A House Republican is driving forward with plans to replace thestate's “no-fault” auto insurance coverage, two years afterlawmakers passed reforms to try to rid the system of fraud.
|However, the proposal continues to be reviewed in a“deliberative and thoughtful manner” in the Senate as a number ofinsurance officials have tempered their call for a change after aconstitutional challenge to the 2012 reform law was recentlysidetracked.
|Rep. Carlos Trujillo, R-Miami, on Tuesday filed two measures (HB267 and HB 269) directed at making bodily injury coverage, which avast majority of motorists in Florida already purchase, thereplacement for no-fault.
|Read the entire story in Florida's Sun Sentinel fromJim Turner of the News Service of Florida HERE.
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