HB No. 2320, a revision to the Hawaii Insurance Code to regulate public adjusters, has been introduced before the Hawaii Legislature. The bill is here.
The bill would require a public adjuster to enter a written contract for services which would, among other things, describe the loss and its location, describe the services to be provided to the insured, attest that the public adjuster is fully bonded, disclose the full compensation the public adjuster is to receive, and state that initial expenses to be reimbursed to the public adjuster from any claim payment.
Public adjusters would not be entitled to a fee of more than eight per cent of any recovery from the insurance company. If the insurer paid policy limits within seventy-two hours after a claim was submitted or committed in writing that payment would be made for the policy limits, the public adjuster would not receive a commission based upon a percentage of the total recovery from the insurer. Instead, the public adjuster would only be entitled to reasonable compensation from the insured for services provided.
The public adjuster would be required to provide to the insured with a written disclosure concerning any financial interest that the public adjuster might have with other parties involved in any aspect of the claim, including any construction firm or building appraisal firm that is to receive any compensation for assisting with the claim.
The bill would give the insured the right to rescind the contract within three business days after the date of signing the contract.
Finally, compensation provisions in a public adjusting contract would be made available to the commissioner upon request.
The first hearing on the bill will be Thursday, January 30, 2020 at 2:30 p.m.