Principles for requiring gun insurance that would protect everyone
A new posting on YouTube by this blog.
For gun insurance to be effective it must be designed for the situation we have with guns. If the wishes of either the NRA which wants guns everywhere or gun control advocates who would have no guns are applied than we would not have effective protection from insurance. This video describes the principles needed.
The first local laws have been
passed to require gun insurance. These are for liability insurance
requiring fault by the gun owner or shooter and certainly don’t pay directly to
victims or cover all guns. But this is a
start on a path that as it evolves will give good protection and promote
safety.
The
first gun insurance requirements have been passed into law in the United
States. Let us celebrate the beginnings
of a culture of responsibility around firearms.
Two separate jurisdictions at opposite ends of the country have launched
on this long awaited return to sanity.
This video looks at the new gun insurance laws in California
and New Jersey. What they cover, where
they came from and where they’re going.
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The
first local laws to require insurance for gun owners will go into effect in 2023. They have been passed and signed into law by
the Mayor of San Jose, California and the Governor of New Jersey.
San Jose requires gun permits but exempts those who have
concealed carry permits, New Jersey’s new law only applies to those with
concealed-carry permits.
You can
see from this that it is only a step toward the insurance we need. These laws take great care to avoid various
kinds of potential interference with gun ownership. The exceptions limit the usefulness and
protection of the insurance, BUT this care proves that the objections of gun
proponents are misguided. As we learn
from the new laws, we’ll find ways to make the insurance more effective.
Insurance can be tailored to the requirements of a
specific risky activity. This is why
it’s a powerful tool both to allow the activity and to mitigate the harm that
results.
We need
insurance that pays benefits to victims, applies without excessive delay and
litigation, and which covers all guns. This
current baby step is important but it will need to followed by more steps that
lead to the goals.
The
ordinance in San Jose takes effect in January.
The Mayor, Sam Liccardo, thanked
those who helped pass the ordinance and
“the many others who work tirelessly to help craft a constitutionally compliant
path to mitigate the unnecessary suffering from gun harm in our community.” The ordinance only covers accidents
that involve firearms. The city plan
envisions that homeowner’s insurance will handle most cases with minimal
changes. That is, no-doubt, the reason
excluding intentional shootings.
Most homeowner’s policies have this exclusion and it would
be a major disruption for insurers to require it to change. Another factor is that there is no specific
loss limit required, this would allow existing insurance to apply regardless of
its limits.
San
Jose’s requirement does not apply to peace officers. That is not unusual as police, even retired
police, have been exempted from many gun laws.
Also exempted are holders of
concealed carry permits. Both exemptions are somewhat illogical as the law
isn’t aimed at preventing anyone from having a gun and it applies only to
accidents.
While
the new ordinance in San Jose was passed in February 2022, its implementation
was delayed by lawsuits from gun supporters.
Most of these have been dismissed and the law is to take effect. Additional lawsuits are expected.
The new
law in New Jersey on the other hand covers those who have
concealed-carry permits. It was enacted
in December 2022 and will take effect in July ‘23. When he signed the bill Governor Phil Murphy
said:
“today’s law fully
respects the Second Amendment while keeping guns out of the wrong hands and
preventing them from proliferating in our communities.”
As expected, lawsuits were immediately filed by gun
proponents.
New Jersey previously had a restrictive law allowing
concealed-carry permits. That law was
struck down by the US Supreme Court. Before
in 2021 there were 870 concealed-carry applications, but the number is now expected
to rise to about 11,000. The insurance
requirement is part of a new package which governs concealed carry in
accordance with this decision.
Applicants for permits will have to demonstrate insurance compliance.
It calls for liability insurance
and would only apply if the gun carrier is at fault. The required insurance limit is
$300,000.00 The governor’s statements
show that he contemplates that homeowner’s insurance can meet the requirements;
but, given the many limitations in typical policies, this will be complex.
These two new laws will launch a
process that will require a substantial time to complete. In addition to the inevitable court battles,
there will be bills introduced and debated in other legislative bodies. This process has happened in other areas
before.
For example, requirements for
insurance for cars started in the early 1930’s and were not fully developed
until the 1960’s. In that case, the
first laws in many states were “financial responsibility laws” which only
required insurance for people who had already been unable to pay for the
consequences of car accidents. While the
insurance industry has often claimed that a new requirement can’t be
implemented, they have historically been able to adapt to whatever is
needed. They will do that now.
Both of the laws assume that
most cases will be handled by some extension of homeowners insurance. As gun insurance matures and adapts to the
needs of supporting victims and providing gun safety, homeowners insurance may
continue to play an important part. The
terms will need to be specifically defined to give coverage of all the
possibilities and to allow the insurer to be protected from particularly
dangerous persons and weapons. In the
less dangerous cases, it should not raise costs greatly. There will be many situations outside the
willingness of home insurance carriers to absorb the risks, and in these cases
special insurance will need to be developed and priced.
Requiring
insurance need not interfere with the safe use of an insured activity or thing. We continue to drive with an insurance
requirement, we work at jobs with workers compensation and we require insurance
for many commercial activities. In all
of these cases the protection provided by the insurance mitigates the risks and
reduces the need for tight regulation.
Insurance is both a means and a symbol of responsibility. We need responsibility around firearms if we
are to allow their existence and reduce their dangers.