Richard Rider

Richard Rider
Location
San Diego, California, USA
Birthday
August 24
Title
Chairman
Company
San Diego Tax Fighters
Bio
Biography of Richard Rider (Updated July, 2011) San Diego, CA 92131 E-mail: RRider@san.rr.com * AGE: 66 * EDUCATION: B.A. Economics, University of North Carolina, 1968 * MILITARY SERVICE: Commander, Supply Corps, U. S. Naval Reserve, retired after 26 years (four years active, the rest in the reserve). ** OCCUPATION: Retired stockbroker and financial planner. Lifetime member of the International Association of Financial Planners. Former business owner. * AFFILIATION: • Chairman, San Diego Tax Fighters • National Taxpayers Union • Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association • San Diego County Taxpayers Association * POLITICAL ACTIVITIES: • Successfully sued the county of San Diego (Rider vs. County of San Diego) to force a rollback of an illegal 1/2-cent jails sales tax, a precedent that saved California taxpayers over fourteen billion dollars, including $3.5 billion for San Diego taxpayers. • Actively supported a variety of tax-cutting ballot initiatives including Proposition 13. Has written ballot arguments against numerous county and state tax increase initiatives. • County co-chair of both California term limit initiatives (Prop 140 and Prop 164). • Libertarian Party candidate for governor in 1994. • Candidate for the 3rd District County Supervisor in 1992 (third place among six candidates with about 20% of the vote). • 1993 – appointed to (and then elected chair of) the San Diego County Social Services Advisory Board. • 1996 – appointed as a Commissioner on the California Constitution Revision Commission by state Assembly Speaker Kurt Pringle. • Has been involved in legal actions against City of San Diego to force a public vote on issuing bonds for Qualcomm stadium expansion, convention center, baseball ballpark and other projects. • 2005 – Unsuccessful candidate for Mayor of San Diego, though his reform ideas have since taken hold. • 2007 – Columnist for NORTH COUNTY TIMES and SAN DIEGO DAILY TRANSCRIPT • 2009 - The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association's "California Tax Fighter of the Year" * FAMILY: Married. Wife, Diane, is a retired public high school teacher. Two sons, ages 32 and 27.

JUNE 12, 2012 7:27PM

CA Worker's Comp Cost Soars 45.3% in Six Months

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California state government controls Workers Comp rate increases to contain costs.  And how's that working out for ya, eh?
 
Since January of this year, rate inceases of 45.3% have been approved. While accusing fingers will be pointed in different directions, the bottom line is that California rates are soaring, and other states are not.  Yet another nail in the coffin of the California economy.
 
 

California Workers Comp Cost Raised by 45.3%–Why Texas is Looking Even Better

by STEPHEN FRANK on 06/11/2012 · 0 COMMENTS     Print This Post Print This Post

http://capoliticalnews.com/2012/06/11/california-workers-comp-cost-raised-by-45-3-why-texas-is-looking-even-better/

 

STEPHEN FRANK COMMENT:  California is in a Depression.  One reason is the lack of jobs. Now, the Democrats elected Insurance Commissioner is assuring more jobs leave the State.

“California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones went against a unified front of labor and employer representatives siding with the insurance industry and the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau (WCIRB) in approving a 8.3% increase mid-year rate hike for California employers. Added to the 37% rate increase he approved for January, July and later renewals are facing an average rate increase of 45.3% over last year at the same time.”

The unions and businesses understand this is a job killer—45% increase in workers comp premiums will assure firing of some employees and the non hiring of others.

AB 32, higher taxes, higher cost of doing business—all this adds up to Depression and a boon for U-Haul.  Thought you should know about the 45% increase—the mainstream media has not report this.

 

 

 

Jones Approves 45% Workers’ Comp Hike for 7/1s

Workers Comp Exec, 6/11/12

California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones went against a unified front of labor and employer representatives siding with the insurance industry and the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau (WCIRB) in approving a 8.3% increase mid-year rate hike for California employers. Added to the 37% rate increase he approved for January, July and later renewals are facing an average rate increase of 45.3% over last year at the same time.

“Crud. This means we lose all our clients and pick up everyone else’s,” one Orange County broker told Workers’ Comp Executive this morning.

The decision covers policies incepting on or after July 1, and gives insurance companies  represented by the WCIRB all that they were asking for in its filing minus two cents. The minor adjustment is being attributed to the State Compensation Insurance Fund’s loss adjustment expenses (LAE), which are typically higher than other carriers’ LAE, and hence skew the overall data.

The decision follows a 37% rate increase that Jones approved for January. The Commissioner and certain industry forces gloss over the magnitude of the increases by explaining how the “benchmarks” or rates for pure premium rates are described. The phraseology changes were made at the commissioner’s request. The Commissioner and carriers express the changes to rates in ‘average rates per $100 of payroll’ but do not compare new rates to the old and therefore omit the true relative increase to employers.

The pure premium rates are advisory and insurers are free to file their own rates. Many follow the advisory, however.

Citing testimony received as part of the rate hearing process, Jones concluded that an increase is necessary as workers’ comp costs continue to increase.

“The primary increase in California’s workers’ compensation costs is with medical costs,” Jones says in his decision. “Per unit medical costs do not appear to be increasing much, but medical utilization appears to be the main driver of overall cost increases.”

That’s particularly troubling in light of the increasing amount insurers spend on services to control medical costs.

“If cost containment tools are not working and costing more than they benefit, we need to know why. I expect the WCIRB to provide further information in the next claims cost benchmark filing that will assist in this analysis as it obtains and evaluates medical cost containment expense data,” Jones said.

Jones also reiterated an earlier call for a balanced approach to workers’ comp reforms. He maintains that any benefit increases for injured workers need to be offset with systemic savings in the form of lower frictional costs and a reduction of medical cost drivers in the system.

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regulation, taxes, california

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