WAC 296-15-121
Surety for a self insurance program. (1) What is surety? Surety is the legal financial guarantee
each self insurer must provide to the department for its self
insured workers' compensation program. Failure to provide
surety in the amount required by the department will result in
the withdrawal of the self insurer's certification. If a self
insurer defaults on (stops payment of) benefits and
assessments, the department will use its surety to cover these
costs.
(a) Surety must be provided on the department's form. The original will be kept by the department. Surety must
cover all past, present and future self insurance liabilities.
(b) Surety may not be used by a self insurer to:
(i) Pay its workers' compensation benefits; or
(ii) Serve as collateral for any other banking
transactions.
(c) Surety is not an asset of the self insurer and will
not be released by the department if the self insurer files a
petition for dissolution or relief under bankruptcy laws.
(d) The department will determine the amount of surety
each self insurer must provide. The surety level may be
increased or decreased to maintain its adequacy when
necessary.
(2) What types of self insurance surety will the
department accept? The department will accept the following
types of surety:
(a) Cash, corporate or governmental securities deposited
with a department approved escrow agent and administered by a
written agreement L&I form F207-039-000 between the
department, self insurer and escrow agent. Use L&I form
F207-137-000 for any rider/amendment to the escrow account.
An escrow account may not be used by the self insurer to
satisfy any other obligation to the bank which maintains the
escrow account.
(b) A bond on L&I form F207-068-000 written by a company
approved to transact surety business in Washington. Use L&I
form F207-134-000 for any rider/amendment to the bond.
(c) An irrevocable standby letter of credit (LOC) on L&I
form F207-112-000 if the self insurer has a net worth of at
least 500 million dollars. Use L&I form F207-111-000 for any
rider/amendment. LOCs are subject to acceptance by the
department. Acceptance includes, but is not limited to,
approval of the financial condition of the issuing or
confirming bank.
(i) The issuing or confirming bank must have a location
in Washington. The bank must provide the department with an
audited financial statement or call report made to the banking
regulatory agencies for the most recent fiscal year. An
audited statement/call report is due at LOC issuance and
annually while the LOC is in effect.
(ii) The self insurer must provide the department a
memorandum of understanding on L&I form F207-113-000 showing
the self insurer's agreement with the following conditions:
(A) The department will automatically extend an LOC for
an additional year unless notified otherwise by registered
mail at least sixty days prior to expiration.
(B) If the department is notified an LOC will not be
replaced, and the self insurer fails to provide acceptable
replacement surety within thirty days of notice:
(I) The department will draw the full value of the LOC. All proceeds of the LOC will be deposited with the department;
(II) Accrued interest in excess of the surety requirement
will be returned semiannually to the self insurer; and
(III) If acceptable replacement surety is later provided,
the proceeds of the LOC and accrued interest will be returned
to the self insurer.
(C) If the self insurer defaults on the payment of
workers' compensation benefits and has failed to provide
acceptable replacement surety for an expired LOC:
(I) The title to the proceeds will be transferred to the
department; and
(II) The proceeds and accrued interest will be used to
pay the self insurer's workers' compensation benefits.
(D) If the self insurer defaults on the payment of
workers' compensation benefits and has an LOC in force:
(I) The department will draw the full value of the LOC. All proceeds of the LOC will be deposited with the department;
and
(II) The proceeds and accrued interest will be used to
pay the self insurer's workers' compensation benefits.
(iii) If the self insurer provides another acceptable
type of surety in the amount required by the department, the
department's interest in the LOC will be released.
(iv) All legal proceedings regarding a self insurer's LOC
will be subject to Washington laws and courts.
(3) How often is each self insurer's surety requirement
reviewed? Each self insurer's surety requirement is reviewed
annually based on the self insurer's annual report.
(4) When could a self insurer's surety level change?
(a) Surety will be maintained at the current level unless
the department's estimate or an independent qualified
actuary's estimate of the self insurer's outstanding claim
liabilities changes by more than twenty-five thousand dollars.
(b) Surety changes are due by July 1 of each year.
(5) How does the department determine the required surety
level? The department analyzes each self insurer's loss
history using incurred development, paid development or other
department approved actuarial methods of loss development. The following factors also may influence the surety
determination:
(a) Pension claims.
(b) Reinsurance.
(c) Inconsistency in reserving practices.
(d) Independent qualified actuarial estimate.
(e) Surety cap.
(6) What is considered reinsurance? For the purposes of
Title 51 RCW, excess insurance and reinsurance mean the same
thing.
(7) May a self insurer reinsure part of its liability?
(a) A self insurer may reinsure up to eighty percent of
its liability under Title 51 RCW.
(b) The reinsuring company and its personnel are
prohibited from participating in the administration of the
responsibilities of the self insurer.
(c) Reinsurance policies issued after July 1, 1975, must
include endorsements which state (a) and (b) of this
subsection.
(d) The self insurer must:
(i) Notify the department of the name of the insurance
carrier, the extent and coverage period of the policy; and
(ii) Submit copies of all reinsurance policies in force
including all modifications and renewal provisions.
(e) The department may accept a certificate of insurance
on L&I form F207-095-000 in place of the policy if the
certificate certifies all coverage conditions and exceptions
and that the reinsurance company and its personnel do not
participate in the administration of the responsibilities of
the self insurer under Title 51 RCW.
(8) What if a self insurer ends its self insured workers'
compensation program? If a self insurer voluntarily
surrenders certification or has its certificate involuntarily
withdrawn by the department, the former self insurer must
continue to do all of the following:
(a) Pay benefits on claims incurred during its period of
self insurance. Claim reopenings and new claims filed for
occupational diseases incurred during the period of self
insurance remain the obligation of the former self insurer.
(b) File quarterly and annual reports as long as
quarterly reporting is required. A former self insurer may
ask the department to release it from quarterly reporting
after it has had no claim activity with the exception of
pension or death benefits for a full year.
(c) Provide surety at the department required level. The
department may require an increase in surety based on annual
reports as they continue to be filed. Surety will not be
reduced from the last required level (while self insured)
until three full calendar years after the certificate was
terminated. A bond may be cancelled for future obligations,
but it continues to provide surety for claims occurring prior
to its cancellation.
(d) Pay insolvency trust assessments for three years
after surrender or withdrawal of certificate.
(e) Pay all expenses for a final audit of its self
insurance program.
(9) When could the department consider releasing surety
to a former self insurer or its successor?
(a) The department may consider releasing surety to a
former self insurer or its successor when all of the following
have occurred:
(i) All claims against the self insurer are closed; and
(ii) The self insurer has been released from quarterly
reporting for at least ten years.
(b) If the department releases surety, the former self
insurer remains responsible for claim reopenings and new
claims filed for occupational disease incurred during the
period of self insurance.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 51.14.077, 51.14.120(7),51.14.150
(4), 51.14.160, 51.44.040(3), 51.44.070 and51.44.150
. 99-23-107, § 296-15-121, filed 11/17/99, effective
12/27/99.]