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Senate advances House substitute changing insurer filing rules; debate centers on commissioner authority and transparency

Oklahoma State Senate · May 4, 2026
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Summary

House Bill 37‑81 (committee substitute) shifts homeowners insurance toward a rate‑filing regime that gives the insurance commissioner broader authority to review and request actuarial data; proponents said it increases transparency and accountability, while senators pressed on market definitions, confidentiality, and scope. The Senate passed the bill 39–6 on third reading.

Senators debated House Bill 37‑81 at length before approving the measure on third reading. The committee substitute combines language from previous legislation to change how homeowners and property insurance rates are filed and reviewed, moving away from a system that required a market to be deemed "noncompetitive" before the insurance commissioner could scrutinize rates.

Senator Reinhardt, the sponsor, said the substitute removes references tied to a "noncompetitive market" and instead requires insurers to file rates with the insurance commissioner, who would then have a period to review filings and to request actuarial information if needed. "It removes references related to a competitive or non competitive market," the sponsor said, and argued the change will "provide transparency" and allow the commissioner to scrutinize rates more effectively.

Opponents and questioners pressed on practical effects: whether references to "competitive" and "noncompetitive" markets still appear in the text; whether the public would have access to filed rates and appeals; and whether regulatory standards were being relaxed or tightened. Senator Kurt and others asked whether the changes would effectively create rate review for every property insurance filing and whether the confidentiality language would still limit public inspection. The sponsor said most filed information will be public and that the change aims to increase transparency while preserving appropriate confidentiality for proprietary actuarial data.

House Bill 37‑81 passed third reading with a roll‑call tally reported as 39 ayes and 6 nays. Sponsors emphasized the measure aims to give the elected insurance commissioner greater ability to request information and to deem rates excessive when justified, while balancing the need to avoid driving carriers out of the state market.