in auto accidents. Many
insurance departments turn the other way to this calculated effort by the
insurance industry to lessen the amount they have to pay out.
In most states,
insurance companies have to submit rate increases to the insurance department
for prior approval. Bloomberg Business week reported recently that in
California, auto insurance rates went down. Why? Consumer groups point to
a voter proposition that required all rate increases to be approved by state
regulators. So when insurance companies are allowed to raise their own
rates without pre-approval, like in Louisiana, rates go up. When
pre-approval is required, rates are much less than in the Bayou State.
In summary,
legislators and insurance officials have turned a blind eye to a variety of
problems in the auto insurance field that have caused Louisianans to pay the
highest rates in the nation. Much easier to just blame the lawyers.
Worst drivers in
the nation as reported by CarInsranceComparison.com? It’s the fault of the
lawyers.
Rampant drunk
driving where drivers have recently been cited for 7th and 8th DWIs?
Those darn lawyers.
Louisiana has one
of the nation’s highest number of uninsured drivers, many who are illegal
immigrants. Laws on the books require that cars of uninsured drivers be
impounded, laws that are rarely enforced. Heck, has to be the lawyers.
Forbes Magazine
reports that Louisiana is a bottom level state for infrastructure — bad roads
and poor safety. Got to be the fault of the lawyers.
Catch my
drift? There are a barrel of reasons why Louisiana leads the nation in
high auto insurance rates. It’s going to take a concentrated effort by
legislators, the governor and insurance officials to put a comprehensive
program in place that will cause rates to go down. Looking for quick
fixes by blaming lawyers, judges or any one group is disingenuous and will do
little to address what has become a financial crisis for many drivers in
Louisiana. Much more needs to be done.
“Both terrorism and
insurance sell fear — and business is business”
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home