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By Staff Writer |
December 13, 2011
An assistant to former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has been named regional manager and counsel for the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America in the Sunshine State.
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By Joan E. Collier, PropertyCasualty360.com |
October 27, 2011
If the numerous PIP bills in the pipeline for 2012 are not enough to get people’s engines running, there are several other driving-related bills that are guaranteed to stir things up.
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By Joan E. Collier, PropertyCasualty360.com |
July 27, 2011
Our August issue is jam-packed with a wide range of insurance topics from property insurance to workers’ compensation to health reform to surplus lines to office technology. Think of it as our summer reading gift to you.
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By William Stander |
June 28, 2011
Like being stuck in a recurring dream, the people of Florida continue to face the vexing question of what to do with a no-fault automobile insurance system that forces them to pay more than necessary for insurance. It’s time to wake up.
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By Joan E. Collier, PropertyCasualty360.com |
May 9, 2011
The Florida Legislature passed bills that significantly remake the state’s Medicaid program.
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By Joan E. Collier, PropertyCasualty360.com |
April 29, 2011
The CMS is saying "not so fast" to Florida's plans to take a Medicaid pilot program statewide.
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By Sharon K. Moorhead |
August 1, 2010
Arturo Hoyo takes over as chair of the Florida Association of Independent Agents in September. The insurance veteran has more than three decades of industry experience, most of it in the densely populated Miami area.
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By Gary Fineout |
July 1, 2010
The fate of Florida's fragile property insurance market may depend heavily on what happens in the next round of elections in the Sunshine State.
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By Fred E. Karlinsky, Esq. |
June 1, 2010
Florida's personal and commercial residential property insurance market today consists mostly of small domestic insurers, Citizens Property Insurance Corp. and State Farm Florida Insurance Co.
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By Gary Fineout |
April 1, 2010
After years of fighting between politicians and Florida's property insurers, it appears that the state's private carriers may be on the verge of getting the ability to raise their rates by a limited amount.