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Update: Appeal Allows Florida Workers' Comp Rate Hike To Proceed

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Update (12/05):   The Florida Office of Insurance Regulation said Nov. 29 it is appealing a circuit judge's ruling that would block a 14.5 percent increase in workers' compensation insurance rates. The office filed a notice of appeal, a move that is expected to allow the rate increase to take effect Dec. 1 as originally planned.

Though Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers issued an order to block the increase, appeals by state agencies typically lead to legal stays of such orders. The effect would be that the rate increase would move forward while the appeal is pending. Gievers issued a 72-page ruling Wednesday that said the state's Sunshine Law had been violated during deliberations about the rate hike.

Gievers ruled, in part, that the National Council on Compensation Insurance,  an organization that files rate proposals for the insurance industry, did not comply with legal requirements about holding public meetings during its deliberations on the hike. Also, she wrote that the organization, commonly known as NCCI, held improper closed-door meetings with staff members of the Office of Insurance Regulation.

The ruling came only eight days before the effective date of the rate hike, which had been approved in October by regulators. The increase, which has been closely watched by business and legal groups, stems largely from two Florida Supreme Court rulings this year that found parts of the workers' compensation system unconstitutional. NCCI also said last week that it planned to appeal Gievers' ruling.

Original story below: 

Little more than a week before businesses were slated to get hit with increased workers' compensation insurance rates, a Leon County circuit judge blocked the hike last Wednesday because of violations of Florida's Sunshine Law.
An organization that files workers' compensation rate proposals for insurers quickly said it would appeal.

The 73-page ruling by Leon County Circuit Judge Karen Gievers dealt with a 14.5 percent rate increase scheduled to start taking effect Dec. 1. The planned increase, which has drawn heavy attention from business and legal groups, stems from Florida Supreme Court rulings this year that found parts of the state's workers' compensation insurance laws unconstitutional.

Gievers ruled, in part, that the National Council on Compensation Insurance — the organization that files rate proposals for the industry —  did not comply with legal requirements about holding public meetings during its deliberations on the hike. Also, she wrote that the organization, commonly known as NCCI, held improper closed-door meetings with staff members of the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation.

"The clear and convincing evidence demonstrated that NCCI and the OIR (Office of Insurance Regulation) held a series of secret meetings in the shade … and not in the Sunshine as required, meetings at which decision maker NCCI (through its staff) discussed and decided the substance of the rate increases NCCI proposed," Gievers wrote. "Far from being meetings in the Sunshine required by law, the meetings between the OIR staff and NCCI staff were designed to, and had the effect of shutting the public out of meaningful participation in the rate making process."

NCCI released a statement Wednesday afternoon saying it was "very disappointed" in the ruling and vowing to challenge it.

"We continue to believe that NCCI and the Florida OIR have fully complied with the law," the statement said. "NCCI plans to appeal the trial court's decision." 

James F. Fee Jr., a Miami attorney who represents injured workers, filed the lawsuit Aug. 10, as insurance regulators were considering a proposal by NCCI to raise rates by 19.6 percent. The Office of Insurance Regulation later required that the proposal be scaled back, and the 14.5 percent hike was approved in October.

The plan to increase rates largely resulted from a Florida Supreme Court ruling in April that said the state's strict limits on attorneys' fees in workers' compensation cases were unconstitutional. Another Supreme Court ruling in a case involving an injured St. Petersburg firefighter also contributed to the increase.

Gievers focused heavily on part of state law that requires open meetings when rating organizations, such as NCCI, hold committee meetings to discuss workers' compensation rate changes. She wrote that two NCCI committees dealt with rate filings in the past but that the organization contended it had delegated to an actuary the work of preparing what are known as "off-cycle" filings, such as the filings after this year's Supreme Court rulings.

But Gievers said a series of meetings occurred during the development of the rate proposal and that the public was not allowed to take part.

She wrote that the "undisputed evidence established that none of the meetings at NCCI were open to the public, established that no minutes were kept and established that there was no notice to the public in advance of the meetings. Further, the undisputed evidence established that NCCI did not provide plaintiff Fee with all of the rate-related information he requested on more than one occasion."

The ruling could add fuel to an expected battle about the workers' compensation insurance system during the 2017 legislative session. Attorneys for injured workers have largely blamed the insurance industry — and, as an extension, NCCI —  for the planned rate hikes, while business groups argue that attorneys' fees drive up costs.

Bill Herrle, executive director of the small-business group NFIB/Florida, issued a statement after Wednesday's ruling that took aim at workers' attorneys.

"Today's opinion on workers' comp is just another tactic by the unscrupulous trial bar to put blinders on the Legislature and conceal the ridiculous fees they extract from the workers' comp system," Herrle said.

But Mark Touby, an attorney who is president of the group Florida Workers' Advocates, called the ruling a "tremendous victory for Florida businesses and the workers they employ."

"It is our hope that this well-reasoned ruling will put a halt to NCCI's history of secret meetings and outrageous rate-hike requests, which only served to bail out the insurance companies' alarming pattern of denying legitimate claims and then making Florida employers cover the cost of those errors," Touby said.

© 2016 The News Service of Florida. All rights reserved. Posting or forwarding this material without permission is prohibited. 

Jim Saunders is the Executive Editor of The News Service Of Florida.