In November 1988, California voters approved Proposition 103, which made changes in the regulation of automobile insurance, as well as the approval of premium rates for property and casualty lines of insurance in California. Proposition 103 also allows for public participation through consumer intervention. Any person who “represents the interests of consumers” and intends to raise any issue relevant to a rate proceeding is permitted to intervene.
Recognizing the importance of public participation, the Legislature also authorized the award of certain costs, expenses, and reasonable attorneys’ fees to an intervenor who makes a “substantial contribution” to a rate decision. Proposition 103 has allowed, from the time it was implemented in 1988, for any person to initiate or intervene in any proceeding before the Department and to challenge any action of the Insurance Commissioner.
However, citing abuses of this process primarily by an organization known as Consumer Watchdog, the California Insurance Commissioner has proposed and submitted for approval, the first overhaul of intervenor process in 35 years.
A broad coalition of insurance consumers, including home builders, farmers, affordable housing advocates, local governments, bankers, independent insurance agents and others, wrote that they were “in strong support of the California Department of Insurance’s proposed intervenor reforms.”
They claimed that “the intervenor process has been abused for financial gain – at the direct expense of consumers – while contributing to the growing insurance availability and affordability crisis.” They claim that “at the heart of this crisis is a broken rate approval process – made worse by a flawed intervenor process that Consumer Watchdog wrote into Proposition 103 for its own benefit.” And as an example they say “Despite contributing no measurable benefit, Consumer Watchdog – an organization with ZERO members and no accountability – has pocketed more than $22.5 million in intervenor fees by exploiting the intervenor program – the very program they wrote into law. These fees are ultimately paid for by consumers through higher premiums.’
A coalition of consumer, labor, senior, immigrant, low-income, and public advocates and concerned civic organizations on proposed regulations authored a letter in opposition to the proposed reforms. It claimed the reforms would result in “stifling consumer voices in the setting of insurance rates and regulations.”
However, it was the Insurance Commissioner who concluded in legal documents that “Significantly, Consumer Watchdog is the primary financial beneficiary of a process it created over thirty years ago, and a process that constitutes the largest source of funding for its organization.” The Commissioner went on to say “Consumer Watchdog, who has no members and is accountable to no one but itself, fails to acknowledge the role of the Department’s rate regulation branch in the rate application process, and wrongly contends to have saved consumers $6 billion in insurance premiums since 2002. The Department’s rate regulation branch analyzes all rate change requests to ensure that what is being requested by insurers is compliant under Proposition 103. If proposed rates are excessive, the Department then requires insurers to reduce the proposed rates to no greater than the maximum permitted rate under Proposition 103. The goal of inviting additional public participation is to bring in a unique perspective or additional value, and not to simply participate for participation’s sake.”
Following the rulemaking procedures that aired these points of view, the California Department of Insurance has submitted its Intervenor and Administrative Hearing Bureau Fairness and Accountability rulemaking package to the Office of Administrative Law (OAL) for final review – what is claims is “marking the most significant modernization of the intervenor system since Proposition 103 was enacted in 1988.
The reforms strengthen transparency, improve efficiency, and protect consumer dollars in the insurance rate review process. Once approved by OAL, the regulations will establish clear standards for intervenor compensation, expand public reporting, and reinforce the Department’s authority to ensure that every dollar in the rate review process serves the public interest.
“These reforms strengthen Proposition 103 by bringing long overdue transparency and accountability to every part of the rate review process,” said Commissioner Lara. “Californians deserve to know that every dollar in this system is protected, and I will not allow any organization — insurer or intervenor — to operate without clear guardrails.”
Key provisions of the regulations include:
– – Clarifying “substantial contribution” and reasonableness standards for an intervenor’s request for compensation
– – Defining the role of the Department’s Administrative Hearing Bureau (AHB) in settlement agreements and requests for compensation
– – Requiring regular status updates from AHB Administrative Law Judges every 30 days to all parties
– – Expanding public reporting by posting intervenor activity and statistics on the Department’s website
– – Improving public access to proceedings through required posting of AHB calendars, dockets, and documents
The Insurance Commissioner also addressed mischaracterizations raised by opponents during the rulemaking process. “Some groups have misrepresented these reforms as limiting consumer voices. That is simply false,” he said. “The right to intervene remains untouched. What changes is the expectation that compensation must be earned, documented, and aligned with the issues in the proceeding.”
The Office of Administrative Law has up to 30 working days to complete its review. Once approved, the regulations will be filed with the Secretary of State and take effect shortly thereafter.
