1970s–1990s — The Rise of Public‑Entity Risk Pools
Category: Municipal Liability • Self‑Insurance • Alternative Risk Financing • Liability Crisis Response
Summary
From the mid‑1970s through the 1990s, cities, counties, school districts, and other public entities across the United States created risk pools — cooperative, member‑owned self‑insurance structures designed to provide stable, affordable liability and property coverage when commercial insurers withdrew from the market.
Public‑entity pools emerged as a direct response to the Mid‑1970s Liability Crisis and exploded during the 1985–1986 Liability Crisis, when municipalities and school districts were unable to obtain coverage at any price.
These pools became permanent institutions, evolving into sophisticated, professionally managed insurers that today cover tens of thousands of public entities nationwide.
Public‑entity pools are one of the most successful and enduring innovations in the history of U.S. risk financing.
I. Background: Why Public Entities Needed Their Own Solution
Public entities face unique liability exposures:
- police liability
- civil‑rights claims
- zoning and land‑use disputes
- employment practices
- public‑official liability
- school‑district risks
- transportation and fleet exposures
By the 1970s, these exposures were becoming more severe and more frequent.
Commercial insurers struggled with:
- unpredictable jury awards
- expanding civil‑rights litigation
- high defense costs
- political pressure
- difficulty pricing long‑tail municipal risks
When the Mid‑1970s Crisis hit, municipalities were among the first to lose coverage.
II. The First Wave: Early Public‑Entity Pools (Mid‑1970s)
The Mid‑1970s Liability Crisis forced public entities to improvise.
Early structures included:
- Joint Powers Authorities (JPAs)
- Intergovernmental Risk Pools
- Self‑Insurance Trusts
- Cooperative Liability Funds
These early pools were often:
- small
- regionally focused
- lightly capitalized
- governed by boards of public officials
- supported by local government associations
But they worked — and they kept cities and school districts insured when the commercial market failed.
III. The Explosion of Pools During the 1985–1986 Liability Crisis
The 1985–86 Crisis was the turning point.
Commercial insurers withdrew from:
- municipal liability
- school‑district liability
- public‑official liability
- police liability
- general liability for cities and counties
Premiums skyrocketed. Many municipalities faced the prospect of shutting down essential services.
The response:
A massive wave of new public‑entity pools formed across the country.
By the late 1980s:
- nearly every state had at least one pool
- many states had multiple pools (property, liability, workers comp)
- school‑district pools became especially common
- pools began hiring professional managers, actuaries, and claims staff
This was the largest expansion of cooperative self‑insurance in U.S. history.
IV. How Public‑Entity Pools Work
Public‑entity pools are member‑owned, nonprofit insurers created by groups of public agencies.
Key features:
- members contribute capital
- members share risk
- boards are composed of public officials
- underwriting is tailored to municipal exposures
- emphasis on loss prevention and training
- long‑term stability over short‑term profit
Pools often provide:
- liability coverage
- property coverage
- workers compensation
- cyber and public‑official liability
- risk‑management services
- training for police, fire, and school personnel
Pools became not just insurers, but risk‑management partners.
V. Why Pools Succeeded Where Commercial Insurers Failed
1. Long‑Term Commitment
Pools do not exit markets during hard cycles.
2. Tailored Underwriting
Pools understand municipal exposures better than commercial carriers.
3. Member Governance
Public officials control coverage, pricing, and risk‑management priorities.
4. Loss‑Prevention Culture
Pools invest heavily in training, safety, and claims reduction.
5. Stable Pricing
Pools smooth out market cycles and avoid the volatility of commercial insurers.
6. Access to Reinsurance
As pools matured, they gained direct access to global reinsurance markets.
VI. Relationship to RRGs and the LRRA
Public‑entity pools were precursors to RRGs.
Key connections:
- Both are member‑owned, cooperative risk‑sharing structures
- Both emerged from liability‑insurance crises
- Both emphasize loss prevention and long‑term stability
- Many pools later explored RRG status after the LRRA (1986)
- Some pools converted to RRGs to operate across state lines
The LRRA gave public‑entity pools a federal pathway to expand beyond state borders.
VII. Evolution in the 1990s
By the 1990s, public‑entity pools had become:
- professionally managed
- actuarially sophisticated
- financially stable
- major buyers of reinsurance
- innovators in risk‑management services
Many pools expanded into:
- employment practices liability
- cyber liability
- environmental liability
- school‑district specialty coverages
They became permanent institutions in municipal risk management.
Sidebar: The Educators and Consultants Behind Early Public‑Entity Risk Management
The emergence of public‑entity risk pools in the 1970s and 1980s was supported by a small group of pioneering consultants and educators who helped define the early discipline of municipal risk management. Two of the most influential were Donn McVeigh and Dave Warren, whose work bridged brokerage, consulting, writing, and university‑level instruction.
Donn McVeigh — Architect of Early JPAs
As a principal at Warren McVeigh & Griffin, Donn McVeigh played a central role in the formation of dozens of Joint Powers Authorities (JPAs) in California and across the nation. His work helped public entities navigate the liability crises of the 1970s and 1980s by providing:
- pooling structures
- funding and actuarial frameworks
- reinsurance strategies
- loss‑control programs
- governance models for boards of public officials
McVeigh was one of the key builders of the public‑entity pooling movement during its formative years.
Dave Warren — Writer, Educator, and Intellectual Backbone of Early Risk Management
Dave Warren was a respected insurance educator and writer whose work shaped how agents, brokers, and public entities understood coverage.
Educator and CPCU Instructor
He taught CPCU and other insurance courses at Golden Gate University, contributing to the professionalization of insurance education at a time when formal risk‑management instruction was still emerging.
Writer and Coverage Interpreter
Warren wrote:
- much of the content for the Warren McVeigh & Griffin Risk Management Binder Service, a widely used reference for agents and public‑entity pools
- a monthly P&C newsletter called The Warren Report, known for its clarity, practicality, and clever title
His writing helped define the language and logic of coverage interpretation for an entire generation of insurance professionals.
Professionalism and Character
Warren was widely regarded as:
- highly professional
- deeply knowledgeable
- unfailingly kind and gentlemanly
His influence was felt through his teaching, writing, and mentorship across the industry.
Why Their Work Matters
Together, McVeigh and Warren represent the two essential halves of early public‑entity risk management:
- McVeigh built the structures — the JPAs, pooling agreements, and operational frameworks.
- Warren built the understanding — the coverage explanations, educational materials, and professional standards.
Their combined work helped public‑entity pools survive the liability crises of the 1970s and 1980s and evolve into the sophisticated, stable institutions they are today.
Why These Firms Were Needed
Public entities in the 1970s had almost no internal risk‑management infrastructure. They needed outside specialists to:
- draft pooling agreements
- design funding mechanisms
- build claims‑administration systems
- implement safety and training programs
- negotiate excess and reinsurance layers
These consultants effectively invented municipal risk management as a professional practice.
Where They Went
By the 1990s, most standalone public‑entity risk‑management consultancies had been absorbed into:
- large brokers (Marsh, Aon, Gallagher, Alliant)
- major consulting firms (WTW, Deloitte, KPMG)
- actuarial firms (Milliman)
- or the pools themselves, which built internal expertise
Today, public‑entity risk management is a mature, institutionalized field dominated by large organizations — but its origins trace back to boutique firms like WMG and practitioners like Donn McVeigh who built the first generation of JPAs.
VIII. Legacy
Public‑entity pools are one of the most successful risk‑financing innovations of the 20th century.
They:
- stabilized municipal insurance markets
- provided coverage when commercial insurers withdrew
- pioneered cooperative self‑insurance
- influenced the design of RRGs
- helped shape the modern ART movement
- remain essential to public‑sector risk management today
More than 80,000 public entities in the U.S. now obtain coverage through pools.
Related Entries
Liability Crises & Market Failures That Forced Public Entities to Self‑Insure
- Mid‑1970s Liability Crisis (1974–1976) (forthcoming) — the first major shock that pushed cities and school districts into forming early JPAs and cooperative liability funds
- 1985–1986 — The Liability Crisis — the market collapse that triggered the largest wave of public‑entity pool formation in U.S. history
- 1986 — Liability Risk Retention Act (LRRA) — provided a federal pathway for public‑entity pools to expand across state lines through RRG conversions
Captives, RRGs & Alternative Risk Financing
- 1970s–1990s — The Rise of Captives and the Modern Self‑Insurance Movement — the broader corporate self‑insurance movement that evolved in parallel with public‑entity pooling
- 1960s–1990s — Offshore Captive Domiciles (Bermuda, Cayman, Guernsey) — many early public‑entity excess layers were placed with offshore reinsurers and captive structures
- Alternative Risk Transfer (ART) Emergence (1980s–1990s) (forthcoming) — public‑entity pools were one of the earliest and most successful ART models
Professional & Association‑Based Collective‑Risk Structures
- 1980s–1990s — Association‑Sponsored Liability Programs — the private‑sector counterpart to public‑entity pooling, built on similar cooperative risk‑sharing principles
- 1960s–1990s — Evolution of Claims‑Made Liability Forms — the architectural shift that stabilized long‑tail liability pricing for both association programs and public‑entity pools
- DPIC and the A&E Professional Liability Era (1960s–1990s) (forthcoming) — a parallel example of profession‑specific underwriting committees and collective risk management
Environmental Liability, Pollution Exclusions & Municipal Exposure
- 1970s–1980s — Environmental Impairment Liability (EIL) — early environmental exposures that public‑entity pools later absorbed through specialized municipal pollution coverages
- 1986 — Absolute Pollution Exclusion — pushed environmental risks out of the CGL market and into public‑entity pools and specialty programs
- 1980 — CERCLA / Superfund — created retroactive environmental liabilities that many public entities faced, accelerating the need for pooled solutions
Judicial, Regulatory & Analytical Developments
- 1993 — Daubert v. Merrell Dow — reshaped expert‑evidence standards, influencing municipal liability litigation and public‑entity claims handling
- 1990s — Rise of Probabilistic Risk Assessment — provided the actuarial and analytical tools that allowed pools to mature into sophisticated insurers
- Vermont Special Insurer Act (1981) (forthcoming) — the onshore regulatory model that later influenced some public‑entity pools exploring captive or RRG structures