The insurer shall provide the following written disclosures to the beneficiary before the retained asset account is established, unless the insurer has already provided these disclosures pursuant to Section 10509.934:
(a) Payment of the full benefit is accomplished by delivery of the draft book or checkbook.
(b) One draft or check may be written to access the entire amount, including interest, of the retained asset account at any time.
(c) Whether the available settlement options are preserved until the entire balance is withdrawn or the balance drops below the insurer’s minimum balance requirements.
(d) A statement identifying the account as either a checking or draft account and an explanation of how the account works, including, but not limited to, any minimum check or draft amount requirements.
(e) Information about the account services provided and contact information where the beneficiary may request and obtain more details about those services.
(f) A description of any fees charged, if applicable.
(g) The frequency of statements showing the current account balance, the interest credited, drafts or checks written, and any other account activity. The insurer shall send the beneficiary at least one statement per quarter, and a statement for any month in which there has been account activity other than just the crediting of interest.
(h) The guaranteed minimum interest rate to be credited to the account, how the actual interest rate will be determined, and the actual interest rate that would be credited to a newly opened account as of the date the disclosure is issued. The actual interest rate may be disclosed by the insurer with the disclosures provided with the claim documents sent to the beneficiary, through a toll-free telephone number established by the insurer, or through the insurer’s Internet Web site.
(i) That the interest earned on the account may be taxable.
(j) Retained asset account funds held by insurance companies are not guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), but are guaranteed by State Guaranty Associations, and that the State Guaranty Association coverage limits vary by state.
(k) A statement that advises the beneficiary to contact the National Organization of Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Associations (NOLHGA) to learn more about the coverage limitations applicable to his or her account, and that provides the beneficiary with the current Internet Web site address and telephone number for NOLHGA.
(l) A description of the insurer’s policy regarding retained asset accounts that become inactive, including the policy with respect to inactive accounts that are at risk of escheating to the state pursuant to the California Unclaimed Property Law (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 1500) of Title 10 of Part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure).
(Added by Stats. 2011, Ch. 130, Sec. 1. (SB 713) Effective January 1, 2012.)