SB 138-INSURANCE CODE AMENDMENTS  CHAIRMAN RANDY PHILLIPS called the Senate Labor & Commerce Committee meeting to order at 1:32 p.m. and announced SB 138 to be up for consideration. MR. BOB LOHR, Director, Division of Insurance, explained that the Division had worked closely with every interest group that has expressed interest about any portion of the bill and has achieved agreement on each point. The committee substitute reflects all of those changes. He said that SB 138 focuses on implementing changes at the federal level that are contained in the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), which largely eliminated the barriers among banking, securities and insurance industries. It allowed mergers and take-overs among those. There is very recent evidence that that is happening. The bill also reforms the way insurance regulation will occur in this country and requires states to consider a number of different changes in their regulatory structures for insurance and this bill reflects those changes in three basic areas. It includes producer licensing to make it much more straight forward and faster for non-residents to obtain a license in all 51 jurisdictions. Secondly, it deals with consumer privacy provisions and authority for states to adopt privacy provisions by regulation that at least equal the federally adopted regulations on privacy; and, if states go beyond those privacy provisions to be more protective of privacy, they will be upheld under the GLBA. The third area of emphasis in the bill is the consumer protection provision, which deals especially with banks selling insurance. MR. JOHN GEORGE, American Council of Life Insurance, National Association of Independent Insurers and AFLAC, said they negotiated with the Division of Insurance who graciously accepted many of their proposals and they support the committee substitute to SB 138. SENATOR DAVIS moved to adopt version F CS to SB 138 with individual recommendations. There were no objections and it was so ordered. MR. DAVE HALE, Alaska Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers, supported CSSB 138. CHAIRMAN PHILLIPS asked if they had ever resolved the third party liability issue with worker's compensation. MR. LOHR responded that concern had been addressed under the revised language in the privacy section. MR. GEORGE concurred with that statement. CHAIRMAN PHILLIPS said he would hold SB 138 until Thursday for further work.