Concerns about Michigan’s new auto insurance law to be aired at March 3 town hall

A public town hall on Michigan’s new auto insurance law has been scheduled for 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 3 at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Flint, 2474 S. Ballenger Hwy.

Hosted by Lansing-based non-profit CPAN, until recently known as The Coalition Protecting Auto No-Fault, along with the Flint chapter of the Brain Injury Association of Michigan, the forum will present options the public may face when renewing auto insurance policies this July and how those decisions might impact a family and its financial future, planners said.

Last June, Gov. Whitmer signed Public Acts 21 & 22, instituting sweeping changes to Michigan’s auto insurance law.  EVM writer Jeff Carey described the new law here.

CPAN officials note the legislation “did away with the state’s model system of lifetime medical and rehabilitative care for persons who suffer catastrophic injuries in vehicular accidents.

Five elements of the new law, as described by CPAN,  will be discussed at the forum as follows:

“1.     Policyholders selecting coverage benefit limits will find themselves being woefully under-insured in the event of serious crashes.

“2.     The new law requires rollbacks in only the Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage of insurance premiums. But those reductions are minor and only temporary (expire in July of 2028). Plus, the law calls for a dramatic increase in the amount of liability coverage residents must now buy.  

“3.     Seniors on Medicare who opt out of Personal Protection Insurance will remain financially responsible, if injured in a crash, for coinsurance, copays and deductibles and will not have coverage for residential treatment programs, long-term care, replacement services, home and vehicle modifications, or transportation, and ongoing therapies, all of which are covered under lifetime policies.

“4.     Consumers who choose limited injury benefits, suffer debilitating injuries and cannot pay their bills once coverage is exhausted, face bankruptcy and going on Medicaid (a taxpayer-funded social safety net).  Consumers who choose limited injury benefits likely will wind up on Medicaid if they are unable to pay their bills. That’s a cost shift from auto insurance companies to  taxpayers.

  “5. Auto insurers can continue to use non-driving factors in determining premiums, such as credit information and geographic territories.”

According to its press release issued for the town hall, “CPAN is a broad, bipartisan coalition of healthcare providers, consumer advocate groups, auto accident survivors and families and caregivers, along with individuals working together in the courts and legislature to uphold auto accident survivors’ rights to quality medical care and rehabilitation under the Michigan auto insurance system.”

CPAN was formed in 2003 based on the belief that it is in the public’s interest to preserve Michigan’ no-fault auto insurance system, according to its website, protectnofault.org.

–EVM Staff

Author: East Village Magazine

A Non-profit, Community News Magazine Since 1976

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