Oregon Workers’ Compensation Insurance Plan (assigned risk plan)
When the Legislature created SAIF in 1965, it provided that, if requested by either SAIF or the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), the insurance commissioner had to promulgate an assigned risk plan to make workers’ compensation insurance available to employers unable to obtain coverage in the voluntary market. The law was amended in 1979 to implement such a plan. In 1980, the commissioner adopted rules constituting the Oregon Workers’ Compensation Insurance Plan and establishing the state’s assigned risk plan.
Several insurers act as service providers. Premium rates paid by assigned risk plan employers for coverage reflect state pure premium rates and an expense-loading factor recommended by NCCI and subject to the commissioner’s approval. The National Workers' Compensation Reinsurance Pool provides reinsurance with the cost borne by all insurers in proportion to their share of all Oregon workers’ compensation premiums written.