The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1974-05-09, Page 181972 average annual premiums
Toronto $192 Hamilton $194 Kitchener $170
Chicago 470 Buffalo • 286 Akron 258
Brooklyn 576 Minneapolis 263 Sacramento 284
illkp IAG INSURANCE
FONS I \ RAN( t ASSOCIAT10%, Ill Ill FLPIFI
PREMIUM TAX - 2c
IINCOME TAX - 2c
RETAINED EARNINGS - 2c
It isn't possible even in this full-page
report to provide all the information
you may want. You can get more
from CIAG's local office or by mail-
ing this coupon.
To: CIAG INSURANCE
No-fault Information
Priory Square, Guelph
N1H 6P8
From : name
address
I would prefer (for little change in premium):
O to keep the present insurance system in Ontario
0, to have a broader no-fault plan (to be paid for vehi-
cle damage and expenses of most injuries by my
own insurer while keeping the right to sue for
severe injuries)
O to have as complete a no-fault plan as possible
(with my out-of-pocket loss paid by my insurance
company regardless of who's at fault and giving up
all right to sue)
My major concerns about automobile insurance are:
O delays in settling claims
O other people getting my money because I've never
had a claim
q having to pay a deductible when I have a claim
o poor service from 0 my agent
O my company
O my adjuster
El another company
ci another company's adjuster
O other
O I would like to have more information about no-
fault car insurance.
Box 5933,
291 King St,
London N6A 4T7,
519-433-3131
P.
What's all this about
no-fault car insurance?
There's a lot of confusion about no-fault car insurance. Even the
term "no-fault" means different things to different people.
The Consumers Association of Canada* feels many people don't
really understand what's involved. Professor Allen Linden, ,
Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, agrees. In response to Is there a single best this growing concern about no-fault, CIAG INSURANCE is offering
you some information and a chance to voice your opinion. answer?
What does "fault" mean
In auto insurance?
The "fault" principle goes back beyond Biblical times. The
idea of an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, was adapted by
English common law to mean the guilty must pay. In auto in-
surance it means if someone damages your car or injures
you by negligent driving he must pay for your loss. Most
motorists carry third party liability insurance to pay for
losses they cause.
Over the years insurance programs have developed which
ignore fault. Workmen's Compensation, for example, pays
for loss regardless of who's at fault. In traffic accidents,
however, many people still feel the guilty should compensate
the innocent.
The fault system theory is that careless drivers must pay for
the accidents they cause and its purpose is to encourage
drivers to be careful. Insurance premiums are calculated to
cover the cost of claims for which drivers in different rating
groups are responsible. According to a recent study the
average liability claims cost for married males over 24 was
less than half that for married males under 20. The liability
coverage premiums for each group reflect this difference.
How about no-fault?
No-fault automobile insurance describes the insurance plan
that exists when fault law does not apply to auto accidents.
Motorists no longer rely on getting payment from another
motorist for vehicle damage or injury but must provide their
own protection. Each company pays its own policyholder
regardless of blame.
Pure no-fault automobile insurance does not exist in North
America. The so-called no-fault plans in some states and
provinces are only partial no-fault programs.
By the way - don't confuse no-fault insurance with govern-
ment insurance. Although limited no-fault coverage is part of
government automobile insurance plans in western Canada,
no-fault benefits have been offered by automobile insurance
companies in Ontario for some years. CIAG was first to do so
through additional coverage introduced in 1959.
What do we have now?
Motorists insured in Ontario have no-fault benefits broader
than those offered in most other provinces and states and
also have the right to sue a guilty party for loss.
No-fault death and disability coverage is part of all liability
insurance policies issued in Ontario. It provides:
Total disability benefits for:
—an employed person (or unemployed person age 21 to 65
who has worked six of the previous 12 months) - 80 per-
cent of wages up to $70 weekly, for up to 104 weeks, or
for life if disability is permanent
—a principal unpaid housekeeper - $35 a week, for up to 12
weeks
Death benefits for:
—head of household - $5,000 (plus $1,000 for each living
dependent after the first)
—a spouse - $2,500
—any dependent child - $1,000
Medical and rehabilitation benefits:
—up to $5,000 a person (four-year time limit) and up to
$500 funeral expenses
If an injured person receives accident benefits from his in-
surance company and recovers from the responsible party,
recovery is reduced by the benefits received. But future
weekly payments are not affected.
*The Consumers Association of Canada, a nonprofit
organization of consumers which brings their views
to the attention of government and producers,
publishes CANADIAN CONSUMER, which features
product studies and buying guides.
t Allen Linden has studied automobile accident corn-
pensatiOn systems for a decade, In the early Sixties
he completed a study which pleb—oiled significant
reforms In Ontario's system of auto insurance,
What's wrong with our
present system?
• The fault principle served well in the early years of the
automobile. Now, with masses of vehicles, complex roads
and higher speeds, even a split second counts and it's
sometimes difficult to decide who's to blame and to what
degree.
You might think it's easy: bad drivers cause accidents. Yes,
they do. But good drivers cause accidents too. And bad
weather and poorly designed roads and unsafe cars cause
accidents. When we try to find the cause of an accident, we
can't look only at the driver.
• Who is paid? Only the "innocent" can recover the full
amount of their losses. Where responsibility is divided,
others may recover part of their loss. Where a driver is judg-
ed responsible for the accident, he and often his passengers
recover nothing from the other party. But they may suffer
loss of wages, vehicle damage, serious injury requiring
rehabilitation or a change in lifestyle - all from a momentary
lapse of judgment. Their recovery is limited to accident
benefits provided by their own policy.
• A committee appointed by the Ontario Minister of Con-
sumer and Commercial Relations in 1970 to inquire into
claims adjusting practices concluded:
"The public simply does not understand the nature of in-
surance coverage (and auto insurance particularly) nor do
they understand the manner in which claims are
settled .. . . Most of the complaints which we received had
to do with automobile damage claims and we think that
much of the problem and public resentment which may exist
against insurers results from the adversary system of resolv-
ing such disputes."
Ninety percent of accidents involve vehicle damage
only and account for 70 percent of total claim
payments.
• Consumerism, the law, and competition among insurance
companies have not created satisfactory claims service
because of a crucial gap in the system. When you are in-
volved in an accident you deal with the other person's com-
pany - not the one you chose yourself.
• Many people feel automobile insurance costs too much.
But how does it relate to other costs? In major metropolitan
areas it can cost twice as much to park a car ($2-$3 per day)
as to insure it; 15 hours auto repair time at current rates of
$10-$15 costs as much as the average annual insurance
premium. People may be more concerned about paying
automobile premiums because they feel they have nothing to
show for it until they have an accident.
Why are people talking
about no-fault?
• The Ontario government has announced its intention to ex-
tend the no-fault benefits now in existence.
• People hope that no-fault will reduce or control the rising
cost of automobile insurance.
• Publicity in the United States about no-fault plans as the
solution to insurance problems has spilled over into Canada
and caused confusion. American problems are not quite the
same as ours. The U.S. legal system is different. Ontario
automobile insurance costs are substantially lower.
• Some people believe the government can solve all our
automobile insurance problems with a no-fault monopoly.
• Times are changing rapidly - and so are social conditions.
To keep pace, institutions are examined and modified more
often.
• The Insurance Bureau of Canada has proposed a no-fault
plan to pay for vehicle damage and a substantial portion of
wage loss and out-of-pocket expenses for personal injury.
The plan would maintain the right to sue for additional ex-
penses and for pain and suffering only in cases of severe in-
jury. The proposed coverage would pay medical and
rehabilitation expenses up to $20,000 per person, lost earn-
ings up to $250 a week for up to three years, and a death
benefit of $1,000 for dependents under 18.
• The Ontario Law Reform Commission has recommended
compulsory, no-fault automobile insurance and the abolition
of court action to determine blame for traffic accidents. The
Commission recommends that all traffic victims be compen-
sated for medical expenses, lost wages and property
damage, but not for pain and suffering.
tc.iiii-faiitt the answer?
• The question of service: Will a change in the law improve
insurer attitudes towards claimants? Taking the emphasis
off the adversary fault system and having drivers deal entire-
ly with their own insurers could help.
• The question of rights: The fault system permits compen-
sation of the innocent victim not only for actual out-of-
pocket expenses, but also for pain and suffering. It denies
compensation to the person at fault in the accident. No-fault
seeks to rehabilitate all victims regardless of fault and the
extra funds are provided by eliminating the right to sue in
whole or in part.
While some rights may be lost, no-fault would bring new
rights more important than money compensation, like the
right to rehabilitation and help in adjusting to the new situa-
tion created by an accident. Rather than focusing on the
allocation of guilt and innocence, no-fault emphasizes solv-
ing the victim's problems.
• The question of responsibility: Advocates of the fault
system suggest that when careless drivers must pay for the
accidents they cause, they are more careful. No-fault sup-
porters argue that a careless driver does not pay, but his in-
surance company does. They say because 95% of motorists
are insured, merely making them theoretically responsible
does not reduce accidents. Nor does an extra premium
charge change the attitude of a person who has caused an
accident.
• The question of cost: The cost of automobile insurance
reflects the amount paid out for claims. No-fault will not
reduce the number of accidents or the, amount of damage -
it's only a change in law.
Only entirely "innocent" traffic victims receive full payment
for their injuries under the fault system. Under no-fault, more
people will be compensated. If the guilty are also paid, the
cost of insurance will rise. The Insurance Bureau of Canada
and the Ontario Law Reform Commission recommend reduc-
ing or eliminating payment for pain and suffering and other
"general damages" to provide funds for out-of-pocket losses
of all injured motorists.
Under no-fault proposals, the young, single driver will pay
relatively less in premiums and the middle-aged husband
and father may pay slightly more. The reasons: the younger,
unmarried person usually drives a lower-value car and has
lower incdme. The older driver heals more slowly and
because of generally higher income, must receive more and
higher benefits. .No-fault insurance rates for each rating
group are based on the amount of benefits expected to be
paid to each group.
Please consider the following questions, then complete and
return the coupon to indicate your views. CIAG will report the
response to the Ontario Ministry of Consumer and Commer-
cial Relations.
• Are you in favor of scrapping entirely the fault approach to
vehicle damage claims? In other words, you and another
driver would collect for vehicle repairs from your own in-
surers regardless of who caused the accident. This could
avoid the delays that concern most claimants.
Premiums would reflect the benefits paid rather than who
was at fault. If you're not satisfied with the service from your
company you can change to another.
• Would you favor removing the right to sue for pain and
suffering in the case of some or all injuries? Each injured
person would be paid out-of-pocket expenses, and trained
for other employment if disability prevented his resuming a
previous occupation.
CIAG, Ontario's leading automobile insurer, insures more
than 320,000 Ontario vehicles. It is owned and controlled by
democratic co-operative,. organizations - the, Ontario Credit
Union League, the OM o::,,E.ecietation„„CAgriciAlture and
"United' Co-Operatlies of dada. Among CIAG's primary ob-
jectives are:
—to provide policyholders with good insurance service and
value
—to act honorably and to be fair to all claimants, whether
policyholders or not
—to be a good corporate citizen, and to try to be known for
enterprise, promptness, honesty and fairness
In 1973, CIAG used its earned premium dollar this way:
CLAIMS - 720
(220 for injuries)
OPERATING COSTS - 220