Lawmakers in Ohio and Massachusetts have proposed bills that would retroactively expand business interruption insurance policies to cover companies’
losses attributable to the outbreak of the novel coronavirus, following on the heels of New Jersey legislators’ recent introduction of a similar proposal.
On Tuesday, Ohio state Reps. Jeffrey Crossman and John M. Rogers, both Democrats, introduced H.B. 589, while Massachusetts state Sen. James B. Eldridge, also a Democrat, introduced S.D. 2888. Generally speaking, both measures would effectively rewrite certain business interruption policies to include the coronavirus pandemic as a covered cause of loss.
The Garden State bill, A3844, was approved by the General Assembly’s Homeland Security and State Preparedness Committee on March 16 and was set for a vote by the full chamber the same day, but the sponsors pulled it at the last second so they could engage in further discussions with concerned insurance industry representatives. As of Wednesday, no further action had been taken on the bill.
The Ohio measure would apply to business interruption policies held by Buckeye State-based companies with 100 or fewer full-time employees, provided the policies were issued by March 9, when Gov. Mike DeWine declared a state of emergency. The Massachusetts bill, meanwhile, would apply to policies sold to businesses in the commonwealth with 150 or fewer full-time employees, as long as the policies were in place by the time Gov. Charlie Baker issued his March 10 emergency declaration. |
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