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Jean-Yves Gilg

Editor, Solicitors Journal

ARP clean-up 'a success', says regulator

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ARP clean-up 'a success', says regulator

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The Solicitors Regulation Authority has recovered more than £750,000 in unpaid insurance premiums since starting to crack down on firms in the assigned risks pool earlier this summer, initial figures show.

The Solicitors Regulation Authority has recovered more than £750,000 in unpaid insurance premiums since starting to crack down on firms in the assigned risks pool earlier this summer, initial figures show.

The regulator's plan to purge the ARP, first reported on solicitorsjournal.com on 19 July (SRA launches purge of ARP firms), has also led to 47 firms closing or about to close.

Chief operating officer Mike Jeacock said the SRA's strategy had proved 'a success' and that the regulator was 'determined to ensure that the ARP operates effectively and will maintain this rigorous approach to its management in future".

Firms falling into the ARP have a four-week grace period during which they are expected to be seeking insurance on the open market.

However, there were still 213 firms in the ARP at the time the SRA's board approved the new, tougher strategy, nine months after they should have got out.

The SRA's 'tough enforcement strategy' of managing firms out of the ARP involved contacting all those approaching the end of their two-year term in the pool by the end of July.

The objective, chief executive Antony Townsend said at the time, was that 'firms which pose a high risk are rectified or closed down and that firms who fail to pay their premiums face credible deterrents, including prompt closure'.

Townsend also pledged that firms entering the ARP this month would be treated in the same way.

According to the SRA, there have been 418 applications to date (7 October 2010) compared to 428 at the same time last year.

'Of these, 22 have already found cover on the open market since 1 October, so will not be in the ARP. Others are likely to do so over the coming weeks,' the SRA said.

The SRA is already identifying for early investigation all firms that have entered the 2010/11 ARP that pose a high regulatory risk.

'All firms in the pool will receive visits from the SRA and there will be an immediate focus on the prompt payment of premiums,' it said.