ENROLLED
Senate Bill No. 223
(By Senator Minard)
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[Passed March 11, 2006; in effect ninety days from passage.]
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AN ACT to amend and reenact §33-2-9 of the Code of West Virginia,
1931, as amended; to amend and reenact §33-20-12 of said code;
to amend and reenact §33-24-4 of said code; to amend and
reenact §33-25-10 of said code; and to amend and reenact §33-
25D-18 of said code, all relating to examinations of insurance
and health care entities; increasing the time in which
insurers, rating organizations and certain health care
entities may respond to examination reports from the Insurance
Commissioner; clarifying that the Insurance Fraud Prevention
Act applies to certain health care entities; and increasing
the minimum period in which examinations of certain health
care entities must be conducted by the Insurance Commissioner.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That §33-2-9 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended,
be amended and reenacted; that §33-20-12 of said code be amended and reenacted; that §33-24-4 of said code be amended and reenacted;
that §33-25-10 of said code be amended and reenacted; and that
§33-25D-18 of said code be amended and reenacted, all to read as
follows:
ARTICLE 2. INSURANCE COMMISSIONER.
§33-2-9. Examination of insurers, agents, brokers and solicitors;
access to books, records, etc.

(a) The purpose of this section is to provide an effective and
efficient system for examining the activities, operations,
financial condition and affairs of all persons transacting the
business of insurance in this state and all persons otherwise
subject to the jurisdiction of the commissioner. The provisions of
this section are intended to enable the commissioner to adopt a
flexible system of examinations which directs resources as may be
considered appropriate and necessary for the administration of the
insurance and insurance-related laws of this state.

(b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions
shall apply:

(1) "Commissioner" means the Commissioner of Insurance of this
state;

(2) "Company" or "insurance company" means any person engaging
in or proposing or attempting to engage in any transaction or kind
of insurance or surety business and any person or group of persons
who may otherwise be subject to the administrative, regulatory or
taxing authority of the commissioner, including, but not limited to, any domestic or foreign stock company, mutual company, mutual
protective association, farmers mutual fire companies, fraternal
benefit society, reciprocal or interinsurance exchange, nonprofit
medical care corporation, nonprofit health care corporation,
nonprofit hospital service association, nonprofit dental care
corporation, health maintenance organization, captive insurance
company, risk retention group or other insurer regardless of the
type of coverage written, benefits provided or guarantees made by
each;

(3) "Department" means the Department of Insurance of this
state; and

(4) "Examiners" means the Commissioner of Insurance or any
individual or firm having been authorized by the commissioner to
conduct an examination pursuant to this section, including, but not
limited to, the commissioner's deputies, other employees, appointed
examiners or other appointed individuals or firms who are not
employees of the Department of Insurance.

(c) The commissioner or his or her examiners may conduct an
examination under this section of any company as often as the
commissioner in his or her discretion considers appropriate. The
commissioner or his or her examiners shall at least once every five
years visit each domestic insurer and thoroughly examine its
financial condition and methods of doing business and ascertain
whether it has complied with all the laws and regulations of this
state. The commissioner may also examine the affairs of any
insurer applying for a license to transact any insurance business in this state.

(d) The commissioner or his or her examiners shall, at a
minimum, conduct an examination of every foreign or alien insurer
licensed in this state not less frequently than once every five
years. The examination of an alien insurer may be limited to its
United States business: Provided, That in lieu of an examination
under this section of any foreign or alien insurer licensed in this
state, the commissioner may accept an examination report on the
company as prepared by the insurance department for the company's
state of domicile or port-of-entry state until the first day of
January, one thousand nine hundred ninety-four. Thereafter, the
reports may only be accepted if:

(1) The insurance department was at the time of the
examination accredited under the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners' Financial Regulation Standards and Accreditation
Program; or

(2) The examination is performed under the supervision of an
accredited insurance department or with the participation of one or
more examiners who are employed by an accredited state insurance
department and who, after a review of the examination work papers
and report, state under oath that the examination was performed in
a manner consistent with the standards and procedures required by
their insurance department.

(e) In scheduling and determining the nature, scope and
frequency of examinations conducted pursuant to this section, the
commissioner may consider such matters as the results of financial statement analyses and ratios, changes in management or ownership,
actuarial opinions, reports of independent certified public
accountants and other criteria as set forth in the examiners'
handbook adopted by the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners and in effect when the commissioner exercises
discretion under this section.

(f) For purposes of completing an examination of any company
under this section, the commissioner may examine or investigate any
person, or the business of any person, insofar as the examination
or investigation is, in the sole discretion of the commissioner,
necessary or material to the examination of the company.

(g) The commissioner may also cause to be examined, at the
times as he or she considers necessary, the books, records, papers,
documents, correspondence and methods of doing business of any
agent, broker, excess lines broker or solicitor licensed by this
state. For these purposes, the commissioner or his or her
examiners shall have free access to all books, records, papers,
documents and correspondence of all the agents, brokers, excess
lines brokers and solicitors wherever the books, records, papers,
documents and records are situate. The commissioner may revoke the
license of any agent, broker, excess lines broker or solicitor who
refuses to submit to the examination.

(h) In addition to conducting an examination, the commissioner
or his or her examiners may, as the commissioner considers
necessary, analyze or review any phase of the operations or methods
of doing business of an insurer, agent, broker, excess lines broker, solicitor or other individual or corporation transacting or
attempting to transact an insurance business in the State of West
Virginia. The commissioner may use the full resources provided by
this section in carrying out these responsibilities, including any
personnel and equipment provided by this section as the
commissioner considers necessary.

(i) Examinations made pursuant to this section shall be
conducted in the following manner:

(1) Upon determining that an examination should be conducted,
the commissioner or his or her designee shall issue an examination
warrant appointing one or more examiners to perform the examination
and instructing them as to the scope of the examination. The
appointment of any examiners pursuant to this section by the
commissioner shall not be subject to the requirements of article
three, chapter five-a of this code, except that the contracts and
agreements shall be approved as to form and conformity with
applicable law by the Attorney General. In conducting the
examination, the examiner shall observe those guidelines and
procedures set forth in the examiners' handbook adopted by the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners. The commissioner
may also employ any other guidelines or procedures as the
commissioner may consider appropriate;

(2) Every company or person from whom information is sought,
its officers, directors and agents shall provide to the examiners
appointed under subdivision (1) of this subsection timely,
convenient and free access at all reasonable hours at its offices to all books, records, accounts, papers, documents and any or all
computer or other recordings relating to the property, assets,
business and affairs of the company being examined. The officers,
directors, employees and agents of the company or person shall
facilitate the examination and aid in the examination so far as it
is in their power to do so;

(3) The refusal of any company, by its officers, directors,
employees or agents, to submit to examination or to comply with any
reasonable written request of the examiners shall be grounds for
suspension, revocation, refusal or nonrenewal of any license or
authority held by the company to engage in an insurance or other
business subject to the commissioner's jurisdiction. Any
proceedings for suspension, revocation, refusal or nonrenewal of
any license or authority shall be conducted pursuant to section
eleven of this article;

(4) The commissioner or his or her examiners shall have the
power to issue subpoenas, to administer oaths and to examine under
oath any person as to any matter pertinent to the examination,
analysis or review. The subpoenas shall be enforced pursuant to
the provisions of section six of this article;

(5) When making an examination, analysis or review under this
section, the commissioner may retain attorneys, appraisers,
independent actuaries, independent certified public accountants,
professionals or specialists with training or experience in
reinsurance, investments or information systems or other
professionals and specialists as examiners, the cost of which shall be borne by the company which is the subject of the examination,
analysis or review or, in the commissioner's discretion, paid from
the Commissioner's Examination Revolving Fund. The commissioner
may recover costs paid from the Commissioner's Examination
Revolving Fund pursuant to this subdivision from the company upon
which the examination, analysis or review is conducted unless the
subject of the examination, analysis or review is an individual
described in subdivision (2), subsection (q) of this section;

(6) Nothing contained in this section may be construed to
limit the commissioner's authority to terminate or suspend any
examination, analysis or review in order to pursue other legal or
regulatory action pursuant to the insurance laws of this state.
The commissioner or his or her examiners may at any time testify
and offer other proper evidence as to information secured during
the course of an examination, analysis or review whether or not a
written report of the examination has at that time either been
made, served or filed in the commissioner's office;

(7) Nothing contained in this section may be construed to
limit the commissioner's authority to use and, if appropriate, to
make public any final or preliminary examination report, any
examiner or company workpapers or other documents or any other
information discovered or developed during the course of any
examination, analysis or review in the furtherance of any legal or
regulatory action which the commissioner may, in his or her sole
discretion, consider appropriate. An examination report, when
filed, shall be admissible in evidence in any action or proceeding brought by the commissioner against an insurance company, its
officers or agents and shall be prima facie evidence of the facts
stated therein.

(j) Examination reports prepared pursuant to the provisions of
this section shall comply with the following requirements:

(1) All examination reports shall be comprised of only facts
appearing upon the books, records or other documents of the
company, its agents or other persons examined or as ascertained
from the testimony of its officers or agents or other persons
examined concerning its affairs and any conclusions and
recommendations the examiners find reasonably warranted from the
facts;

(2) No later than sixty days following completion of the
examination the examiner in charge shall file with the commissioner
a verified written report of examination under oath. Upon receipt
of the verified report, the commissioner shall transmit the report
to the company examined, together with a notice which shall afford
the company examined a reasonable opportunity of not more than
thirty days to make a written submission or rebuttal with respect
to any matters contained in the examination report;

(3) Within thirty days of the end of the period allowed for
the receipt of written submissions or rebuttals the commissioner
shall fully consider and review the report, together with any
written submissions or rebuttals and any relevant portions of the
examiner's workpapers and enter an order:

(A) Adopting the examination report as filed or with modification or corrections. If the examination report reveals
that the company is operating in violation of any law, rule or
prior order of the commissioner, the commissioner may order the
company to take any action the commissioner considers necessary and
appropriate to cure the violation; or

(B) Rejecting the examination report with directions to the
examiners to reopen the examination for purposes of obtaining
additional data, documentation or information and refiling pursuant
to subdivision (2) of this subsection; or

(C) Calling for an investigatory hearing with no less than
twenty days' notice to the company for purposes of obtaining
additional documentation, data, information and testimony;

(4) All orders entered pursuant to this subsection shall be
accompanied by findings and conclusions resulting from the
commissioner's consideration and review of the examination report,
relevant examiner workpapers and any written submissions or
rebuttals. Any order issued pursuant to paragraph (A), subdivision
(3) of this subsection shall be considered a final administrative
decision and may be appealed pursuant to section fourteen of this
article and shall be served upon the company by certified mail,
together with a copy of the adopted examination report. Within
thirty days of the issuance of the adopted report the company shall
file affidavits executed by each of its directors stating under
oath that they have received a copy of the adopted report and
related orders.

(k) Hearings conducted pursuant to this section shall be subject to the following requirements:

(1) Any hearing conducted pursuant to this section by the
commissioner or the commissioner's authorized representative shall
be conducted as a nonadversarial, confidential investigatory
proceeding as necessary for the resolution of any inconsistencies,
discrepancies or disputed issues apparent upon the face of the
filed examination report or raised by or as a result of the
commissioner's review of relevant workpapers or by the written
submission or rebuttal of the company. Within twenty days of the
conclusion of any hearing, the commissioner shall enter an order
pursuant to paragraph (A), subdivision (3), subsection (j) of this
section;

(2) The commissioner may not appoint an examiner as an
authorized representative to conduct the hearing. The hearing
shall proceed expeditiously with discovery by the company limited
to the examiner's workpapers which tend to substantiate any
assertions set forth in any written submission or rebuttal. The
commissioner or the commissioner's representative may issue
subpoenas for the attendance of any witnesses or the production of
any documents considered relevant to the investigation whether
under the control of the commissioner, the company or other
persons. The documents produced shall be included in the record
and testimony taken by the commissioner or the commissioner's
representative shall be under oath and preserved for the record.
Nothing contained in this section shall require the commissioner to
disclose any information or records which would indicate or show the existence or content of any investigation or activity of a
criminal justice agency;

(3) The hearing shall proceed with the commissioner or the
commissioner's representative posing questions to the persons
subpoenaed. Thereafter, the company and the department may present
testimony relevant to the investigation. Cross-examination may be
conducted only by the commissioner or the commissioner's
representative. The company and the commissioner shall be
permitted to make closing statements and may be represented by
counsel of their choice.

(l) Adoption of the examination report shall be subject to the
following requirements:

(1) Upon the adoption of the examination report under
paragraph (A), subdivision (3), subsection (j) of this section, the
commissioner may continue to hold the content of the examination
report as private and confidential information for a period of
ninety days except to the extent provided in subdivision (6),
subsection (i) of this section. Thereafter, the commissioner may
open the report for public inspection so long as no court of
competent jurisdiction has stayed its publication;

(2) Nothing contained in this section may prevent or be
construed as prohibiting the commissioner from disclosing the
content of an examination report, preliminary examination report or
results or any matter relating thereto or the results of any
analysis or review to the insurance department of this or any other
state or country or to law-enforcement officials of this or any other state or agency of the federal government at any time, so
long as the agency or office receiving the report or matters
relating thereto agrees in writing to hold it confidential and in
a manner consistent with this section;

(3) In the event the commissioner determines that regulatory
action is appropriate as a result of any examination, analysis or
review, he or she may initiate any proceedings or actions as
provided by law;

(4) All working papers, recorded information, documents and
copies thereof produced by, obtained by or disclosed to the
commissioner or any other person in the course of an examination,
analysis or review made under this section must be given
confidential treatment and are not subject to subpoena and may not
be made public by the commissioner or any other person, except to
the extent provided in subdivision (5), subsection (i) of this
section. Access may also be granted in accordance with section
nineteen of this article. The parties must agree in writing prior
to receiving the information to provide to it the same confidential
treatment as required by this section unless the prior written
consent of the company to which it pertains has been obtained.

(m) The commissioner may require any examiner to furnish a
bond in such amount as commissioner may determine to be appropriate
and the bond shall be approved, filed and premium paid, with
suitable proof submitted to the commissioner, prior to commencement
of employment by the commissioner. No examiner may be appointed by
the commissioner if the examiner, either directly or indirectly, has a conflict of interest or is affiliated with the management of
or owns a pecuniary interest in any person subject to examination
under this section. This section shall not be construed to
automatically preclude an examiner from being:

(1) A policyholder or claimant under an insurance policy;

(2) A grantor of a mortgage or similar instrument on the
examiner's residence to a regulated entity if done under customary
terms and in the ordinary course of business;

(3) An investment owner in shares of regulated diversified
investment companies; or

(4) A settlor or beneficiary of a "blind trust" into which any
otherwise impermissible holdings have been placed;

(5) Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection, the
commissioner may retain, from time to time, on an individual basis
qualified actuaries, certified public accountants or other similar
individuals who are independently practicing their professions even
though these persons may, from time to time, be similarly employed
or retained by persons subject to examination under this section.

(n) Personnel conducting examinations, analyses or reviews of
either a domestic, foreign or alien insurer shall be compensated
for each day worked at a rate set by the commissioner. The
personnel shall also be reimbursed for their travel and living
expenses at the rate set by the commissioner. Other individuals
who are not employees of the Department of Insurance shall all be
compensated for their work, travel and living expenses at rates
approved by the commissioner or as otherwise provided by law. As used in this section, the costs of an examination, analysis or
review means:

(1) The entire compensation for each day worked by all
personnel, including those who are not employees of the Department
of Insurance, the conduct of the examination, analysis or review
calculated as hereinbefore provided;

(2) Travel and living expenses of all personnel, including
those who are not employees of the Department of Insurance,
directly engaged in the conduct of the examination, analysis or
review calculated at the rates as hereinbefore provided for;

(3) All other incidental expenses incurred by or on behalf of
the personnel in the conduct of any authorized examination,
analysis or review.

(o) (1) All property and casualty insurers subject to the
provisions of this section shall annually pay to the commissioner
on or before the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred
ninety-one, and every first day of July thereafter an examination
assessment fee of up to five thousand dollars. Four hundred fifty
dollars of this fee shall be paid to the Treasurer of the state to
the credit of a special revolving fund to be known as the
Commissioner's Examination Revolving Fund which is hereby
established; up to four thousand two hundred dollars shall be paid
to the Treasurer of the state to the credit of the Unfair Claims
Settlement Practice Trust Fund established in section four-b,
article eleven of this chapter and three hundred fifty dollars
shall be paid to the Treasurer of the state. If the trust fund has moneys in excess of one million dollars, the examination assessment
fee shall be eight hundred dollars and the five thousand dollar fee
shall only be reinstated at whatever amount the commissioner deems
necessary to maintain the fund, if the fund value goes below one
million dollars. The commissioner may at his or her discretion,
upon notice to the insurers subject to this subsection, increase
this examination assessment fee or levy an additional examination
assessment fee of two hundred fifty dollars. In no event may the
total examination assessment fee, including any additional
examination assessment fee levied, exceed five thousand two hundred
fifty dollars per insurer in any calendar year.

(2) All insurers other than property and casualty insurers
subject to the provisions of this section shall annually pay to the
commissioner on or before the first day of July, one thousand nine
hundred ninety-one, and every first day of July thereafter an
examination assessment fee of eight hundred dollars. Four hundred
fifty dollars of this fee shall be paid to the Treasurer of the
state to the credit the Commissioner's Examination Revolving Fund
and three hundred fifty dollars shall be paid to the Treasurer of
the state. The commissioner may at his or her discretion, upon
notice to the insurers subject to this subsection, increase this
examination assessment fee or levy an additional examination
assessment fee of two hundred fifty dollars. In no event may the
total examination assessment fee, including any additional
examination assessment fee levied, exceed one thousand five hundred
dollars per insurer in any calendar year.

(p) The moneys collected by the commissioner from an increase
or additional examination assessment fee shall be paid to the
Treasurer of the state to be credited to the commissioner's
Examination Revolving Fund. Any funds expended or obligated by the
commissioner from the Commissioner's Examination Revolving Fund may
be expended or obligated solely for defrayment of the costs of
examinations, analyses or reviews of the financial affairs and
business practices of insurance companies, agents, brokers, excess
lines brokers, solicitors or other individuals or corporations
transacting or attempting to transact an insurance business in this
state made by the commissioner pursuant to this section or for the
purchase of equipment and supplies, travel, education and training
for the commissioner's deputies, other employees and appointed
examiners necessary for the commissioner to fulfill the statutory
obligations created by this section.

(q) The commissioner may require other individuals who are not
employees of the Department of Insurance who have been appointed by
the commissioner to conduct or participate in the examination,
analysis or review of insurers, agents, brokers, excess lines
brokers, solicitors or other individuals or corporations
transacting or attempting to transact an insurance business in this
state to:

(1) Bill and receive payments directly from the insurance
company being examined, analyzed or reviewed for their work, travel
and living expenses as previously provided in this section; or

(2) If an individual agent, broker or solicitor is being examined, analyzed or reviewed, bill and receive payments directly
from the Commissioner's Examination Revolving Fund for their work,
travel and living expenses as previously provided in this section.
The commissioner may recover costs paid from the Commissioner's
Examination Revolving Fund pursuant to this subdivision from the
person upon whom the examination, analysis or review is conducted.

(r) The commissioner and his or her examiners shall be
entitled to immunity to the following extent:

(1) No cause of action shall arise nor shall any liability be
imposed against the commissioner or his or her examiners for any
statements made or conduct performed in good faith while carrying
out the provisions of this section;

(2) No cause of action shall arise, nor shall any liability be
imposed, against any person for the act of communicating or
delivering information or data to the commissioner or his or her
examiners pursuant to an examination, analysis or review made under
this section if the act of communication or delivery was performed
in good faith and without fraudulent intent or the intent to
deceive;

(3) The commissioner or any examiner shall be entitled to an
award of attorney's fees and costs if he or she is the prevailing
party in a civil cause of action for libel, slander or any other
relevant tort arising out of activities in carrying out the
provisions of this section and the party bringing the action was
not substantially justified in doing so. For purposes of this
section, a proceeding is "substantially justified" if it had a reasonable basis in law or fact at the time that it was initiated;

(4) This subsection does not abrogate or modify in any way any
constitutional immunity or common law or statutory privilege or
immunity heretofore enjoyed by any person identified in subdivision
(1) of this subsection.
ARTICLE 20. RATES AND RATING ORGANIZATIONS.
§33-20-12. Examinations.

(a) The commissioner shall, at least once in five years, make
or cause to be made an examination of each rating organization
licensed under the provisions of section six of this article and he
or she may, as often as he or she may deem it expedient, make or
cause to be made an examination of each advisory organization
referred to in section ten of this article and of each group,
association or other organization referred to in section eleven of
this article. The reasonable costs of any such examination shall
be paid by the rating organization, advisory organization, or
group, association or other organization examined upon presentation
to it of a detailed account of such costs. The officers, managers,
agents and employees of such rating organization, advisory
organization, or group, association or other organization may be
examined at any time under oath and shall exhibit all books,
records, accounts, documents or agreements governing its method of
operation. The commissioner shall furnish two copies of the
examination report to the organization, group or association
examined not less than thirty days prior to filing same in his or
her office. If such organization, group or association so requests in writing, within such thirty-day period, the commissioner shall
consider the objections, if any, to such report as proposed and
shall not file such report until such modifications, if any, have
been made therein as the commissioner deems proper. The report
when so filed shall be admissible in any action or proceeding
brought by the commissioner against the organization, group or
association examined, or its officers or agents, and shall be prima
facie evidence of the facts stated therein. The commissioner may
withhold the report of any such examination for such time as he or
she may deem proper.

(b) In lieu of any such examination the commissioner may
accept the report of an examination made by the insurance
supervisory official of another state, pursuant to the laws of such
state.
ARTICLE 24. HOSPITAL SERVICE CORPORATIONS, MEDICAL SERVICE
CORPORATIONS, DENTAL SERVICE CORPORATIONS AND
HEALTH SERVICE CORPORATIONS.
§33-24-4. Exemptions; applicability of insurance laws.

Every corporation defined in section two of this article is
hereby declared to be a scientific, nonprofit institution and
exempt from the payment of all property and other taxes. Every
corporation, to the same extent the provisions are applicable to
insurers transacting similar kinds of insurance and not
inconsistent with the provisions of this article, shall be governed
by and be subject to the provisions as herein below indicated, of
the following articles of this chapter: Article two (Insurance Commissioner); article four (general provisions), except that
section sixteen of said article may not be applicable thereto;
section twenty, article five (borrowing by insurers); section
thirty-four, article six (fee for form, rate and rule filing);
article six-c (guaranteed loss ratios as applied to individual
sickness and accident insurance policies); article seven (assets
and liabilities); article eight-a (use of clearing corporations and
federal reserve book-entry system); article eleven (unfair trade
practices); article twelve ( insurance producers and solicitors),
except that the agent's license fee shall be twenty-five dollars;
section two-a, article fifteen (definitions); section two-b,
article fifteen (guaranteed issue; limitation of coverage;
election; denial of coverage; network plans); section two-d,
article fifteen ( exceptions to guaranteed renewability); section
two-e, article fifteen (discontinuation of particular type of
coverage; uniform termination of all coverage; uniform modification
of coverage); section two-f, article fifteen (certification of
creditable coverage); section two-g, article fifteen
(applicability); section four-e, article fifteen (benefits for
mothers and newborns); section fourteen, article fifteen ( policies
discriminating among health care providers); section sixteen,
article fifteen ( policies not to exclude insured's children from
coverage; required services; coordination with other insurance);
section eighteen, article fifteen (equal treatment of state
agency); section nineteen, article fifteen (coordination of
benefits with medicaid); article fifteen-a (West Virginia Long-Term Care Insurance Act); article fifteen-c (diabetes insurance);
section three, article sixteen (required policy provisions);
section three-a, article sixteen (same - mental health); section
three-d, article sixteen (medicare supplement insurance); section
three-f, article sixteen (required policy provisions - treatment of
temporomandibular joint disorder and craniomandibular disorder);
section three-j, article sixteen (hospital benefits for mothers and
newborns); section three-k, article sixteen (limitations on
preexisting condition exclusions for health benefit plans); section
three-l, article sixteen ( renewability and modification of health
benefit plans); section three-m, article sixteen (creditable
coverage); section three-n, article sixteen (eligibility for
enrollment); section eleven, article sixteen ( group policies not
to exclude insured's children from coverage; required services;
coordination with other insurance); section thirteen, article
sixteen (equal treatment of state agency); section fourteen,
article sixteen (coordination of benefits with medicaid); section
sixteen, article sixteen ( insurance for diabetics); article
sixteen-a (group health insurance conversion); article sixteen-c (
employer group accident and sickness insurance policies); article
sixteen-d (marketing and rate practices for small employer accident
and sickness insurance policies); article twenty-six-a (West
Virginia Life and Health Insurance Guaranty Association Act), after
the first day of October, one thousand nine hundred ninety-one;
article twenty-seven (insurance holding company systems); article
twenty-eight (individual accident and sickness insurance minimum standards); article thirty-three (annual audited financial report);
article thirty-four (administrative supervision); article thirty-
four-a (standards and commissioner's authority for companies deemed
to be in hazardous financial condition); article thirty-five
(criminal sanctions for failure to report impairment); article
thirty-seven (managing general agents); and article forty-one (
Insurance Fraud Prevention Act) and no other provision of this
chapter may apply to these corporations unless specifically made
applicable by the provisions of this article. If, however, the
corporation is converted into a corporation organized for a
pecuniary profit or if it transacts business without having
obtained a license as required by section five of this article, it
shall thereupon forfeit its right to these exemptions.
ARTICLE 25. HEALTH CARE CORPORATIONS.
§33-25-10. Examination of corporation; report of examination;
objections to report; access to books, records,
etc.; removal of records, etc., from state.

(a) The commissioner or his or her accredited examiners may at
any reasonable time and shall, at least once every five years,
visit each health care corporation and thoroughly examine its
financial condition and methods of doing business and ascertain
whether it has complied with all of the laws and rules of this
state. All expenses of each such examination conducted shall be
borne by such corporation. The commissioner shall make a full
written report of each such examination of the corporation,
certified to by the commissioner or the examiner in charge of such examinations. The commissioner shall furnish a copy of the report
to the corporation examined not less than thirty days prior to
filing the same in his or her office. If such corporation so
requests in writing, within such thirty-day period, the
commissioner shall consider the objections of such corporation to
the report as proposed and shall not so file the report until after
such modifications, if any, have been made therein as the
commissioner deems proper. The report, when filed, shall be
admissible in evidence in any action or proceeding brought by the
commissioner against the corporation examined, or its officers or
agents, and shall be prima facie evidence of the facts stated
therein. The commissioner or his or her examiners may at any time
testify and offer other proper evidence as to information secured
during the course of an examination, whether or not a written
report of the examination has at that time been either made, served
or filed in the commissioner's office.

(b) For such purposes the commissioner, his or her deputies
and employees shall have free access to all books, records, papers,
documents and correspondence of any such corporation and such
books, records, papers, documents and records shall be and remain
in the State of West Virginia. The licenses of said corporation
shall be automatically revoked if such books, records, papers,
documents and records are taken outside the State of West Virginia
without the prior written approval of the commissioner.

(c) The commissioner shall revoke the license of any such
corporation which refuses to submit to such examination.
ARTICLE 25D. PREPAID LIMITED HEALTH SERVICE ORGANIZATION ACT.
§33-25D-18. Examinations.

(a) The commissioner may make an examination of the affairs of
any prepaid limited health service organization and providers with
whom the organization has contracts, agreements or other
arrangements as often as he or she considers it necessary for the
protection of the interests of the people of this state but not
less frequently than once every five years.

(b) The commissioner may contract with the Department of
Health and Human Resources, any entity which has been accredited by
a nationally recognized accrediting organization and has been
approved by the commissioner to make examinations concerning the
quality of health care services of any prepaid limited health
service organization and providers with whom the organization has
contracts, agreements or other arrangements, or any such entity
contracted with by the Department of Health and Human Resources, as
often as it considers necessary for the protection of the interests
of the people of this state, but not less frequently than once
every five years: Provided, That in making the examination, the
Department of Health and Human Resources or the accredited entity
shall utilize the services of persons or organizations with
demonstrable expertise in assessing quality of health care.

(c) Every prepaid limited health service organization and
affiliated provider shall submit its books and records to the
examinations and in every way facilitate them. For the purpose of
examinations, the commissioner and the Department of Health and Human Resources have all powers necessary to conduct the
examinations, including, but not limited to, the power to issue
subpoenas, the power to administer oaths to and examine the
officers and agents of the prepaid limited health service
organization and the principals of the providers concerning their
business.

(d) The prepaid limited health service organization is subject
to the provisions of section nine, article two of this chapter in
regard to the expense and conduct of examinations.

(e) In lieu of the examination, the commissioner may accept
the report of an examination made by another state.

(f) The expenses of an examination assessing quality of health
care under subsection (b) of this section and section nineteen of
this article shall be reimbursed pursuant to subdivision (5),
subsection (i), section nine, article two of this chapter.