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Press Release

Contact:

Bob Young
510-251-9470

For Release:

November 29, 2021

Dept. of Industrial Relations Announces 2022 User Funding Assessment Rates

Oakland, CA - The California Department of Industrial Relations (DIR) has issued the 2022 assessments that workers’ compensation insurers are required to collect from policyholders to cover the budget of the state Division of Workers’ Compensation (DWC) and five related programs set up by state lawmakers.  Insurers should apply the following rates against their policyholders’ estimated annual assessable premium for policies incepting January 1, 2022 through December 31, 2022: 

2022 WC Administration Revolving Fund Assessment: 0.019277
2022 Uninsured Employers Benefits Trust Fund Assessment:  0.001455
2022 Subsequent Injuries Benefits Trust Fund Assessment: 0.017451
2022 Occupational Safety & Health Fund Assessment: 0.009177
2022 Labor Enforcement & Compliance Fund Assessment: 0.007102
2022 WC Fraud Account Assessment: 0.004856

State law also requires insurers to advance the money on behalf of their policyholders (the first installment is due on or before January 1, 2022; the balance is due on or before April 1, 2022), then recoup the funds via surcharges and assessments on all workers’ compensation policies with 2022 inception dates.  Assessment methodologies are noted in the memos DIR posted this week.  The DIR memo to insurers notes that for single carriers that are not part of an insurer group and that reported data to the WCIRB on an individual company basis for 2020, “Total California Direct Written Premium for assessment purposes is the amount reported for calendar year 2020 to the WCIRB, which reflects the premiums charged to policyholders with the exception that it excludes the impact of deductible credits, retrospective rating adjustments, and policyholder dividends.”  For insurers that are part of an insurer reporting group that reported data to the WCIRB for 2020, “Total California Direct Written Premium for assessment purposes is the product of (a) the total 2020 written premium reported to the WCIRB on the aforementioned basis and (b) the ratio of the company’s 2020 California written premium as reported in the 2020 Statutory Annual Statement (these amounts include the effect of deductible credits and retrospective rating adjustments) to the total 2020 Statutory Annual Statement of California written premium reported for your insurer group as a whole.”

To cover their share of the 2022 assessments, self-insured and California legally uninsured employers must apply the following rates against the total amount of workers’ compensation indemnity they paid:  

2022 WC Administration Revolving Fund Assessment: 0.031386 
2022 Uninsured Employers Benefits Trust Fund Assessment:  0.002301
2022 Subsequent Injuries Benefits Trust Fund Assessment: 0.034845
2022 Occupational Safety & Health Fund Assessment: 0.016639
2022 Labor Enforcement & Compliance Fund Assessment: 0.012606
2022 WC Fraud Account Assessment: 0.008178

More details are included in the memos that DIR has posted under “What’s New” at www.dir.ca.gov/dwc/.  The state is mailing the memos with invoices for each company’s share of the assessments and surcharges to California workers’ comp insurers, self-insured employers and legally uninsured employers.  Insurers with questions about the 2022 surcharges and assessments may email them to DIR Accounting Administrator Naomi Carter at NCarter@dir.ca.gov; self-insureds or California legally uninsured employers may call the Office of Self-Insurance Plans in Sacramento at (916) 464-7000.

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