Industry Reps Back Reauthorization of Federal Terrorism Backstop

 Michelle Sartain, president Marsh U.S. and Canada, who has worked at Marsh for more than 28 years, encouraged lawmakers on Capitol Hill last month to reauthorize the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act. More than two decades after Marsh McLennan lost 358 employees in the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, the backstop remains a necessary component to a stable insurance market, she said.



“By all accounts, the program has been a model public-private partnership,” said Sartain. “The backstop remains a critical component to a stable terror insurance market, particularly for nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological (NBCR) events, and has enabled insurance to be placed and investments to be made.”

The federal backstop for terrorism risk was first initiated late in 2002 to respond to insurers’ forced exclusion of terrorism risks from commercial property/casualty insurance policies following losses from the terrorist attacks. The change put construction projects on hold since financers required the insurance. Meanwhile, a crisis began in workers’ compensation due to the high levels of exposure faced in the line of business since state laws prohibited a terrorism exclusion.

The legislation requires insurers to offer terrorism coverage while the industry has the assurance that if losses from an event reach certain thresholds (the event needs to exceed $5 million in damages to be certified as an act of terrorism and cost insurers $200 million in industry losses to trigger coverage), the government will step in. TRIA has been reauthorized several times, the latest at the end of 2019. It is due to expire again on Dec. 31, 2027.

Sartain offered 17 pages of testimony covering TRIA’s history and features, and outlined how certain industries such as healthcare and higher education rely on TRIA. On Sept. 17 she told the U.S. House Financial Services Subcommittee on Housing and Insurance that the terrorism backstop allows for insurers and reinsurers to quantify exposures and provide capacity into the market.

Although the expiration is two years away, “insurers and rating agencies closely monitor legislative activity related to [TRIA],” Sartain explained. “Any uncertainty regarding the future of the federal backstop as the deadline approaches will have an impact on the availability and nature of insurance coverage. That, in turn, could send ripple effects through the economy and potentially affect companies’ decision-making processes about hiring and investing.”

If the backstop expires without a replacement, “insurers that are still able to offer terrorism coverage will likely only write coverage for buyers with operations in preferred locations, and could consider increasing prices for other locations,” Sartain wrote. “This would lead to capacity shortfalls for central business districts, at-risk industries, and employers with significant workers’ compensation accumulations, such as office workers, manufacturing facilities, and healthcare and education facilities,” she continued.

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