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601.715(2)(a)(a) An authorized insurer may change its registered agent by delivering to the commissioner for filing a statement of registered agent change that is signed by an officer of the insurer and that includes all of the following information:
601.715(2)(a)1.1. The name and home office address of the authorized insurer.
601.715(2)(a)2.2. The name of the registered agent, as changed.
601.715(2)(a)3.3. The complete address of the registered agent, as changed.
601.715(2)(a)4.4. Any other information that the commissioner may require.
601.715(2)(b)(b) An authorized insurer may change its registered agent no more than one time per year.
601.715(3)(3)A registered agent of an authorized insurer may change its registered agent address by doing all of the following:
601.715(3)(a)(a) Notifying in writing the authorized insurer for which the registered agent is acting.
601.715(3)(b)(b) Delivering to the commissioner for filing a statement that includes all of the following:
601.715(3)(b)1.1. The name and home office address of the authorized insurer for which the registered agent is acting.
601.715(3)(b)2.2. The complete new registered agent address.
601.715(3)(b)3.3. An attached copy of the notice under par. (a).
601.715(4)(a)(a) A registered agent of an authorized insurer may resign by signing and delivering to the commissioner for filing a statement of resignation that includes all of the following information:
601.715(4)(a)1.1. The name and home office address of the authorized insurer for which the registered agent is acting.
601.715(4)(a)2.2. The name of the registered agent.
601.715(4)(a)3.3. A statement that the registered agent resigns.
601.715(4)(b)(b) After filing the statement, the commissioner shall mail a copy to the authorized insurer under par. (a) 1.
601.715(4)(c)(c) The resignation is effective on the earlier of the following:
601.715(4)(c)1.1. Sixty days after the commissioner receives the statement of resignation for filing.
601.715(4)(c)2.2. The date on which the appointment of a successor registered agent is effective.
601.715(4m)(4m)Service on an insurer under this section shall be made by personally serving the process, notice or demand on the registered agent of the insurer. In lieu of delivery to the registered agent, the process, notice or demand may be left at the office of the registered agent with the person who is apparently in charge of the office.
601.715(5)(5)If an authorized insurer has no registered agent for service of process in this state or if the registered agent cannot with reasonable diligence be served, substituted service may be made on the commissioner under ss. 601.72 and 601.73. If substituted service is made on the commissioner, an affidavit attesting that the authorized insurer has no registered agent or that the registered agent could not with reasonable diligence be served shall be attached to the process, notice or demand that is served.
601.715(6)(6)Except as provided in sub. (5), this section does not limit or affect the right to serve summons, notice, orders, pleadings, demands or other process upon an authorized insurer in any other manner provided by law.
601.715 HistoryHistory: 1995 a. 396; 1999 a. 30.
601.72601.72Service of process through state officer.
601.72(1)(1)General. Under procedures specified in s. 601.73, the commissioner is by law constituted attorney, except in cases in which the proceeding is to be brought by the state against an insurer or intermediary other than a risk retention group or risk purchasing group, in which event the department of financial institutions is by law constituted attorney, to receive service of summons, notices, orders, pleadings and all other legal process relating to any court or administrative agency in this state for all of the following:
601.72(1)(a)(a) Authorized insurers. All insurers authorized to do business in this state, while authorized to do business in this state, and thereafter in any proceeding arising from or related to any transaction having any connection with this state, provided the requirements under s. 601.715 (5) are satisfied.
601.72(1)(b)(b) Surplus lines insurers. All insurers as to any proceeding arising out of any contract that is permitted by s. 618.41, or out of any certificate, cover note or other confirmation of such insurance.
601.72(1)(c)(c) Unauthorized insurers. All insurers or other persons doing an unauthorized insurance business in this state, including but not limited to risk purchasing groups, as to any proceeding arising out of the unauthorized transaction.
601.72(1)(d)(d) Risk purchasing groups and nonresident intermediaries. All risk purchasing groups or nonresident intermediaries as to any proceeding arising out of insurance activities within this state or out of insurance activities related to policies on risks within this state.
601.72(2)(2)Appointment of attorney. Except as provided in sub. (2m), every licensed insurer by applying for and receiving a certificate of authority, every surplus lines insurer by entering into a contract subject to the surplus lines law, and every unauthorized insurer by doing an insurance business in this state, is deemed to have irrevocably appointed the commissioner and department of financial institutions as the insurer’s attorneys in accordance with sub. (1).
601.72(2m)(2m)Risk retention groups and risk purchasing groups. A risk retention group or risk purchasing group may not do an insurance business or engage in any insurance activity in this state until it registers with the commissioner and designates the commissioner as its agent for the purposes described in sub. (1). The commissioner may prescribe the form of registration under this subsection. If a risk retention group or risk purchasing group fails to designate the commissioner as required by this subsection, the commissioner is appointed agent for the risk retention group or risk purchasing group as provided in sub. (2).
601.72(3)(3)Others affected. The commissioner and department of financial institutions shall also be attorneys for the personal representatives, receivers, trustees, or other successors in interest of the persons specified in sub. (1).
601.72(4)(4)Fees. Litigants serving process on the commissioner under this section shall pay the fees specified in s. 601.31 (1) (p).
601.72(5)(5)Ordinary means of service. The right to substituted service under this section does not limit the right to serve summons, notice, orders, pleadings, demands or other process upon any person in any manner provided by law.
601.72 HistoryHistory: 1995 a. 27, 396; 2001 a. 102.
601.72 AnnotationLegislative Council Note on sub. (1) (d), 1975: Under s. 628.04 (created by this act), Wisconsin takes an important step in liberalizing prevailing licensing laws by not requiring residence for unrestricted Wisconsin intermediaries’ licenses. As a correlative measure, however, the reach of the Wisconsin courts and administrative agencies is extended to all such nonresidents. [Bill 16-S]
601.72 AnnotationThe commissioner has the duty to accept service for all insurers, but does not have a duty to determine whether an insurer is a party to the action in which service is sought. Davies v. Heiman, 186 Wis. 2d 370, 520 N.W.2d 917 (Ct. App. 1994).
601.73601.73Procedure for service of process through state officer.
601.73(1)(1)Requirements for effective service. Service upon the commissioner or department of financial institutions under s. 601.72 is service on the principal, if:
601.73(1)(a)(a) Two copies of the process are left in the hands or office of the commissioner or department of financial institutions respectively; and
601.73(1)(b)(b) The commissioner or department of financial institutions mails a copy of the process to the person served according to sub. (2) (b).
601.73(2)(2)Commissioner’s action.
601.73(2)(a)(a) Records. The commissioner and department of financial institutions shall give receipts for and keep records of all process served through them.
601.73(2)(b)(b) Process mailed. The commissioner or department of financial institutions shall send immediately by certified mail to the person served, at the person’s last-known principal place of business, residence or post-office address or at an address designated in writing by the person, one copy of any process received and shall retain the other copy.
601.73(2)(c)(c) Default judgment. No plaintiff or complainant is entitled to a judgment by default in any proceeding in which process is served under this section and s. 601.72 until the expiration of 45 days after the date of mailing of the process under par. (b). If the proceeding is to foreclose or otherwise enforce a lien or security interest, the plaintiff or complainant is not entitled to a judgment by default under this paragraph until the expiration of 20 days after the date of mailing of the process under par. (b).
601.73(3)(3)Proof of service. A certificate by the commissioner or the department of financial institutions, showing service made upon the commissioner or department of financial institutions, and attached to a copy of the process presented for that purpose is sufficient evidence of the service.
601.73 AnnotationLegislative Council Note, 1979: [Repeal of (1) (c)] In its original form, the procedures of ss. 601.72 and 601.73 for substituted service of process through the commissioner or secretary of state required, in s. 601.73 (1) (b), the serving party to also mail a copy of the process to the person served, as additional assurance that this substituted service would provide actual notice. Sub. (1) (c) then required filing of an affidavit of compliance with (1) (a) and (b) to make the service effective. It may have been cumbersome, but it was logical. Some time later, the requirement of mailing by the serving party was eliminated by an amendment (ch. 189, laws of 1971) that did not go through the Insurance Laws Revision Committee, and did not make the necessary collateral changes. It makes little sense for the serving party to have to provide an affidavit as to what the public official does under (1) (b). Moreover, under (1) (b) the service is not complete anyway unless the public official does perform the statutory duty. Thus, the affidavit seems unnecessary and, because service is not complete without mailing by the public official, no further requirement seems needed. The reasonable solution, therefore, is to repeal (1) (c). [Bill 146-S]
601.73 AnnotationSection 801.15 (5) does not extend the time for answering a complaint served by substitute service under this section. Leonard v. Cattahach, 214 Wis. 2d 236, 571 N.W.2d 444 (Ct. App. 1997), 96-3167.
subch. VII of ch. 601SUBCHAPTER VII
HEALTHCARE STABILITY PLAN
601.80601.80Definitions; healthcare stability plan. In this subchapter:
601.80(1)(1)“Affordable Care Act” means the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, P.L. 111-148, as amended by the federal Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, P.L. 111-152, and any amendments to or regulations or guidance issued under those acts.
601.80(2)(2)“Attachment point” means the amount set under s. 601.83 (2) for the healthcare stability plan that is the threshold amount for claims costs incurred by an eligible health carrier for an enrolled individual’s covered benefits in a benefit year, beyond which the claims costs are eligible for reinsurance payments.
601.80(3)(3)“Benefit year” means the calendar year for which an eligible health carrier provides coverage through an individual health plan.
601.80(4)(4)“Coinsurance rate” means the rate set under s. 601.83 (2) for the healthcare stability plan that is the rate at which the commissioner will reimburse an eligible health carrier for claims incurred for an enrolled individual’s covered benefits in a benefit year above the attachment point and below the reinsurance cap.
601.80(5)(5)“Eligible health carrier” means an insurer, as defined in s. 632.745 (15), that offers an individual health plan and incurs claims costs for an enrolled individual’s covered benefits in the applicable benefit year.
601.80(6)(6)“Grandfathered plan” means a health plan in which an individual was enrolled on March 23, 2010, for as long as it maintains that status in accordance with the Affordable Care Act.
601.80(7)(7)“Health benefit plan” has the meaning given in s. 632.745 (11).
601.80(8)(8)“Healthcare stability plan” means the state-based reinsurance program known as the Wisconsin Healthcare Stability Plan administered under s. 601.83 (1).
601.80(9)(9)“Individual health plan” means a health benefit plan that is not a group health plan, as defined in s. 632.745 (10), or a grandfathered plan.
601.80(10)(10)“Payment parameters” means the attachment point, reinsurance cap, and coinsurance rate for the healthcare stability plan.
601.80(12)(12)“Reinsurance cap” means the threshold amount set under s. 601.83 (2) for the healthcare stability plan for claims costs incurred by an eligible health carrier for an enrolled individual’s covered benefits, after which the claims costs for benefits are no longer eligible for reinsurance payments.
601.80(13)(13)“Reinsurance payment” means an amount paid by the commissioner to an eligible health carrier under the healthcare stability plan.
601.80 HistoryHistory: 2017 a. 138.
601.83601.83Healthcare stability plan; administration.
601.83(1)(1)Plan established; general administration.
601.83(1)(a)(a) The commissioner shall administer a state-based reinsurance program known as the healthcare stability plan in accordance with the specific terms and conditions approved by the federal department of health and human services dated July 29, 2018. Before December 31, 2023, the commissioner may not request from the federal department of health and human services a modification, suspension, withdrawal, or termination of the waiver under 42 USC 18052 under which the healthcare stability plan under this subchapter operates unless legislation has been enacted specifically directing the modification, suspension, withdrawal, or termination. Before December 31, 2023, the commissioner may request renewal, without substantive change, of the waiver under 42 USC 18052 under which the health care stability plan operates in accordance with s. 20.940 (4) unless legislation has been enacted that is contrary to such a renewal request. The commissioner shall comply with applicable timing in and requirements of s. 20.940.
601.83(1)(c)(c) If the federal government enacts into law Senate Bill 1835 of the 115th Congress or a similar bill providing support to states to establish reinsurance programs, the commissioner shall seek, if necessary, and receive federal moneys for the purpose of reinsurance programs that result from that enacted law to expend for the purposes of this subchapter.
601.83(1)(d)(d) In accordance with sub. (5) (c), the commissioner shall collect the data from an eligible health carrier as necessary to determine reinsurance payments.
601.83(1)(e)(e) Beginning on a date determined by the commissioner, the commissioner shall require each eligible health carrier to calculate the rates the eligible health carrier would have charged for a benefit year if the healthcare stability plan had not been established and submit the calculated rates as part of its rate filing submitted to the commissioner. The commissioner shall consider the calculated rate information provided under this paragraph as part of the rate filing review.
601.83(1)(f)1.1. For each applicable benefit year, the commissioner shall notify eligible health carriers of reinsurance payments to be made for the applicable benefit year no later than June 30 of the calendar year following the applicable benefit year.
601.83(1)(f)2.2. Quarterly during the applicable benefit year, the commissioner shall provide each eligible health carrier with the calculation of total amounts of reinsurance payment requests.
601.83(1)(f)3.3. By August 15 of the calendar year following the applicable benefit year, the commissioner shall disburse all applicable reinsurance payments to an eligible health carrier.
601.83(1)(g)(g) The commissioner may promulgate any rules necessary to implement the healthcare stability plan under this section, except that any rules promulgated under this paragraph shall seek to maximize federal funding for the healthcare stability plan and shall comply with this section and with the approval by the federal department of health and human services dated July 29, 2018. The commissioner may promulgate rules necessary to implement this section as emergency rules under s. 227.24. Notwithstanding s. 227.24 (1) (a) and (3), the commissioner is not required to provide evidence that promulgating a rule under this paragraph as an emergency rule is necessary for the preservation of the public peace, health, safety, or welfare and is not required to provide a finding of emergency for a rule promulgated under this paragraph. An emergency rule promulgated by the commissioner under this paragraph before January 1, 2019, remains in effect until it is superseded by a subsequent permanent rule.
601.83(1)(h)(h) In 2019 and in each subsequent year, the commissioner may expend no more than $200,000,000 from all revenue sources for the healthcare stability plan under this section, unless the joint committee on finance under s. 13.10 has increased this amount upon request by the commissioner. The commissioner shall ensure that sufficient funds are available for the healthcare stability plan under this section to operate as described in the approval of the federal department of health and human services dated July 29, 2018.
601.83(1)(hm)(hm) Notwithstanding par. (h), in 2022 and in each year thereafter, the commissioner may expend from all revenue sources $230,000,000 or less for the healthcare stability plan under this section.
601.83(1)(i)(i) The commissioner shall complete and submit any reports, provide any information, and participate in any oversight activities required by the federal department of health and human services to implement and maintain the healthcare stability plan under this subchapter.
601.83(2)(2)Payment parameters. The commissioner, after consulting with an actuarial firm, shall design and adjust payment parameters with the goal to do all of the following:
601.83(2)(a)(a) Stabilize or reduce premium rates in the individual market.
601.83(2)(b)(b) Increase participation by health carriers in the individual market.
601.83(2)(c)(c) Improve access to health care providers and services for individuals purchasing coverage in the individual market.
601.83(2)(d)(d) Mitigate the impact high-risk individuals have on premium rates in the individual market.
601.83(2)(e)(e) Take into account any federal funding available for the plan.
601.83(2)(f)(f) Take into account the total amount available to fund the plan.
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2023-24 Wisconsin Statutes updated through all Supreme Court and Controlled Substances Board Orders filed before and in effect on January 1, 2025. Published and certified under s. 35.18. Changes effective after January 1, 2025, are designated by NOTES. (Published 1-1-25)