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JPMorgan Introduces Prepaid Card for Workers Comp Payments

The Chase Workers Compensation Debit Card brings efficiencies for insurers, convenience for individuals through a single card that can enable claimants to receive multiple payments.

JPMorgan (New York; $1.8 trillion in assets) launched a prepaid debit card for workers compensation payments. The Chase Workers Compensation Card is designed to help insurance companies gain efficiencies and to provide an alternative payments method for individuals entitled to workers compensation.

According to Greg Kerwick, managing director, treasury services/emerging payments products with JPMorgan, the card was launched as a logical way to expand its payroll card business. "We have a large market in the payroll debit card space that we issue to companies of all sizes. The concept of workers comp has a strong correlation to payroll," Kerwick explains. "It was just a natural extension to issue the workers comp card as a complement to our payroll card."

The Chase Workers Compensation Card is a prepaid Visa debit card that is branded to the insurance companies. JPMorgan operates the issuance and processing on the back end. The cards are accepted at any ATM or POS device that takes Visa. "This offers a convenient alternative to checks for insurance companies and individuals," he says. "The funds are immediately available and the reload is done in the same manner as a direct deposit. Once you have the card, there's no waiting for a check to arrive in the mail."

For JPMorgan clients enrolled in its payroll card program, there isn't much to implementation, Kerwick notes. "You're just adding volume. The client sends us an enrollment file and we issue the cards. It's just a regular payment run."

To further enhance the product, JPMorgan is providing its insurance clients with a set of reporting and administration capabilities. According to the bank, program administrators use an online managing and reporting tool to enroll cardholders, ensure that cards have been shipped to new cardholders in a timely manner, electronically deposit funds into card accounts, track payments to ensure that cardholders are being paid on time, and produce nearly 20 types of reports. New cardholders also can be enrolled via batch file processing. However, adds Kerwick, "Insurers do not have access to the card behavior data. We maintain cardholder confidentiality."

Although the workers comp card isn't the solution to insurance companies' paper woes, Kerwick says it's certainly a step in the right direction. "This is just another way to help them."

Central Mutual Insurance Company (Van Wert, Ohio; $584 million in direct written premium) is now offering the Chase Workers Compensation Card to claimants who receive repetitive payments. "Having the ability to provide an additional payment option to our claimants provides us with a competitive market advantage and enables us to streamline our claims paying process," said Thad Eikenbary, assistant VP-treasurer, with the insurer, in a statement.

According to figures from the Insurance Information Institute, Americans collected $42 billion in workers compensation payments in 2006. About nine out of 10 people in the nation's workforce are protected by workers compensation insurance.

JPMorgan offers a variety of prepaid cards, including payroll cards, university cards, emergency benefits cards, government benefits cards and rebate cards.

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