
Alabama Updates Captive Insurance Law to Strengthen Solvency
- Alabama Governor Kay Ivey recently signed House Bill 415, which updates the state’s captive insurance laws effective June 1, 2026.
- The new law raises the minimum cash requirement for pure captive insurers from $100,000 to $250,000 to better protect workers’ comp funds.
- Additionally, the law brings stricter auditing and actuarial requirements while potentially lifting the existing licensing moratorium.
Fort Wayne City Council Reviews Rising Costs of Public Safety Injuries
- Fort Wayne officials are scrutinizing a significant increase in workers’ compensation and “hurt-on-duty” expenses for police and firefighters.
- Proposed adjustments aim to manage the financial impact of long-term medical care and wage replacement for public safety personnel injured in the line of duty.
- City leaders are balancing the necessity of providing comprehensive benefits with the reality of growing budgetary pressures.
- The council is currently weighing policy shifts to improve claim efficiency and cost containment.
Austin Firefighter Wins Vital Workers’ Comp Ruling in Cancer Battle
- A state hearing officer ruled that Austin firefighter Suzanne LaFollette’s terminal cancer is an occupational disease, reversing a previous denial by the city.
- The decision confirms that her Stage 4 diagnosis is work-related, granting her access to critical medical benefits and wage replacement.
- Initially, the city claimed her illness was an “ordinary disease of life” rather than a result of carcinogen exposure.
- Advocates now urge Texas to expand presumptive cancer laws to include reproductive illnesses for all firefighters.
