House votes to extend Terrorism Act … presidential veto expected

September 20th, 2007 by Julie Ferguson

We have a fight brewing over the Terrorism Risk Insurance Revision and Extension Act (TRIEA), which the House just voted to extend for 15 years. We live in unusual times when the white knight for the insurance industry is Barney Frank and the opponent is George Bush.
The House measure not only extended the bill, but also strengthened it:

It would add group life insurance to the lines of insurance covered by the program, and it would cover terrorist attacks by Americans as well as by foreigners. It would also require commercial property and casualty insurance policies to cover losses from terrorist attacks involving nuclear, biological, chemical or radiological attacks. Typically such policies now exclude that coverage.

According to other news reports, it would also kick in at $50 million, rather than the current $100 million.
Many in the insurance industry think that such a measure is vital to ensure industry solvency in the event of large-scale terror, particularly in workers comp. In other lines of insurance, carriers can price for the coverage or can simply refuse to extend coverage, but because workers compensation is statutory, these mechanisms aren’t available.
This is likely to produce pushback from the White House – it’s anticipated that the president will veto the measure, viewing it as an unacceptable expansion to a program that was intended as temporary. The White House issued a statement saying that the most efficient method for providing terrorism coverage will come from the private sector. In response, bill sponsor Barney Frank said, “There are in our midst people who believe in the free market so firmly that they believe in it the way other people believe in unicorns.”
Get out the popcorn, this could be an interesting contest. It may be a nail-biter, too, since the current law is set to expire at the end of the year and workers comp is heading into its heavy renewal season.

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