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1. General Insurance Concepts
2. Producer Roles and Receipt Types
3. Underwriting
4. Health Insurance Basics
5. Required Policy Provisions
6. Optional Policy Provisions
7. Medical Expense Insurance
8. Group Health Insurance
9. The Affordable Care Act (ACA)
10. Disability Income Insurance
11. Accidental Death and Dismemberment Insurance
12. Long Term Care Insurance
13. Dental Insurance
14. Section 125 Plans and Limited Policies
15. Federal Government Programs
16. Medigap and Medicaid
17. Health Insurance Taxation
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69. Wisconsin Laws & Ethics

Consumer Rights and Electronic Delivery

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Right to File a Complaint

Insurers are required to notify their insureds of the right to file a complaint with the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance regarding problems they may have with their insurance. Notice is required once for each policy or certificate issued by an insurer. This notice serves a real purpose. OCI is the consumer’s avenue for resolving disputes that the insurer won’t resolve. The complaint mechanism is part of how the regulatory system stays informed about market conduct — every complaint becomes a data point.

Electronic Delivery

Notice to a party, and any other document required under applicable law in an insurance transaction (or that serves as evidence of insurance coverage) may be stored, presented, and delivered by electronic means, as long as the notice or other document meets the requirements of subchapter II of ch. 137, Wis. Stat. (the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act). Wisconsin doesn’t require paper. What it requires is that the electronic delivery genuinely accomplishes the legal purpose — providing notice, evidence, or other content the law requires.

Putting It All Together

You’ve covered a lot. Before you close this chapter, here are the threads to keep in mind as you go into your line-specific study and into the actual practice of insurance in Wisconsin.

The Big Themes

Competent and trustworthy is the standard. Wisconsin returns to this standard at every step — at original licensing, in continuing education, in discipline, in marketing. If your conduct calls either competence or trustworthiness into question, the Commissioner can act.

You are a fiduciary. Client money is held in trust. Client information is held in trust. Recommendations are made for the client’s benefit, not your commission. Honesty has no loopholes. Misrepresentation by omission, by inference, by subterfuge — all count. The law doesn’t reward technical accuracy in a misleading presentation.

Disclosure is the antidote to most ethical problems. Fee disclosure, home solicitation disclosure, replacement disclosure, surplus lines disclosure — when the law has a concern, it usually requires the agent to put the relevant facts in front of the client in writing.

OCI is the regulator, and it has teeth. Forfeitures up to $5,000 per violation for vulnerable victims and fraud. Criminal penalties up to $5,000 and three years imprisonment for intentional violations. License revocations with a default five-year reapplication ban. Treat the rules seriously because OCI does.

Numbers Worth Remembering

  • 20 hours total prelicensing for a major line.
  • 8 hours general/ethics + 12 hours line-specific.
  • 24 CE hours per biennium, including 3 hours of ethics.
  • 30 days to report most license changes (address, partnership, conviction, regulatory action, lawsuit).
  • 3 years record retention for cash, commissions, policyholder records, and personnel; for policyholder records specifically, that’s 3 years after termination or lapse.
  • 15 days for the insurer to appoint an agent after contract execution or first application.
  • 30 days for the insurer to notify OCI when an appointment is terminated.
  • 60 days advance notice for nonrenewal.
  • 10 days notice for mid-term cancellation (most policies); 30 days for workers’ compensation.
  • 30-day prompt payment clock on claims, with 7.5% simple interest on overdue payments.
  • 2x profit as a forfeiture base; $1,000 standard ceiling per violation; $5,000 ceiling for fraud or vulnerable-victim violations; $5,000/day compulsive forfeiture.
  • $5,000 / 3 years criminal penalty maximum for individuals; $10,000 for corporations.
  • 5 years default reapplication ban after revocation for substantive grounds.
  • $35 biennial renewal fee (resident); $70 (nonresident).
  • $100 annual surplus lines license fee; $100,000 maximum bond.
  • 3% premium tax on surplus lines and certain direct placements.
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Consumer Rights and Electronic Delivery

Right to File a Complaint

Insurers are required to notify their insureds of the right to file a complaint with the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance regarding problems they may have with their insurance. Notice is required once for each policy or certificate issued by an insurer. This notice serves a real purpose. OCI is the consumer’s avenue for resolving disputes that the insurer won’t resolve. The complaint mechanism is part of how the regulatory system stays informed about market conduct — every complaint becomes a data point.

Electronic Delivery

Notice to a party, and any other document required under applicable law in an insurance transaction (or that serves as evidence of insurance coverage) may be stored, presented, and delivered by electronic means, as long as the notice or other document meets the requirements of subchapter II of ch. 137, Wis. Stat. (the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act). Wisconsin doesn’t require paper. What it requires is that the electronic delivery genuinely accomplishes the legal purpose — providing notice, evidence, or other content the law requires.

Putting It All Together

You’ve covered a lot. Before you close this chapter, here are the threads to keep in mind as you go into your line-specific study and into the actual practice of insurance in Wisconsin.

The Big Themes

Competent and trustworthy is the standard. Wisconsin returns to this standard at every step — at original licensing, in continuing education, in discipline, in marketing. If your conduct calls either competence or trustworthiness into question, the Commissioner can act.

You are a fiduciary. Client money is held in trust. Client information is held in trust. Recommendations are made for the client’s benefit, not your commission. Honesty has no loopholes. Misrepresentation by omission, by inference, by subterfuge — all count. The law doesn’t reward technical accuracy in a misleading presentation.

Disclosure is the antidote to most ethical problems. Fee disclosure, home solicitation disclosure, replacement disclosure, surplus lines disclosure — when the law has a concern, it usually requires the agent to put the relevant facts in front of the client in writing.

OCI is the regulator, and it has teeth. Forfeitures up to $5,000 per violation for vulnerable victims and fraud. Criminal penalties up to $5,000 and three years imprisonment for intentional violations. License revocations with a default five-year reapplication ban. Treat the rules seriously because OCI does.

Numbers Worth Remembering

  • 20 hours total prelicensing for a major line.
  • 8 hours general/ethics + 12 hours line-specific.
  • 24 CE hours per biennium, including 3 hours of ethics.
  • 30 days to report most license changes (address, partnership, conviction, regulatory action, lawsuit).
  • 3 years record retention for cash, commissions, policyholder records, and personnel; for policyholder records specifically, that’s 3 years after termination or lapse.
  • 15 days for the insurer to appoint an agent after contract execution or first application.
  • 30 days for the insurer to notify OCI when an appointment is terminated.
  • 60 days advance notice for nonrenewal.
  • 10 days notice for mid-term cancellation (most policies); 30 days for workers’ compensation.
  • 30-day prompt payment clock on claims, with 7.5% simple interest on overdue payments.
  • 2x profit as a forfeiture base; $1,000 standard ceiling per violation; $5,000 ceiling for fraud or vulnerable-victim violations; $5,000/day compulsive forfeiture.
  • $5,000 / 3 years criminal penalty maximum for individuals; $10,000 for corporations.
  • 5 years default reapplication ban after revocation for substantive grounds.
  • $35 biennial renewal fee (resident); $70 (nonresident).
  • $100 annual surplus lines license fee; $100,000 maximum bond.
  • 3% premium tax on surplus lines and certain direct placements.

More from Wisconsin Laws & Ethics

  • Who Is an Intermediary?
  • Maintaining Your License
  • License Discipline
  • Ethics — Standards of Professional Conduct
  • Compensation Rules