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CPAN Urges Lawmakers to Quickly Take Up and Pass Package Fixing No-Fault Auto Insurance Flaws

CPAN Urges Lawmakers to Quickly Take Up and Pass Package Fixing No-Fault Auto Insurance Flaws

Consumer advocacy group says a delay will exacerbate daily challenges that continue to devastate auto crash survivors

LANSING, Mich.—(Sept. 26, 2023)— CPAN, the statewide consumer advocacy group that has long fought to protect victims of catastrophic auto accidents, today called on the Michigan Legislature to quickly pass a set of newly introduced Senate bills that would fix a range of problems created by the auto reform package signed into law in 2019.

“When you’re in a life-changing auto accident, you and your family go to hell and back,” said CPAN President Tim Hoste. “Those same victims have gone through hell a second time as they have tried to contend with the havoc raised by the state’s auto reform. The Legislature can end their nightmares now, by rapidly getting these bills passed and sent on to the governor’s desk. Sitting on these bills is only an option for those who disregard the lives of 17,000 of our state’s most vulnerable.”

Senate Bills 530 and 531, introduced by State Sen. Mary Cavanagh and State Sen. Sarah Anthony, provide narrow fixes to the two most harmful elements of the 2019 auto insurance reforms by replacing the nearly 50% cut in catastrophic care with a reasonable and sustainable fee schedule, and by removing the arbitrary 56-hour per-week cap on care provided by family members. The bills would not impact other elements of auto insurance reform, including the option to select Personal Injury Protection (PIP) levels, new utilization review rules, and the introduction of a fraud authority unit.

A study from the nonprofit public health institute MPHI found that as of April 2022, the cut in reimbursements for catastrophic care—including long-term rehabilitation services such as residential rehabilitation, in-home nursing and nursing aides, case management, and more—had caused:

  • Nearly 7,000 patients to be discharged from care;

  • The loss of more than 4,000 health care jobs, and;

  • The closure of more than 30 businesses.

“If the Legislature fails to act with speed on this matter, it can mean only one thing: That lawmakers have not, and are not, listening to the pleas of their constituents to right this injustice,” said Kris Nicholoff, CEO and executive director of the Michigan Osteopathic Association and a member of the CPAN board of directors. “Let’s end this suffering now—not tomorrow, not the day after—but today.”

When the law was passed in 2019, the auto insurance lobby and its supporters claimed that it would reduce Michigan’s highest-in-the-country auto insurance premiums. However, the Mid-Year Auto Trends Report by Insurify found that Michigan still has the highest premiums in the country. Even worse, Michigan is the worst state in the country for penalizing drivers based on their credit information, a discriminatory practice that disproportionally impacts low-income consumers and people of color. The Consumer Federation of America found that safe drivers in Michigan with poor credit pay a whopping 263% more than safe drivers with excellent credit. 

“On every front, it’s plainly obvious that the new auto insurance law has failed to meet its intent,” Hoste said. “Only the well-heeled auto insurance companies—which have raked in record profits since the law went into effect—stand in opposition to a fix that would protect crash survivors and consumers alike. The Legislature needs to stand up to their greed and take action.”

Dr. Michael Andary, a physician with 35 years of experience working with survivors of catastrophic car crashes, said that the new law has made it impossible for his patients to get the care they need to thrive and survive.

“Those in the medical and post-acute care fields have the expertise, the technology, and the capability to provide the type of quality care that makes a difference in how extensively someone with serious injuries can rebound toward health and normalcy,” said Dr. Andary. “What these auto reform changes—pushed so aggressively by powerful auto insurance lobbyists—have done is block needed care. The changes have caused unnecessary suffering and death. They have placed a ceiling on how far many patients could go in their post-acute care trajectory. Let’s remove these barriers—let’s get back to allowing doctors and clinicians to do their jobs.”

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CPAN is a broad bipartisan, Michigan-based coalition whose mission is to be the consumer advocate for auto insurance policyholders, those who have been injured in a motor vehicle crash and the medical providers caring for them, representing them at the Capitol, in the courts, and in the public forum. For more information, please visit www.CPAN.us.

Scott Swanson