A new court decision will keep the public’s eyes from records of an auto insurance fund.
The Michigan appeals court says the state Catastrophic Claims Association is a public body, but lawmakers legally carved out an exemption from public records disclosure.
The insurance fund was created to reimburse insurers for catastrophic claims that exceed $545,000. Owners pay $160 per vehicle per year on top of regular insurance.
A coalition of health care, labor and consumer organizations wants to know how the fund calculates rates.
The court’s 2-1 decision was released Friday. In dissent, Judge Elizabeth Gleicher says lawmakers violated the constitution when they threw a cloak over the fund’s records without amending Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act.
She says no one would know there’s a “covert” exemption in insurance law.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
UPS, FedEx Scramble to Shore Up Networks Drained by Deadly Crash
Massive Wildfire Liabilities Push Utilities to Use AI to Stop Blazes
Losses Top $20 Billion in Asia Floods as Climate Risks Grow
North Carolina Motorist Tells 911: Eagle Dropped a Cat Through the Windshield