CSHB 120(RLS)am-SERVICE CONTRACTS  CHAIR BUNDE announced CSHB 120(RLS)am to be up for consideration. REPRESENTATIVE JOHN COGHILL, sponsor of HB 120, said this bill speaks to a gray area in law about service contracts. He said the past administration made a ruling that a company like Sears can provide a service contract through a direct retailing outfit. However, if service is provided under other contracts, it must be provided as insurance rather than as a contract. The present administration wants this issue clarified. The bill will take service contracts out of the insurance statute. He noted he has made sure the service contracts in the motor vehicle industry are very clearly not a part of this discussion. CHAIR BUNDE noted a letter from Linda Hall, Director of the Division of Insurance, in which she states that HB 120 is beneficial to both the division and those entities that provide service contracts. He asked if it will benefit consumers as well. MS. LINDA HALL, Director, Division of Insurance, replied that she thought so. The issue of what is and is not insurance has been problematic for a number of years. This bill clarifies that issue, which should benefit all involved. SENATOR STEVENS asked if a service contract and an extended warranty are the same thing. MS. HALL replied that they are technically the same thing. An extended warranty is normally offered by a manufacturer; a service contract does similar things, but is from a different entity and is purchased. This bill addresses the service contracts. CHAIR BUNDE said he thought a service contract would take care of routine maintenance that wouldn't be part of a warranty. MS. HALL elaborated that service contracts cover things that are generally operational. SENATOR FRENCH said he was interested in the exemption that takes service contracts out of the purview of the Division of Insurance and that service contracts include servicing things made by other people. He asked if once they are taken out of the division's purview, another entity will police how they are administered and regulated. He asked who he would complain to if Best Buy conned him into buying a $30 service contract on his new television but wouldn't come out and fix it. MS. HALL replied that court would be an option, but there is a consumer protection agency somewhere. SENATOR STEVENS moved to pass CSHB 120 (RLS) am from committee with its zero fiscal note and individual recommendations. SENATORS FRENCH, DAVIS, STEVENS and BUNDE voted yea and it moved on to its next committee of referral.