Prior to its closure, it was headquartered in Stevenage and as of 2020, had 96,210 members, 159 employees and assets of £60 million.[1]
In 2022, UIA Mutual ceased writing new business and renewals, which are now offered under the UIA brand by Manchester-based broker Uinsure Limited.
Origins
The Poor Law (and Local Government) Officers' Mutual Guarantee Association was founded by the National Poor Law Officers' Association in 1890 and registered under the Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1876. The National Association of Local Government Officers' Provident Society transferred engagements to the Poor Law and Local Government Officers' Mutual Guarantee Association, which became the National and Local Government Officers' Association Mutual Insurance Association (Logomia) in 1926.[2] This was shortened to NALGO Insurance Association (NIA) in 1969.[3]
To help make its long standing relationship with the trades union movement clear, UIA registered Union Insurance Association as a trading name in 2015[6] and, to emphasise the mutual, customer-focused nature of the business, it rebranded as UIA Mutual in 2016.[7] The Together Mutual Insurance brand was launched in 2013, to offer products to like-minded members of the general public, largely through digital routes.[8]
UIA (Insurance Services) was an insurance broker, incorporated in 1994.[9] Travel, pet and motor insurance were provided by third parties, mainly to clients of its parent society.[10] UIA motor insurance was arranged and administered by Autonet Insurance Services. UIA travel insurance was arranged and administered by AllClear Insurance Services. Pet insurance was provided in association with Petwise, which is a trading name of Ultimate Insurance Solutions.
In 2004, UIA announced its decision to close its £30m life assurance fund to new customers due to adverse market conditions.[11] In 2005, its long-term business was acquired by Liverpool Victoria Friendly Society.[12]
A survey of 1,000 UK adults, commissioned by UIA in 2015, revealed that 60% of burglary victims never feel secure in their homes again. The survey also found that, after being targeted, it takes the average victim seven months to return to some level of normality in their home. Burglars avoided being caught or prosecuted in more than two thirds of the burglaries studied.[13]
In 2017, the Financial Conduct Authority took the decision to publish data on individual insurers, revealing details of the companies with whom customers were most and least likely to make a successful claim. At the lower end of the scale, the FCA’s statistics showed that UIA members had a 20-25% chance of having their claim relating to buildings and contents rejected.[14]
Winding down
In 2022, the Society announced that it would no longer offer members renewal of their current cover or new policies.[15] Several issues, including rising operational costs, regulatory changes and the Society’s long-standing participation in the defined benefit UNISON Staff Pension Scheme, had created losses. The pension scheme was in deficit, meaning the Society was required to contribute significant sums each year to help it meet its obligations.[16]
Following a strategic review, which concluded that the losses could not continue if the business was to remain solvent and could not be addressed without fundamental change, the Board sold renewal rights to Uinsure and concluded an agreement with UNISON and the pension trustees to implement a flexible apportionment arrangement, which set payments into the pension scheme in a manner that ensured the Society could meet its liabilities. The renewal and apportionment arrangements allowed the Society to continue to provide a service to existing policyholders as it was wound down on a solvent basis as an independent mutual organisation over a carefully managed “run-off” period.[17]