Best Auto Insurance: Wyoming (2021)
Trying to buy auto insurance in Wyoming? This article will tell you everything you need to know about car insurance in the Cowboy State. We’ll review state requirements, penalties for driving without coverage, average costs, and Wyoming’s best car insurance providers.
To rank the top five companies for auto insurance in Wyoming, we considered providers’ national reputation and coverage offerings, but also local rates and regional satisfaction scores.
If you’re simply looking for the cheapest car insurance in Wyoming, you should reach out for multiple car insurance quotes from a range of providers. Use the tool below to start comparing free quotes from the best insurers near you.
Florida’s Altmaier to Assume NAIC Presidency for 2021 December 29, 2020
Members of the association of regulators elected these leaders for the new year:
President: Florida Insurance Commissioner David Altmaier
David Altmaier
Altmaier was appointed commissioner of the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) by the Financial Services Commission on April 29, 2016. Altmaier began his public service at OIR in 2008, serving in a number of roles including chief analyst of the Property and Casualty Financial Oversight unit and deputy commissioner of Property and Casualty Insurance.
Altmaier succeeds 2020 NAIC President and South Carolina Insurance Director Ray Farmer.
President-Elect: Idaho Insurance Director Dean L. Cameron
[December 28, 2020]
KBRA Comments on Renovate America s Chapter 11 Filing
Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA) releases commentary following an announcement on December 22, 2020 that Renovate America Inc. (Renovate), a Property Assessed Clean Energy (News - Alert) (PACE) originator, has filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code.
Renovate has sponsored thirteen PACE ABS transactions that have outstanding KBRA ratings. The ABS (News - Alert) transactions are largely insulated from the financial performance of Renovate as the company only served as the Program Administrator for these transactions, has limited interaction with the underlying obligors, and has little control over the collateral performance. The servicing of the PACE assessments, including billing and collections, is performed by David Taussig & Associates, which serves as the Assessment Administrator.
Originally published on December 24, 2020 8:49 am
Lorraine Rogge and her husband, Michael, travel the country in a recreational vehicle, a well-earned adventure in retirement. This spring found them parked in Artesia, N.M., for several months.
In May, Rogge, 60, began to feel pelvic pain and cramping. But she had had a total hysterectomy in 2006, so the pain seemed unusual, especially because it lasted for days. She looked for a local gynecologist and found one who took her insurance at the Carlsbad Medical Center in Carlsbad, N.M., about a 20-mile drive from the RV lot.
The doctor asked if Rogge was sexually active, and she responded yes and that she had been married to her husband for 26 years. Rogge felt she made it clear that she is in a monogamous relationship. The doctor then did a gynecological examination and took a vaginal swab sample for laboratory testing.
AHIP protests repeal of antitrust exemptions for health insurers Consumer Reports hails passage as being good for providers who feel pressured into contract terms that benefit insurers.
, Managing Editor
The Senate on Tuesday voted to amend the McCarran-Ferguson Act, a move that, if signed into law by President Trump as expected, would restore antitrust laws to the business of health insurance.
The House passed the Competitive Health Insurance Reform Act on September 21.
The McCarran–Ferguson Act currently exempts the business of health insurance from federal antitrust and competition laws and leaves regulation under state control.
The reform of the McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1945 would ensure that health insurers are subject to the same federal antitrust laws as other industries, according to proponents.