House and Senate in West Virginia lawmakers have signed off on allowing cities and towns to tap insurance proceeds when clearing away buildings destroyed by fire.
The bill has been sent Gov. Joe Manchin, who sponsored the proposal to allow municipalities to file insurance liens. Supporters believe it could resolve a lawsuit filed against Huntington by the West Virginia Insurance Federation, an insurance trade group that helped draft the bill.
The new law is a compromise worked out among municipalities, insurers and officials following an industry dispute over an ordinance in the city of Huntington. That measure forced insurers to pay funds on some total fire losses to the city rather than directly to policyholders, which insurers said would violate state law and their private contracts with insureds.
Topics Virginia
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Pipeline Explodes at Delfin LNG Planned Project in Louisiana
Nine-Month 2025 Results Show P/C Underwriting Gain Skyrocketed
US Appeals Court Rejects Challenge to Trump’s Efforts to Ban DEI
Maine Plane Crash Victims Worked for Luxury Travel Startup Led by Texas Lawyer 


