Lawmakers advance car insurance bill package despite affordability concerns Lawmakers advance car insurance bill package despite affordability concerns
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Most of those who testified during the nearly three-hour hearing cautioned that mandating more insurance coverage would hurt people already struggling with rising inflation, high gas prices, and other economic fallout from the pandemic.
The bill that sparked some of the liveliest debate would raise the minimum amount of personal injury protection drivers must carry on basic and standard car insurance policies to
Another bill would bar drivers from relying on their health insurance coverage for personal injury protection. That would impact 1.27 million drivers, LaSpisa said.
Combined, the two bills would result in "excessive" premium increases and force drivers to get more insurance than they need or can afford, he said.
"People are not going to be able to handle such sharp increases, and as a consequence, many more people will drive without coverage," Bell said. "Many of them will be drivers of color, who will then be subject to traffic stops by police. This is really going in the wrong direction, particularly with inflation."
"Why would you want to increase premiums on average
Sen.
"During this process, we haven't really directed our attention to the injured party and the consequences of low rates," Bramnick said. "I understand the impact of insurance rates. I understand the cost. But we also are talking about two issues - one, the victim and what the victim should be entitled to, and rates. And as long as we balance those two, we can have a discussion. But if that victim is no longer part of the discussion, then we're not having a discussion."
"We are long overdue for reforms," Scutari said in a statement. "We need stronger consumer safeguards so policyholders aren't denied the rights and compensation they deserve."
Advocates told the
Instead of basing car insurance rates on a motorist's driving history and safety record, many insurers use education, occupation, and consumer credit scores to determine rates. That means they often charge higher premiums for those least likely to afford them: poor and non-white drivers.
Several lawmakers have introduced bills in the past two legislative sessions to remedy that problem, but they have not passed. It was introduced again in the Assembly in January but remains stalled there.
Most of the committee's five members voted to advance all nine bills. Sen.
Of a bill legislators advanced that would raise the minimum liability coverage for commercial vehicles to
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