1 CCR 204-21
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE Division of Motor Vehicles MOTORIST INSURANCE IDENTIFICATION DATABASE 1 CCR 204-21 [Editor’s Notes follow the text of the rules at the end of this CCR Document.] _________________________________________________________________________ Section 1. Authority This rule is promulgated under the authority of Section 42-7-604(8), C.R.S. Section 2. Definitions “Commercial Vehicle” means for the purposes of this rule, any vehicle that is insured pursuant to a commercial line of business automobile liability insurance policy. “Complying Policy ” means a policy of insurance which provides the coverage and is subject to the terms and conditions required in Part 6 of Article 4 of Title 10, C.R.S. and is certified by the insurer and the insurer has filed a certification with the commissioner that such policy, contract, or endorsement conforms to Colorado law and any rules or regulations promulgated by the commissioner. “Department” means the Department of Revenue “Designated Agent” means the party with which the Department contracts under Section 42-7-604, C.R.S.
“Division” means the Motor Vehicle Division in the Department of Revenue created in Section 24-1-117 (4)(a)(IX), C.R.S.
“EDI” (Electronic Data Interchange) means inter-company, computer-to-computer transmission of business data in a standard format.
“FTP” (File Transfer Protocol) is a protocol for exchanging files over the Internet. “Proof of financial responsibility for the future” as defined in Title 42, Article 7, Section 103 (14) (9) C.R.S., means:
(a) Proof of financial responsibility for the future, also referred to in this article as proof of financial responsibility, means proof of the ability to respond in damages for liability, on account of accidents occurring after the effective date of said proof, arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of a motor vehicle, in the amount of twenty-five thousand dollars because of bodily injury to or death of one person in any one accident, and, subject to said limit for one person, in the amount of fifty thousand dollars because of bodily injury to or death of two or more persons in any one accident , and in the amount of fifteen thousand dollars because of injury to or destruction of property of others in any one accident.
(b) For the purposes of this title, the form known as the “SR-22” furnished to the department may be used as proof of financial responsibility in compliance with this article. Code of Colorado Regulations 1 “Interstate Registered Vehicle” means vehicles operating in interstate commerce traveling in Colorado and at least one other state.
“Personal Motor Vehicle” means vehicles for which passenger plates are issued including passenger cars, station wagons, hearses, ambulances (non-government owned) buses, and passenger vans. “Special Use Vehicle” means a single use vehicle designed to carry a specific commodity, such as a trash compactor or a concrete mixer.
Section 3. Basis and Purpose The purpose of this rule is to implement the reporting requirements by insurers issuing motor vehicle insurance policies in Colorado and to clarify acceptable proof of complying motor vehicle insurance coverage.
Section 4. Scope of the Motorist Insurance Identification Database In 1997, the Motorist Insurance Identification Database (MIIDB) was signed into law. This law required the Department to enter into a contract with a Designated Agent for the purpose of monitoring compliance with the financial security requirements of Parts 3 and 4 of Article 7, Title 42, C.R.S. Insurance companies that issue automobile insurance policies in the state are required to report new policies issued and canceled policies before the seventh working day after the last date of the week reported on.
Section 42-2-127.7, C.R.S. allows for suspension of a person’s driving privilege if the person is unable to provide evidence of a complying policy when contacted by law enforcement. In order to avoid a suspension, the driver may file proof of financial responsibility for the future for three years. Section 5. Reporting Requirements of Cancellation Dates of Policies Section 10-4-615(2)(c), C. R. S. requires that insurance companies report the policy number, effective date, and expiration date of each policy to the Designated Agent. For the purposes of this regulation, expiration date is defined as the final expiration date or the date on which insurance coverage is canceled or terminated by the insurance carrier. Reporting of the expiration date to the Designated Agent is not required for any intervening date in which coverage continues on receipt of payment. The final expiration date for coverage must be reported to the Designated Agent during the first normal weekly reporting period following the expiration date.
Section 6. Reporting Requirements for Commercial Lines of Insurance The primary purpose of the database is to track personal motor vehicles rather than commercial vehicles. The development of the MIIDB requires the Division to transmit the entire registered vehicle file to the Designated Agent to match to insurance information provided by insurance companies issuing motor vehicle policies in Colorado. The Motor Vehicle Registration file contains primarily personal motor vehicle information. However, information on some commercial vehicles operated within the State of Colorado is also included. Commercial vehicles registered for interstate operations are maintained in a separate, distinct, database maintained by the Motor Carrier Services Division. The purpose of the following statement is to identify vehicles insured under commercial motor vehicle policies that are contained within the Motor Vehicle Registration file. Once identified the vehicle will be noted as insured by a commercial motor vehicle policy and exempt from further tracking unless the carrier subsequently notifies the Designated Agent that the vehicle is no longer insured by a commercial motor vehicle policy.
Code of Colorado Regulations 2 The following procedures will apply:
a. All companies issuing motor vehicle insurance in the state must report to the Motorist Insurance Identification Database (MIIDB).
b. Companies issuing commercial insurance for motor vehicles provide proof of insurance cards indicating that the vehicles are commercially insured, the vehicle record will be marked as exempt.
c. All motor vehicle insurance policies must be reported including commercial motor vehicle policies.
d. Personal motor vehicle policies reporting must be vehicle specific policies that include all vehicles and insured drivers on policies.
e. Commercial motor vehicle policies should be reported as vehicle specific policies if vehicle information is available. Vehicle information includes the vehicle’s VIN (Vehicle Identification Number), make and year.
f. Insurers issuing commercial motor vehicle policies that are able to report on a vehicle specific basis will be allowed to report such information in order to assure that the vehicle record will be flagged as exempt on the MIIDB. The owners’ name and address is required but vehicle and driver information is not required.
g. To expedite the identification of exempt vehicles, the Division will identify any vehicle plate types that are distinct to a commercial vehicle class type. The Designated Agent is authorized to mark these vehicles as exempt from tracking insurance information under the MIIDB. These plate types are:
h. The following will also be exempt if the last three characters of the plate type field are:
Code of Colorado Regulations 3
i. In addition, a “C” in the Carrier Type field on any plate indicates the vehicle is used for commercial purposes and will be marked exempt. The Department will also identify any vehicle that is self- insured to the Designated Agent to mark as insured.
The purpose of this Rule is to minimize the opportunity for owners of vehicles insured pursuant to a commercial policy from receiving a citation for no insurance. Section 7. Acceptable Proof of Complying Coverage Following is a list of acceptable methods to show that a driver had a complying policy in effect pursuant to Section 42-7-605, C.R.S.:
a. A letter from an insurance agent or insurer on company letterhead.
b. An insurance card, Declaration Sheet, binder or policy issued by an insurer.
c. A certificate of self-insurance issued pursuant to Section 10-4-624, C.R.S. If the above information is presented but the record does not exist in the MIIDB, the vehicle record will be temporarily marked as insured until verified with the listed insurance company. Once verified, the insurance company will be required to submit policy data to the Designated Agent to be placed in the database via the usual reporting method. If the information, as required above, is not transmitted to the Designated Agent by the insurance company within 30 days from the date the request is sent, the record will again be marked as not insured. Section 8. Technical Reporting Requirements Following are the requirements for reporting information to the Designated Agent or Department: Data Elements for Electronic Insurance Reporting (1) The insurer shall transmit the information specified by Statute:
(2) Insurance Information Reported:
(b ) State where policy is issued;
(c ) Insurance policy number;
Code of Colorado Regulations 4 (d ) Policy type, (e ) Insurance policy effective date, if the transaction type is new; (f ) Insurance policy cancellation date, if the transaction type is canceled or deleted; (g ) Each vehicle’s VIN, if the policy is vehicle-specific; (h ) Each vehicle’s make, if the policy is vehicle-specific; (i ) Each vehicle’s year, if the policy is vehicle-specific; (j ) Colorado Motor Vehicle Division driver license number or PIN (Personal Identification Number ) number OR FEDERAL TAX ID (FEIN ) of insured and driver; (k ) State where the insured’s or driver’s identification was issued; (l ) Each insured or driver’s name;
(o ) Each insured or driver’s city;
(p ) Each insured or driver’s state;
(q ) Each insured or driver’s zip code.
Reporting documents shall be sent to the Designated Agent or the Department. The format must comply with the standards for ANSI ASC X12 Version 3, Release 5 (3050) transaction set 811 as currently identified as a standard transmission format for the insurance industry. Insurance Database Load Media Choices for Initial Load and Periodic Updates All data will be reported by the following means in a format determined by the Department or the designated agent.
The reporting will be by the following means unless otherwise approved by the Department or the Designated Agent:
The transport method for delivering files to the designated agent or the Department will be Pretty Good Privacy (“PGP” ) using at least a 1024-bit RSA public key and a 128-bit AES key. The Internet protocol (“IP” ) address from which the files are exchanged must be provided to the designated agent prior to transmission.
1. Each insurance company submits to the Designated Agent only active Colorado motor vehicle liability insurance policies.
2. The record content and media must comply with the requirements outlined.
3. Prior to the initial load, EDI testing must be completed (EDI via FTP users only). Code of Colorado Regulations 5 4. If the entire load file rejects, the Designated Agent will make a report available via FTP that the insurance company can access. The insurance company will make the necessary corrections and resubmit the entire file.
5. The format for EDI must meet the ANSI ASC X12 transaction set 811 (3050) Version 3.0 Release 5. Periodic Updates 1. Insurers shall report cancellations or deletions during the first normal weekly reporting period following the cancellation.
2. An insurer may choose to report more frequently than required by Section 10-4-615(1), C.R.S., but at a minimum must report weekly.
3. Transactions are to be submitted when:
Error reporting 1. The Designated Agent will make available error reports from the initial load and on going reporting to the company via FTP.
2. The insurance company must retrieve the information returned and develop an error correction process for records that are rejected and returned as hard errors.
3. The insurer must correct rejected record errors and resubmit corrected records via the agreed upon transmission mode before update reporting. Until it is corrected, a rejected record may be visible to law enforcement as uninsured.
Electronic Data Interchange 1. The format for insurance records submitted electronically must meet the format as determined by the designated agent.
2. Programming must include the ability to receive an 811 error transaction and return a 997 functional acknowledgment to the 811 error transaction.
3. The following characters must be used as data delimiters in reporting in the 811 set 3050 format: - Sub-element delimiter: hexadecimal 1F - Data element delimiter: hexadecimal 1D - Segment delimiter: hexadecimal 1C 4. Insurance companies will be responsible for payment of the costs associated with record delivery. Section 9. Enforcement Code of Colorado Regulations 6 Noncompliance with this rule may result in the imposition of sanctions pursuant to Section 10-4-615 (4), C.R.S. A fine of $250 per day shall be assessed the non-compliant insurance company for any of the following offenses:
- Failure to submit initial insurance data - Failure to submit and maintain insurance data each week. - Failure to submit the complete record as defined in Section 10-4-615 CRS. Any organization that is subject to fines pursuant to this rule will be referred to the Insurance Commissioner for appropriate action under the authority of the Division of Insurance. Section 10. Severability If any section of this rule, or the applicability of any section to any person or circumstance is for any reason held invalid by a court, the remainder of the rule, or the applicability of such provision to other persons or circumstances, shall not be affected.
Section 11. Effective Date This rule shall become effective January 1, 2007.
_________________________________________________________________________ Editor’s Notes History Code of Colorado Regulations 7