West Virginia’s workers’ compensation insurer BrickStreet Mutual Insurance Co. has made its first scheduled payment of $5.8 million on its outstanding surplus note to the state of West Virginia, Gov. Joe Manchin announced.
The Offices of the Insurance Commissioner received the check last week.
“These payments will go directly to the benefit of the workers compensation Old Fund, helping to pay back the systems long-term deficit,” Manchin said in a prepared statement. “As privatization continues to flourish, this places West Virginia on a level playing field with surrounding states to compete for economic development opportunities. I cant emphasize enough how important this process has been for our states future.”
BrickStreets surplus note balance now stands at $185 million. The company is scheduled to make its next principal payment of $40 million plus interest on June 30, 2008.
As part of 2005 legislation to privatize West Virginias 90-year-old workers compensation system, BrickStreet received a $200 million surplus note to establish its business practices and begin building adequate reserves to pay claims for injured workers.
Topics Workers' Compensation Virginia
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Reinsurers Hold Bulk of Jamaica’s Property Exposures From Hurricane Melissa: Reports
Security First the Latest in Florida to Announce Home Insurance Rate Cut
AWS Outage a ‘Moderate Incident,’ Another Near Miss for Insurance Industry
Brown & Brown Reports Strong Q3 Revenue Growth of 35.4% 

