Chapter 5 Lack of consumer protections
5.1
Consumer advocates argue that existing regulations pertaining to
insurance claims processes focus on the handling of complaints and disputes and
do not adequately protect consumers in the areas of claims handling and
assessment practices.[1]
5.2
As discussed in Chapter 2, under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth),
the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) regulates the
conduct of financial service providers, including general insurers. However,
claims handling and settlement are exempted from regulation.[2]
5.3
Insurers have a duty of utmost good faith under the Insurance
Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), but ASIC does not have any oversight
responsibilities. The Insurance Contracts Amendment Bill 2010 was introduced
into Parliament to remedy this exclusion by giving ASIC power to ‘take
licensing action for a breach of the duty of utmost good faith in relation to
claims handling’ and ‘take representative action on behalf of third-party
beneficiaries’ and ‘intervene in any proceedings under the Insurance Contracts
Act’.[3] Pertinently, ASIC advised
the Committee that ‘we think it would be better if the claims-handling process
was within the broader regulatory system’.[4] The Committee’s view and
recommendations are outlined in Chapter 7.
5.4
The bill was passed in the House of Representatives in June 2010 and
consequently introduced in the Senate. However the 42nd Parliament was
prorogued before the Senate could vote and consequently the bill lapsed.
5.5
Thus, when it comes to claims handling, the situation remains that
consumer protections reside with the General Insurance Code of Practice (the
Code) which stipulates that claims handling will be conducted in ‘a fair,
transparent and timely manner’.[5] Consumers have only this
voluntary industry code to rely on, and as a previous chapter has determined, this
Code is ineffective, is not required to be adhered to during disaster events,
and is so little known that consumers are not aware how it could protect their
rights or to whom to direct complaints.
5.6
Legal Aid NSW argued that:
Existing regimes governing the reasonable time to resolve a
claim, including unresolved claims, is insufficient and piecemeal. It relies
heavily on the Industry Code of Practice in General Insurance that has been criticised
in the past for failing to address the unfairness in delay on disputed claims. There is little if any public reporting and
monitoring by industry, the regulator or FOS as to the time to resolve disputed
claims.[6]
5.7
The Insurance Law Service (ILS) recommended that an Australian Standard
be created for claims handling, and compliance with the standard monitored and
enforced by ASIC.[7]
5.8
This chapter discusses the need for more stringent consumer protection
in the ways that claims are processed and in the information required to be made
available to claimants.
Claims handling process
5.9
It is apparent to the Committee that in many instances insurers did not
meet the standards, in particular the timeframes, contained in the Code when
responding to the large volumes of claims arising from natural disasters. Indeed,
the greater the disaster, the greater the vacuum of consumer protections.
5.10
Legal Aid Queensland noted that they could not:
… point to any law or regulation or industry code which
mandated an insurer response to a claim within a time limit or that required
insurers to expedite a claim where the insured’s home was unliveable.[8]
5.11
Many
consumers were subject to unreasonable delays in the assessment of their
claims. The Committee heard that the widespread use of third parties by
insurers added to the delay, as both insurers and consumers had to wait for
their assessment. Even where claims had been resolved and insurers had accepted
liability, clients faced further delays with third parties contracted for the
repairing or rebuilding process.
5.12
Moreover, many claimants had concerns about the accuracy or objectivity
of third-party assessments but struggled to challenge or appeal against them.
5.13
Legal Aid NSW submitted that ‘our casework experience and [our] survey
results clearly illustrate a system of claims handling that is complex, time
consuming and ultimately very frustrating for consumers’.[9]
5.14
The following sections outline many of the issues raised in regards to
claims processing.
Delays in processing claims
5.15
The Code identifies a number of timeframes that members voluntarily
agree to meet.[10] The insurer is required
to respond to claims within 10 days of lodgement by accepting, denying or
requesting more information about the claim. Where this timeframe cannot be
met, insurers are to negotiate reasonable alternative timeframes with the
insured.
5.16
Should more information or investigation be required, clients are to be
informed about the progress of the claim every 20 days. Once all information is
obtained and investigations completed, insurers are obliged to notify the
claimant of the final decision within 10 days.[11]
5.17
In the event of a claim being denied, insurers will provide written
advice to this effect, as well as information about the internal complaints
process. If requested, insurers will also provide reports that have been used
in assessing the claim, with the exception of any information subject to
privacy laws or that may be prejudicial to the insurer in relation to a
dispute.[12]
5.18
The ILS observed that:
The current timeframes, however, can be extended indefinitely
and are therefore rendered meaningless. The ILS submits that there must be a
trigger point at which the consumer is armed with the information they need to
enlist the assistance of an independent ‘referee’ … to determine whether any
further delay is justifiable by the circumstances.[13]
5.19
Not only can the timeframes be extended indefinitely, the standards
contained in the Code may not be adhered to by insurers during times of
disaster and catastrophe.[14] In the absence of the
Code following a natural disaster, claimants appear bereft of protections and
forced to accept the level of services and nature of timeframes that their
particular insurance company opted to provide. The Committee received
overwhelming evidence that insurers often failed abysmally to meet the
timeframes in the aftermath of recent natural disasters, and neither were
claimants kept informed of the progress of their claim.
5.20
The ILS noted that:
The vast majority of [surveyed] consumers did not receive an
acknowledgment of their claim for some weeks after they made the initial claim.
The claims were made over the phone. From a consumer perspective those claims
then disappeared into a blackhole.[15]
5.21
According to a survey conducted by the Collaborative Insurance Law
Service (CILS), most of the respondents who had received a written rejection of
their claim following the Queensland floods were not advised of the denial
until one to three months after lodgement.[16] The Committee’s online survey
found that 60 per cent of respondents considered that the time taken to
settle their claim was ‘very slow’.[17] By August 2011, only 65
per cent of Queensland floods insurance claims had been resolved by the
insurance industry.[18]
5.22
Some local governments reported that residents had unresolved claims
months after the initial event. Northern Grampians Shire Council in Victoria
noted that ‘there are a number of insurance claims still outstanding, being
disputed or negotiated, a full six months after the last flood event’.[19] Ipswich City Council in
Queensland, whilst noting that the large volume of claims was a challenge to
insurers, claimed that ‘instances of processing of claims taking up to three
months and even longer have had and continue to have a significant impact on
the community’.[20]
5.23
The Carisbrook Disaster Recovery Committee, also in Victoria, reported
that ‘some residents were given timeframes for decisions to be made on whether
they would be covered or not. These timeframes were frequently exceeded or
extended for some several times.’[21]
5.24
Legal Aid Queensland (LAQ) provided a case study of a client whose claim
had not been processed six months after lodgement, and was only attended to
once LAQ intervened.[22]
5.25
Although delays in claims handling are often attributed to the
additional burden of determining the origins of floodwater, delays are also
present in other extreme weather events. Ms Jenny Lawton, a lawyer with
Victoria Legal Aid, advised the Committee that ‘the bulk of calls’ to Bushfire
Legal Help, set up in the wake of the Black Saturday fires in Victoria, related
to delays in claims handling.[23] Victoria Legal Aid’s Bushfire
Insurance Unit ‘assisted a number of clients experiencing undue delay in
resolving their claims, some more than 12 months after the fires’.[24]
Legal Aid Western Australia said that after the Perth Hills bushfires:
… people were more willing to accept an outcome that was not
the best outcome, because they had just run out of steam and run out of emotion
and they were finding it difficult to deal with negotiations with an insurance company.[25]
5.26
During these events, there appears to be no protection for consumers who
experience significant delays in the handling of their claims. Yet it is during
these events that claimants are likely to have experienced catastrophic loss,
in many instances to be homeless, and unable to fully resume their lives until
a claim is settled.
5.27
The ICA has proposed changes to the Code that would specify a maximum
time limit for determining claims; however, there is still a caveat that the
Code provisions do not necessarily apply in times of identified catastrophes.
Therefore, in this context, consumers could still face indefinite waiting
periods.
5.28
Consumer groups suggested that timeframes ‘may need to be set in
regulations, a claims handling standard or an ASIC Regulatory Guide’.[26]
Ms Bridget Burton, Coordinator, Caxton Legal Centre, acknowledged that it may
not be reasonable for the usual minimum claims-handling standards to apply in
the wake of disasters, but ‘there have to be some rules that apply after a
disaster event’.[27]
Third-party assessments
5.29
Section 3.2 of the Code provides timeframes and measures for claims
handling in the event that more information, assessment or investigation is
required. In such instances, reports from third-party experts such as
hydrologists, engineers or builders may be commissioned to examine the cause or
extent of damage. These expert reports may then be used to determine if damage
is covered by the insurer, or what the remedy may take if the claim is
accepted. Again, the Code includes the caveat that insurers may be unable to
adhere to the declared timeframes in times of catastrophes or natural
disasters.
5.30
Under the Code, the insurer is to advise the claimant of what
information is needed and provide an estimate of the time required to conduct
the investigations. Should an assessor, loss assessor or investigator be
appointed, clients are to be informed within five days of appointment.[28]
Even following a disaster event, these requirements to inform claimants should
not be considered unreasonable. However, the Code does not stipulate timeframes
within which claims investigations should be completed.
5.31
The Committee encountered consumer frustration with the lengthy delays
to claims handling when third parties became involved. Loss assessors are
commonly utilised to determine the extent of damage and whether a property can
be repaired or requires rebuilding. The expertise of hydrologists, in
particular, was relied upon for claims arising out of the recent flood events,
as many insurers needed to identify the origin of water damage before
determining a claim.
5.32
In one-off cases, the delay would be minimal. However, the general
insurance industry maintains that the high volume of claims in the wake of
recent natural disasters resulted in an unmet demand for third parties. The
Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) stated:
The combination of these disastrous events stretched the
resources of insurers, hydrologists, loss assessors, builders and local and
state governments … Delays in processing claims are inevitable in such periods
when extreme demand is placed upon supply infrastructure and skills and labour
availability within Australia and internationally.[29]
5.33
Due to the skills shortage, third parties such as assessors were brought
in from other states and even from overseas to assess disaster claims.[30]
Some international experts were unable to deliver their reports before their
visas expired and they had to return home.[31]
5.34
The ICA advised the Committee that the average time to finalise claims
in the wake of the recent extreme weather events was 28 days, compared to the
usual average of 10 days.[32] The NDIR report points
out that this figure does not demonstrate the extreme end of the scale where
some consumers had to wait many months.[33]
5.35
The Committee heard anecdotal evidence of lengthy delays in getting
third parties to affected properties. Buloke Shire Council’s questionnaire
revealed that ‘delays due to the need for “third party” (hydrologists,
geotechnical engineers and building consultants) information to become
available’ was one of the most-cited problems encountered by their residents.[34]
5.36
More than 60 per cent of respondents to the Committee’s online survey
experienced delays with getting third party experts and consultants to assess
their claim.[35] And a submitter ventured
that ‘third parties are responsible for significant delay as they take a long
time to report’.[36]
5.37
Insurers
may consider claims to be resolved once liability is accepted, but from the
client’s perspective, the saga continues with the recovery and rebuilding
process. The Committee heard from individuals whose insurers had promptly
accepted liability and undertaken to rebuild or repair their homes, but who
found themselves months later still unable to return home due to delays in
finalising building quotations or allocating builders.
5.38
Central Goldfields Shire Council submits that:
Much has been made of the high
completion rate of initial claims by insurers however this has not necessarily
translated to work on damaged properties or a satisfactory resolution of
people's disputes in a timely manner.[37]
5.39
Brisbane City Councillor Nicole Johnston told the Committee that:
A lot of residents have anecdotally said to me that they ring
up and are promised someone will come to do their quotes but after three weeks
they have to chase them and start again.[38]
5.40
The general insurance industry maintains that Australia is not able to
meet the demand for tradespeople that occurs after natural disasters of such
magnitude and scale as the recent extreme weather events. Suncorp Group admits
that ‘the main issue has been the availability of these services in the context
of extensive damage over a wide geographical area and the shortage of skilled
workers. This has unfortunately led to some delays.’[39]
5.41
The National Insurance Brokers Association (NIBA) claims that:
… there are simply not enough resources in the building and
related trades and in other material suppliers to allow insurers to provide
what might be regarded as a normal response within normal time frames when you
have so many claims happening and so much damage occurring all at the same
time.[40]
5.42
The ICA’s proposed amendments to the Code include a maximum timeframe
for external expert reports to be completed, but again, the exemption of the
Code to situations of natural disasters renders the amendment ineffectual.
Further, these proposed amendments would not address the delays caused by a
shortage of tradespeople to repair or rebuild following catastrophes.
Independence and accuracy of third-party assessments
5.43
The Committee noted a common perception among communities that third
parties employed by insurers may favour the insurers when issuing reports.
Several local governments in Victoria noted this. Buloke Shire Council reported
that:
The use of third parties to review and assess damage is not
seen as working for the mutual benefit of the claimant and the insurer. Their
role is seen as delivering a predictable outcome to the insurer (in favour of
the insurer) because their independence is compromised as an agent of the
insurer.[41]
5.44
Pyrenees Shire Council stated that hydrology ‘reports were in favour of
the Insurance Companies, keeping in mind that these engineers are paid by the
insurance company’[42] and Loddon Shire Council
claimed that ‘we believe that the insurance companies used their legal advice
and their hydrologists as a defensive strategy to minimise payouts’.[43]
5.45
Northern Grampians Shire Council maintained that assessors are ‘actually
agents of the insurance company and it seems to be a very one-sided
decision-making process’.[44] And in Central
Goldfields Shire, ‘the perception of the community is that the hydrologists
employed by the insurance companies were not at arm’s length from the insurance
company’.[45]
5.46
Queensland MP, Andrew Cripps, summed up thus:
In many ways, the fate of the policy holders’ claim is in the
assessor’s hands. Who are these assessors? What say does a policy holder have
in the appointment of one to assess their claim? Can policy holders have
confidence that they have the skills and experience to undertake an assessment
of the damage to their property? Where and by who are they trained? Who
regulates their profession? … What rights do policy holders have to seek a
review of the assessor's report, or have another one done to verify it?[46]
5.47
The City of Armadale Council in Western Australia advocated for a number
of fire-affected residents. In some cases where insurers and city building
inspectors disagreed on the merits of repairing rather than rebuilding, the
City commissioned an independent structural engineer who concluded that the
structures needed to be demolished.[47]
5.48
An independent hydrologist, engaged by a legal firm to assess the cause
of extensive flooding in Victoria in January 2010, criticised hydrology
reports—used by insurers to deny claims—for ignoring factors other than
riverine inundation, leading the legal firm to question the independence of
insurer-commissioned reports.[48]
5.49
There are also concerns about the accuracy of third-party reports. The
fact that hydrologists rarely accessed properties affected by water damage
until long after the water had receded contributed to fears of inaccuracy or
incompleteness in the resulting reports, since the evidence from the time of
the disaster had not remained. Where some properties had been subject to
different types of flooding from a single weather event, there were concerns
that third parties did not have an adequate understanding of local areas and
therefore the sequence of inundation.
5.50
Carisbrook Disaster Recovery Committee advised that ‘visits by
hydrologists were occurring months after the event when crucial debris had been
cleaned up. Some did desktop decisions without actually visiting the area.’[49]
5.51
Ms Alannah Jenkins, Flood Case Support Worker, Rochester and Elmore
District Health Service, spoke of her work with flood-affected clients and told
the Committee that ‘we have seen numerous times hydrology reports from months
after the floods—four to five months’.[50] Caxton Legal Centre ‘had
cases where it was six and seven months after the event before a hydrologist
visited the person's property’.[51]
5.52
There are also instances where more information can come to light
further down the track. RACQ Insurance overturned its original denial decisions
for 247 claims in Queensland after receiving more accurate hydrological
information that demonstrated that an insurable type of flooding had in fact
occurred.[52]
5.53
Consumer advocates point out that consumers are relatively powerless to
challenge the assessment of third parties.[53] In one instance, a
former state government soil health officer was able to provide reports on the
behaviour and nature of flooding in his neighbourhood whereas an insurer’s
reports were inconclusive.[54] However, this personal
expertise is not available to most people and so the accuracy and independence
of third-party expert reports is crucial.
5.54
Caxton Legal Centre points out that ‘it is expensive [for individuals] to
engage a hydrologist to write a report and, as such, they are experts primarily
“belonging” to insurance companies’.[55] The NIBA also noted that
its members have expressed concern at the lack of ‘availability of independent
experts to challenge the views of an insurer’s hydrologist’.[56]
5.55
Several groups have recommended that a panel of independent hydrologists
be available for the free use of consumers who wish to double-check an
insurer’s assessment.[57]
5.56
Admittedly, such a resource would face the same challenges in timeliness
as insurer-employed hydrologists when there are high volumes of flood claims.
However, with the forecast changes to the availability of flood insurance and a
uniform definition of flood, the need for hydrology input will diminish, and
the workload of an independent panel for consumer verification may be
manageable.
5.57
Legal aid organisations are concerned that some insurers have tried to
avoid delays by relying instead on ‘generic Insurance Council of Australia
reports, suburb by suburb snap-shot reports by hydrologists employed by the
insurer, or on a guess made by a loss assessor’ and only commissioning site-specific
hydrology investigations if the decision is disputed.[58]
This places a high onus on claimants to challenge decisions so that a proper
assessment can be undertaken.
5.58
Cr Johnston corroborated this phenomenon among her residents who ‘got a
catchment-wide hydrology report which did not relate to their property, which
forced many of them to go through the appeals process’.[59]
5.59
Although generalised area reports may reduce delays in handling claims,
consumers’ right to an accurate assessment is compromised. Moreover, the onus
is on consumers to dispute such a decision in order to receive a fair and
transparent claim assessment. This was demonstrated in Charlton, Victoria,
where a number of insurance claims from January 2011 floods were rejected
without site-specific data and are, 12 months later, being taken to the
insurance industry’s external dispute resolution scheme with a contrasting hydrology
report commissioned by a legal firm.[60]
5.60
The Committee also heard evidence of other assessments, such as scopes
of work for repairs, being inaccurate. One submitter counted 27 items missing
or incorrect on the insurance assessor’s scope of works.[61]
Another witness had three scopes of work conducted, each omitting the same
building structures.[62] Residents in Carisbrook,
Victoria, reported scopes of works missing entire rooms.[63]
5.61
Given that in these situations claimants are recovering from the trauma
of the disaster event, and may not be emotionally or financially capable of
challenging third-party reports or taking on the might of an insurance company,
it is essential that consumer protections regarding claims-processing
arrangements are in place.
Lack of information
5.62
From the stories told to the Committee, it would seem that many people’s
experiences in lodging a claim against their policy in the wake of a natural
disaster are of entering labyrinths of hoops and hurdles with no roadmap.
Instead of useful explanations or instructions on the claims-handling process,
claimants struggled to elicit phone, email or written contact or key
information from their insurers.
5.63
According to the Code, insurers must keep the client informed about the
progress of an investigated claim every 20 days, and respond to requests for
information within 10 days.[64]
5.64
Moreover, insurers are obliged to provide claimants with any information
that has been used in making a decision about the claim.
Difficulties with communication
5.65
To compound the frustration of delays in claims handling, there is
widespread dissatisfaction with the level of communication from insurers about
the progress of a claim. The Committee encountered a recurring theme that claimants
did not know what was going on with a claim and this added a great deal of
angst and stress to efforts to recover from the natural disaster. As the
coordinator of Lockyer Valley Flood Relief said:
I can understand the overwhelming difficulty the insurance
companies have had. I can understand that. I guess what I cannot understand is
the lack of communication. Something is better than nothing. Something would
always be better than nothing.[65]
5.66
An insurance broker stated that delays associated with mass claims were
inevitable due to the high demand on loss adjusters, but that ‘the most common
complaint in this regard is the lack of communication and slow responses from
the loss adjuster after the initial contact’.[66]
5.67
The CILS survey indicated that 77 per cent of respondents were never
advised of the progress of their claim.[67] Ms Karen Cox, Coordinator,
ILS, told the Committee that:
I have seen in a number of submissions, echoing over and
over, the extraordinary circumstances that people were in and the difficulties
they had in contacting insurers and getting information about their claims … The
commitment [in the Code] is to do little more than keep telling you what is
happening.[68]
5.68
Residents of Carisbrook, affected multiple times by flooding, expressed
their frustrations to the Carisbrook Disaster Recovery Committee that insurers
did not follow up on claims or contact them when promised.[69]
5.69
Queensland Flood and Cyclone Legal Help facilitated community forums
with affected communities, the Insurance Council of Australia and the Financial
Ombudsman Service, where ‘many people expressed anger and dissatisfaction with
the progress of their insurance claims’.[70] As a result, several
legal aid organisations established the Collaborative Insurance Law Service;
one of its aims was to assist consumers who experience delays in getting a
response from their insurer.[71]
5.70
In
Victoria, the Bushfire Insurance Unit gave assistance to ‘clients who were not
being adequately informed of the status of their claims’.[72]
5.71
The City of Armadale Council related a particular case that ‘had
consistent and regular delays. [The claimants] felt like their insurance
company just was not speaking to them.’[73] Buloke Shire Council
said that many of the residents that had spoken with ‘had to follow up their
claim with their insurer on numerous occasions and … it has taken persistence
on their part to get information on the progress of their claim or a decision’.[74]
5.72
Northern Grampians Shire Council advised the Committee that one of their
residents telephoned ‘his insurer each week from the time the claim was lodged
in January until August to remind them that he was waiting to hear the progress
of his claim’.[75]
5.73
The LAQ cited a case study of a client where ‘the only written
communication that had been received by Mrs M from [her insurer] was a survey
asking for client satisfaction’.[76]
5.74
In addition to substantial anecdotal evidence of insurers rarely
contacting consumers, the Committee also heard that many consumers had great
difficulties in contacting insurers to chase up information on the progress of
their claim.
5.75
Caxton Legal Centre reported that consumers:
… were sitting on hold for a long time because they had to
ring their insurance company; the insurance companies were not contacting
people. The hold times were ridiculous. There was no call-back system.[77]
5.76
Carisbrook Disaster Recovery Committee said that some of their residents
‘felt compelled to contact FOS because they had had difficulty contacting or
communicating with their insurance companies’.[78]
5.77
Residents of Cr Johnston’s Tennyson ward felt there was in fact
‘responsibility on the policy holder to chase the insurance company for an
outcome through repeated calls, letter and/or emails’.[79]
5.78
Most insurers have 1300 numbers for customer service, which are charged
at the cost of a local call from a landline, but are charged per minute when
made by a mobile phone. However, in the wake of natural disasters, many people lose
access to their landlines. The Australian Communications Consumer Action
Network submitted that the cost of contacting insurers, and waiting on hold for
long periods of time, via mobile phone can be prohibitive.[80]
5.79
Caxton Legal Centre noted that:
Most insurers do not have a phone number that is free from
mobile phones or a same-day call back service. Hold times when calling insurers
in January, February and March were excessive. The cost of phoning insurers was
a source of great anger and frustration in community forums in the early weeks
following the floods with some people estimating spends of hundreds of dollars
waiting on hold for their insurer to give them an update on the progress of
their claim.[81]
5.80
Moreover, dislocated residents relied on their mobile phones to
communicate with families and friends and other essential services, and therefore
wasting battery charge waiting to be connected to an insurer was an additional
stress and major inconvenience.
Access to documents
5.81
Moreover, the Committee heard widespread anecdotal evidence of clients
being unable to access third-party reports upon which insurers had made
decisions.
5.82
The Code advises that:
You will have access to information about you that we have
relied on in assessing your complaint and an opportunity to correct any
mistakes or inaccuracies. In special circumstances or where a claim is being or
has been investigated, we may decline to release information but we will not do
so unreasonably. In these circumstances, we will give you reasons. We will
provide our reasons in writing upon request.[82]
‘Special circumstances’ include when
the information may be ‘prejudicial’ to the insurer in the event of a dispute.[83]
The Committee notes that the proposed amendments to the Code would remove
potentially prejudicial information from the definition of ‘special
circumstances’.
5.83
FOS notes that currently the:
Code of Practice itself does
not commit to a full exchange of all material and requires the consumer to
request access to the documentation or information.[84]
5.84
The Committee heard that on some occasions, reports upon which claims
were determined were not made available to clients when requested. This lack of
transparency was frustrating for those who wished to confirm that the reports
(from assessors, hydrologists, or others) were correct. Certainly such secrecy
would give rise to suspicions that insurers had something to hide, and this
often subsequently contributed to community anxiety and the spread of
misinformation.
5.85
Caxton Legal Centre noted that:
The responses to requests for documents have been mixed.
While there has been a general willingness to provide PDS documents and
hydrology reports this is not universal. Caxton lawyers have experienced more
problems than could have been anticipated in obtaining documents.[85]
5.86
The ILS had a client whose claim was rejected within one week:
Despite ILS writing to the insurer on a number of occasions
requesting copies of the telephone recordings relied upon by the insurer,
including copies of any hydrology or assessor’s reports to support its decision
to deny our client’s claim, the insurer to date has not provided any real
evidence to support its decision.[86]
5.87
A consumer advocacy client was refused access by their insurer to a
hydrology report cited in the claim denial until they took their case to FOS
and legal aid.[87] Another client was
initially charged hundreds of dollars to access a report before the client
threatened to speak to his local member of parliament.[88]
5.88
David Stubbin advised that ‘during my claim process, I’ve been denied
any opportunity to review and comment on the insurer’s claim notes and
assessment report.’[89]
5.89
Valerie Kinglsey noted that her insurer stonewalled her efforts to
access their building quotations, advising her by email that she could view
them only in return for accepting a cash settlement.[90]
5.90
Ms Deborah Olsen, a Brisbane community recovery coordinator for Lifeline
Uniting Care Community Queensland, dealt with frustrated clients who had
different experiences between insurance companies:
It seemed to be a mixed bag with the hydrologist’s report,
depending on which insurance company they were with. We have spoken with people
who were very distressed because they had to fight very hard to get a copy of
the hydrologist’s report. Their neighbours would have a copy but they would not
be able to access theirs and they could not understand why.[91]
5.91
The ILS submitted that a particular insurance company hired lawyers to
deal with all claims. As a result, the lawyers obstructed the flow of
information to clients by claiming ‘legal professional privilege’ over
hydrology reports, which were accessed only after some months and appeals to FOS
and ASIC.[92]
5.92
FOS described this phenomenon as ‘a real problem, and it causes delays
because the consumer cannot then look at the information and say, “Well, is
that right or not. Do I agree with this” or, “They have got the wrong house.”’[93]
Committee comment
5.93
While the Committee appreciates that large volumes of claims place
pressure on insurers, long delays to finalise claims have a detrimental effect
on consumers. Further, the failure of many insurers to adequately communicate
with their clients during the claims-handling process is inexcusable.
5.94
This inquiry aimed to identify systemic issues in the operation of the
insurance industry during disaster events, and to recommend changes necessary
to ensure an industry-wide capacity to appropriately respond during disaster
events.
5.95
Insurers gave evidence to the Committee that, in light of the
overwhelming number of claims, they were unable to meet timeframes or
communicate regularly with their clients. The Committee rejects those excuses
and notes the positive innovations of some insurers after these disaster
events. The Committee commends those insurers for their commitment to customer
service and sound business planning, especially when their buildings and
employees were also affected by disasters, although again there is scope for
improvement in some areas. These innovations include:
n the establishment of
mobile offices in central locations to facilitate claims lodgement;
n claims case managers
assigned to see clients through the claims-handling process;
n Insurance Captains
from the Insurance Council of Australia who attend relief centres and disaster
meetings;
n the use of mobile
phone messaging systems when householders were homeless and were without
landlines, internet connection or mailboxes;
n providing copies of
third-party reports to enable clients to understand claims decisions;
n call-back options
that worked; and
n the flexibility to
use consumer-organised tradespeople to expedite repair work.
5.96
These strategies were used by some, but not many, insurers. They demonstrate
that the industry as a whole can and should be doing better. Currently, the
self-regulatory Code places little onus on insurers to achieve benchmark
performances in the claims-handling process, particularly during disaster
events. The Committee intends for this situation to change.
5.97
As there is no compulsion on insurers to adhere to the Code’s
timeframes, or even the amended, mutually-agreed timeframes in times of
disasters, consumers have little recourse when left in limbo with claims unresolved
for months and months. The Committee notes that the elderly are particularly
vulnerable in these situations and heard anecdotal stories where claimants
‘gave up’ the insurance battle as the stress of pursuing it was too much to
bear.
5.98
Currently, claims handling is excluded from ASIC’s regulatory
responsibilities for financial services providers. The Insurance Contracts
Amendment Bill 2010 was drafted to amend this inclusion, making a breach of the
duty of utmost good faith equal to a breach of the Insurance Contracts Act. However,
Parliament was prorogued before the bill could be passed.
5.99
The Committee considers that ASIC should be empowered to regulate
efficient, honest and fair dealings in relation to claims handling so that it
can investigate companies who do not act in utmost good faith in relation to
their clients, including when they do not adhere to the Code, when there are
unreasonable delays, or when claims assessments and investigations are
conducted in an unfair manner.
5.100
At the very least, the Committee considers it essential that there be
protection for consumers in the claims-handling process in the aftermath of
disaster events. An alternative to ASIC powers over claims handling would be
the mandatory application of a revised and more stringent General Insurance
Code of Practice that cannot be waived during disaster events and includes
claims-handling and communication obligations appropriate to these events. This
would also extend to consumer access to third-party reports.
5.101
The Committee makes recommendations in Chapter 7 to reform the
regulatory environment of the insurance industry and to mandate consumer
protections in insurance claims-handling processes.
5.102
The Committee also supports the Australian Communications Consumer
Action Network’s Fair Calls for All campaign for affordable calls to 1300
phone numbers from mobile telephones and strongly urges the ICA to lobby the
telecommunications industry for action in this area.