Captive Programs – Trusted Captive and Risk-Retention Support for Connecticut Assisted Living Facilities
Supporting Connecticut Senior Care Communities with Captive and Risk-Retention Expertise
Some assisted living facilities and their carriers rely on captive and risk-retention structures instead of or alongside traditional insurance. Arizona is one of the leading U.S. captive domiciles, and its Captive Insurance Division within the Arizona Department of Insurance and Financial Institutions (DIFI) works closely with risk-retention groups (RRGs) and other captives.
For Connecticut-based assisted living and long-term care facilities, “Captive Programs (RRG)” may refer to RRGs that are licensed in Arizona or other domiciles and that use DIFI’s captive division and contacts, including Chief Captive Analyst Victoria Fimea.
Who Is Behind Captive Programs (RRG)?
Arizona’s Captive Insurance Division regulates captive insurers and risk-retention groups under Arizona captive statutes, with oversight provided by captive specialists and analysts. Captive-sector biographies list Victoria Fimea as Chief Captive Analyst for the Arizona Department of Insurance and Financial Institutions – Captive Program, with office contact (602) 364-0267 and additional listed numbers such as 602-364-4490 in related references.
The division oversees pure captives, association and industry group captives, risk-retention groups, and other captive forms, setting minimum capital and surplus requirements and reviewing filings.
Why Connecticut Assisted Living Facilities Need Captive Programs (RRG)
Connecticut assisted living facilities may be connected to captive and RRG programs when:
- They participate in senior-care RRGs or captives domiciled in Arizona or other captive jurisdictions.
- Their carriers cede risk to captives or RRGs as part of broader risk-financing strategies.
- They seek alternatives to traditional insurance due to claims history, size, or risk appetite.
These captive structures can provide more tailored and potentially stable coverage for senior-care risks, but rely heavily on member facilities’ loss experience and documentation.
What Sets Captive Programs (RRG) Apart
Captive and RRG programs emphasize:
- Member-owned or sponsor-controlled structures that align insurance and risk-management incentives.
- Regulatory oversight by captive divisions such as Arizona DIFI, with dedicated contacts like Chief Captive Analyst Victoria Fimea.
- Flexibility in coverage design, capital structure, and risk-sharing among members.
For Connecticut assisted living facilities, this can mean more influence over coverage terms, but also greater responsibility for maintaining strong risk-management results.
Coverage Solutions for Connecticut Facilities
Through captive and RRG structures, Connecticut facilities can support:
- General and professional liability coverage tailored to assisted-living and long-term-care operations.
- Shared risk pools where member facilities’ collective performance influences pricing and dividends.
- Alternative risk-financing options when traditional markets are volatile.
Coverage details vary by program, but all depend on sound governance and regulatory compliance overseen by captive regulators.
Industry Insight: The Real Cost of Staff Burden in Senior Care
Captive programs and RRGs see staff burden and documentation quality reflected directly in member loss experience. Because losses in a captive pool ultimately belong to the members, understaffing and poor documentation at a few facilities can affect everyone’s financial results, not just one insured.
Connecticut assisted living facilities participating in captive programs must pay particular attention to staffing, incident prevention, and documentation discipline to keep their own costs and the program’s long-term viability under control.
Case Story: When Documentation Failures Strain RRGs
Captive and RRG regulators and managers have seen situations where a series of poorly documented claims from a subset of members—missing incident reports, inconsistent care notes, or untracked corrective actions—pushes loss ratios higher, forcing assessments, capital calls, or program restructuring.
Connecticut facilities that maintain strong documentation and share accurate data with their captive’s actuaries, regulators, and reinsurers help protect the entire program, not just themselves.
How Caring Data Complements Your Captive Program
Captive and RRG structures depend on high-quality member data to set rates, structure coverages, and secure reinsurance support. Caring Data, a compliance management platform built specifically for assisted living and long-term care facilities, helps Connecticut communities centralize incident reports, clinical documentation, and corrective-action plans that captive managers and actuaries rely on.
By delivering complete, organized documentation, Caring Data helps facilities demonstrate their commitment to risk management and strengthens the captive program’s performance and credibility with regulators.
Explore Caring Data: https://caringdata.com/
Book a Demo: https://calendly.com/saile/60min
Testimonial
“Managing an assisted living facility means balancing resident care, staff performance, regulatory compliance, and financial risk — all at once. Participating in a captive or RRG gives us more control over our insurance, but it also means our documentation and loss experience affect every member. Using Caring Data as our compliance platform has helped us meet the expectations of our captive managers and regulators. I would recommend this combination to any Connecticut facility operator who takes risk management seriously.”
— Executive Director, Assisted Living Facility, Connecticut
Get in Touch with Captive Programs (Arizona DIFI Reference)
Key Contact:
- Victoria Fimea – Chief Captive Analyst, Arizona Department of Insurance and Financial Institutions – Captive Program
- Office phone: (602) 364-0267; other published captive-division numbers include (602) 364-4490.
Final Thoughts
Connecticut assisted living facilities that participate in captive programs or RRGs benefit from greater control over their insurance but assume more responsibility for their own loss experience. Strong facility documentation—supported by Caring Data—helps protect both the individual facility and the entire captive program.
Gallagher Healthcare (Broker) – Connecticut