FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE CO
S-1/A, 1997-05-09
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<PAGE>

As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 9, 1997
                                                      Registration No. 333-20345




                          SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                                Washington, D.C. 20549

                                   AMENDMENT NO. 1

                                       FORM S-1

               REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

                          FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY           
             -----------------------------------------------------------
                (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)


                                         New York                        
             ------------------------------------------------------------
            (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)


                                           63                          
               --------------------------------------------------------
               (Primary Standard Industrial Classification Code Number)


                                      13-2699219             
                         ------------------------------------
                         (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)


                              220 Salina Meadows Parkway
                               Syracuse, New York 13220
                                       315-451-0066                         
          ------------------------------------------------------------------
          (Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area
                  code, of registrant's principal executive offices)


                              David A. Peterson, Esquire
                                   P. O. Box 64284
                             Saint Paul, Minnesota 55164
                                      612-738-5080                          
          ------------------------------------------------------------------
          (Name, address including zip code, and telephone number, including
                           area code, of agent for service)


<PAGE>

Approximate Date of Commencement of Proposed Sale to Public:  As soon as
practicable after the effective date of this Registration Statement.

If any of the securities being registered on this form are to be offered on a
delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of
1933, check the following box: 
                                       /X/
                                       ---
                        -------------------------------------





                           CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Title of each                            Proposed            Proposed maximum
class of securities       Amount to be   maximum offering    aggregate                 Amount of
to be registered          registered     price per unit      offering price            registration fee
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>            <C>                 <C>                       <C>
Interests under flexible    *              *                 None registered herewith.
premium deferred
fixed annuity
contracts
</TABLE>

- ------------------
* The maximum aggregate offering price is estimated solely for the purpose of
determining the registration fee.  The amount being registered and the proposed
maximum offering price per unit are not applicable in that these securities are
not issued in predetermined amounts or units.


<PAGE>

                         FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                                Cross-Reference Sheet
                              Pursuant to Regulation S-K
                                     Item 501(b)


Form S-1 Item Number               Prospectus Caption
- --------------------               ------------------

1.   Forepart of the               Cover Page; Table of Contents;
     Registration Statement        Distribution and Servicing
     and Outside Front
     Cover Page of Prospectus

2.   Inside Front and Back         Other Information; Reports
     Cover Pages of Prospectus

3.   Summary Information, Risk     Summary of Contract Features
     Factors and Ratio of          or, as to ratio of earnings to
     Earnings to Fixed Charges     fixed charges, Not Applicable

4.   Use of Proceeds               The Variable Account; The
                                   Portfolios; The Fixed Account

5.   Determination of Offering     Not Applicable
     Price

6.   Dilution                      Not Applicable

7.   Selling Security Holders      None

8.   Plan of Distribution          Distribution and Servicing

9.   Description of Securities     Cover Page; The Variable
     to be Registered              Account; The Portfolios; The
                                   Fixed Account; Accumulation
                                   Period; Charges and
                                   Deductions; General Provisions

10.  Interests of Named            Legal Matters
     Experts and Counsel

11.  Information with Respect      First Fortis Life Insurance
     to the Registrant             Company; Further Information
                                   About First Fortis; Financial
                                   Statements; Distribution and
                                   Servicing


<PAGE>
VALUE
ADVANTAGE
PLUS
VARIABLE
ANNUITY
 
Contracts Under Flexible
Premium Deferred
Combination Variable and
Fixed Annuity Contracts
 
      [LOGO]
 
PROSPECTUS DATED
May 1, 1997
 
FORTIS-Registered Trademark-
 
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
MAILING ADDRESS:      STREET ADDRESS:             PHONE: 1-800-591-7333
P.O. BOX 3249         SUITE 255
SYRACUSE              220 SALINA MEADOWS
NEW YORK 13220        PARKWAY
                      SYRACUSE
                      NEW YORK 13212
 
This Prospectus describes interests under flexible premium deferred combination
variable and fixed annuity contracts issued by First Fortis Life Insurance
Company ("First Fortis"). The minimum initial purchase payment is generally
$5,000 and is $500 for each subsequent purchase payment.
 
A Contract allows you to accumulate funds on a tax-deferred basis. You may elect
a guaranteed interest accumulation option through the Fixed Account or a
variable return accumulation option through Separate Account A (the "Variable
Account") of First Fortis, or a combination of these two options. Under the
variable rate accumulation option, you can choose among the following Portfolios
(see "The Portfolios" for limitations on the availability of certain Portfolios
in certain states):
 
Alliance Money Market Portfolio           Lexington Natural Resources Trust
Alliance International Portfolio          Lexington Emerging Markets Fund
Alliance Premier Growth Portfolio         MFS Emerging Growth Series
American Century VP Balanced Fund         MFS High Income Series
American Century VP Capital Appreciation  MFS World Governments Series
  Fund                                    Montgomery Emerging Markets Fund
Federated High Income Bond Fund II        Montgomery Growth Fund
Federated Utility Fund II                 Neuberger & Berman Limited Maturity
Federated American Leaders Fund II        Bond
Federated Fund for U.S. Government        Portfolio
  Securities II                           Neuberger & Berman Partners Portfolio
Fortis S & P 500 Index Series             SAFECO Equity Portfolio
INVESCO Industrial Income Portfolio       SAFECO Growth Portfolio
INVESCO Health Services Portfolio         Strong Discovery Fund II
INVESCO Technology Portfolio              Strong International Stock Fund II
                                          Van Eck Worldwide Bond Fund
                                          Van Eck Worldwide Hard Assets Fund
 
The accompanying Prospectus for these Portfolios describes the investment
objectives, policies and risks of each of the Portfolios. You can choose among
10 different guarantee periods under the guaranteed interest accumulation
option, each of which has its own interest rate.
 
You have the right to examine a Contract during a "free look" period after you
receive the Contract and return it for a refund of the amount of the then
current Contract Value. The "free look" period is 10 days.
 
The Contract provides several different types of retirement and death benefits,
including fixed and variable annuity income options. You may make partial
surrenders of the Contract Value or may totally surrender the Contract for its
Cash Surrender Value.
 
This Prospectus gives prospective investors information about the Contracts that
they should know before investing. This Prospectus must be accompanied by a
current Prospectus of the Portfolios. These Prospectuses should be read
carefully and kept for future reference.
 
A Statement of Additional Information, dated May 1, 1997, about certain aspects
of the Contracts has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and
is available without charge, from First Fortis at the address and phone number
printed above. The Table of Contents for the Statement of Additional Information
appears on page 23 of this Prospectus.
 
THESE POLICIES ARE NOT OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED BY, ANY BANK,
CREDIT UNION, BROKER-DEALER OR OTHER FINANCIAL INSTITUTION. THEY ARE NOT
FEDERALLY INSURED BY THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL
RESERVE BOARD, OR ANY OTHER AGENCY; AND INVOLVE INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING THE
POSSIBLE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL.
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION, NOR HAS THE COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY
OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
FORTIS-Registered Trademark- and Fortis-Registered Trademark- are registered
servicemarks of Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG.
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        PAGE
<S>                                                                     <C>
Special Terms Used in this Prospectus.................................     3
Information Concerning Fees and Charges...............................     4
Summary of Contract Features..........................................     6
First Fortis Life Insurance Company...................................     7
The Variable Account..................................................     7
The Portfolios........................................................     8
The Fixed Account.....................................................     8
    - Guarantee Interest Rates/Guarantee Periods......................     8
    - Market Value Adjustment.........................................     9
    - Investments by First Fortis.....................................     9
Fixed Account Value...................................................     9
Accumulation Period...................................................    10
    - Issuance of a Contract and Purchase Payments....................    10
    - Contract Value..................................................    10
    - Allocation of Purchase Payments and Contract Value..............    11
    - Total and Partial Surrenders....................................    11
    - Benefit Payable on Death of Annuitant or Contract Owner.........    12
The Annuity Period....................................................    12
    - Annuity Commencement Date.......................................    12
    - Commencement of Annuity Payments................................    12
    - Relationship Between Subaccount Investment Performance and
       Amount of Variable Annuity Payments............................    13
    - Annuity Forms...................................................    13
    - Death of Annuitant or Other Payee...............................    13
Charges and Deductions................................................    14
    - Premium Taxes...................................................    14
    - Charges Against the Variable Account............................    14
    - Annual Administrative Charge....................................    14
    - Tax Charge......................................................    14
    - Miscellaneous...................................................    14
General Provisions....................................................    14
    - The Contracts...................................................    14
    - Postponement of Payments........................................    14
    - Misstatement of Age or Sex and Other Errors.....................    14
    - Assignment......................................................    15
    - Beneficiary.....................................................    15
    - Reports.........................................................    15
Rights Reserved By First Fortis.......................................    15
Distribution..........................................................    15
Federal Tax Matters...................................................    16
Further Information about First Fortis................................    19
    - General.........................................................    19
    - Selected Financial Data.........................................    19
    - Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
      Results of Operations...........................................    19
    - Liquidity and Capital Resources.................................    20
    - Competition.....................................................
    - Regulation and Reserves.........................................
    - Employees and Facilities........................................
    - Directors and Executive Officers................................    21
    - Executive Compensation..........................................    22
    - Ownership of Securities.........................................    22
Voting Privileges.....................................................    22
Legal Matters.........................................................    23
Other Information.....................................................    23
Contents of Statement of Additional Information.......................    23
First Fortis Financial Statements.....................................    23
Appendix A--Sample Market Value Adjustment Calculations...............   A-1
Appendix B--Explanation of Expense Calculations.......................   B-1
Appendix C--Participating Portfolios..................................   C-1
</TABLE>
 
THE CONTRACTS ARE NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STATES. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT
CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH SUCH OFFERING MAY NOT
LAWFULLY BE MADE. FIRST FORTIS DOES NOT AUTHORIZE ANY INFORMATION OR
REPRESENTATION REGARDING THE OFFERING DESCRIBED IN THIS PROSPECTUS WHICH IS NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS PROSPECTUS, THE RELATED STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, OR
ANY SUPPLEMENTS THERETO OR IN ANY SUPPLEMENTAL SALES MATERIAL AUTHORIZED BY
FIRST FORTIS.
<PAGE>
SPECIAL TERMS USED IN THIS PROSPECTUS
 
<TABLE>
<S>              <C>
ACCUMULATION     The time period under a Contract between the Contract Issue Date and the Annuity Commencement
PERIOD           Date.
ACCUMULATION     A unit of measure used to calculate the Contract Owners' interest in the Variable Account
UNIT             during the Accumulation Period.
ANNUITANT        A person during whose life annuity payments are to be made by First Fortis under the Contract.
ANNUITY          The date on which the Annuity Period commences.
COMMENCEMENT
DATE
ANNUITY PERIOD   The time period following the Accumulation Period, during which annuity payments are made by
                 First Fortis.
ANNUITY UNIT     A unit of measurement used to calculate variable annuity payments.
BENEFICIARY      The person entitled to receive benefits under the terms of the Contract.
CASH SURRENDER   The amount payable to the Contract Owner on surrender of the Contract after all applicable
VALUE            adjustments and deduction of all applicable charges.
CERTIFICATE      The date on which the Contract becomes effective as shown on the Contract Data Page.
ISSUE DATE
CERTIFICATE      The sum of the Fixed Account Value and the Variable Account Value.
VALUE
CONTRACT OWNER   The person or company named in the application for a Contract, who is entitled to exercise all
                 rights and privileges of ownership under the Contract during the Accumulation Period.
FIXED ACCOUNT    The name of the alternative under which purchase payments are allocated to First Fortis'
                 General Account.
FIXED ACCOUNT    The amount of your Contract Value which is in the Fixed Account.
VALUE
FIXED ANNUITY    An annuity option under which First Fortis promises to pay the Annuitant or any other payee
OPTION           that you designate one or more fixed payments.
GENERAL ACCOUNT  All assets of First Fortis other than those in the Variable Account, and other than those in
                 any other legally segregated separate account established by First Fortis.
GUARANTEED       The rate of interest we credit during any Guarantee Period, on an effective annual basis.
INTEREST RATE
GUARANTEE        The period for which a Guaranteed Interest Rate is credited.
PERIOD
HOME OFFICE      Our office at 220 Salina Meadows Parkway, Syracuse, New York 13212; 1-800-591-7333; Mailing
                 address: P.O. Box 3249, Syracuse NY 13220.
MARKET VALUE     Positive or negative adjustment in Fixed Account Value that we make if such value is paid out
ADJUSTMENT       more than fifteen days before or after the end of a Guarantee Period in which it was being
                 held.
NET PURCHASE     The gross amount of a purchase payment less any applicable premium taxes or similar
PAYMENT          governmental assessments.
NON-QUALIFIED    Contracts that do not qualify for the special federal income tax treatment applicable in
CERTIFICATES     connection with certain retirement plans.
PORTFOLIO        Each separate investment portfolio eligible for investment by the Variable Account.
QUALIFIED        Contracts that are qualified for the special federal income tax treatment applicable in
CONTRACTS        connection with certain retirement plans.
SUBACCOUNTS      The several Subaccounts of the Variable Account, each of which invests its assets in a
                 different Portfolio.
VALUATION DATE   All business days except, with respect to any Subaccount, days on which the related Portfolio
                 does not value its shares. Generally, the Portfolios value their shares on each day the New
                 York Stock Exchange is open.
VALUATION        The period that starts at the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange on a
PERIOD           Valuation Date and ends at the close of regular trading on the exchange on the next succeeding
                 Valuation Date.
VARIABLE         The segregated asset account referred to as Variable Account A of First Fortis Life Insurance
ACCOUNT          Company established to receive and invest purchase payments under Contracts.
VARIABLE         The amount of your Contract Value in the Subaccounts of the Variable Account.
ACCOUNT VALUE
VARIABLE         An annuity option under which First Fortis promises to pay the Annuitant or any other payee
ANNUITY OPTION   chosen by you one or more payments which vary in amount in accordance with the net investment
                 experience of the Subaccounts selected by the Annuitant.
WRITTEN REQUEST  A written, signed and dated request, in form and substance satisfactory to First Fortis and
                 received at our Home Office.
</TABLE>
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
INFORMATION CONCERNING FEES AND CHARGES
 
CONTRACT OWNER TRANSACTION CHARGES
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                <C>
       Front-End Sales Charge Imposed on Purchases...............    0%
       Maximum Surrender Charge for Sales Expenses...............    0%
       Other Surrender Fees......................................    0%
       Exchange Fee..............................................    0%
ANNUAL CONTRACT ADMINISTRATION CHARGE............................  $30
VARIABLE ACCOUNT ANNUAL EXPENSES
(AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE ACCOUNT VALUE)
       Mortality and Expense Risk Charge.........................  .45%
       Variable Account Administrative Charge....................    0%
                                                                   ----
         Total Variable Account Annual Expenses..................  .45%
</TABLE>
 
MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT WITH RESPECT TO FIXED ACCOUNT
 
Surrenders and other withdrawals from the Fixed Account more than fifteen days
from the end of a Guarantee Period are subject to a Market Value Adjustment. The
Market Value Adjustment may increase or reduce the Fixed Account Value. It is
computed pursuant to a formula that is described in more detail under "Market
Value Adjustment."
 
PORTFOLIO ANNUAL EXPENSES (A) (B)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           TOTAL PORTFOLIO
                                                                                              OPERATING
                                                                INVESTMENT                    EXPENSES
                                                               ADVISORY AND     OTHER      (*AFTER EXPENSE
                                                              MANAGEMENT FEE   EXPENSES    REIMBURSEMENT)
                                                              --------------   --------   -----------------
<S>                                                           <C>              <C>        <C>
American Century VP Balanced Fund...........................          1.00%      0.00%              1.00%
American Century VP Capital Appreciation Fund...............          1.00%      0.00%              1.00%
Alliance Money Market Portfolio.............................          0.50%      0.19%              0.69%
Alliance International Portfolio............................          0.04%      0.91%              0.95%
Alliance Premier Growth Portfolio...........................          0.72%      0.23%              0.95%
Federated High Income Bond Fund II..........................          0.01%      0.79%              0.80%
Federated Utility Fund II...................................          0.24%      0.61%              0.85%
Federated American Leaders Fund II..........................          0.53%      0.32%              0.85%
Federated Fund for U.S. Government Securities II............          0.00%      0.80%              0.80%
Fortis S & P 500 Index Series...............................          0.40%      0.39%              0.79%
INVESCO Industrial Income Portfolio.........................          0.75%      0.20%              0.95%
INVESCO Health Services Portfolio...........................          0.60%      0.40%              1.00%
INVESCO Technology Portfolio................................          0.60%      0.40%              1.00%
Lexington Natural Resources Trust...........................          1.00%      0.42%              1.42%
Lexington Emerging Markets Fund.............................          0.85%      0.79%              1.64%
MFS Emerging Growth Series..................................          0.75%      0.25%              1.00%
MFS High Income Series......................................          0.75%      0.25%              1.00%
MFS World Governments Series................................          0.75%      0.25%              1.00%
Montgomery Emerging Markets Fund............................          0.23%      1.22%              1.45%
Montgomery Growth Fund......................................          0.00%      0.01%              0.01%
SAFECO Equity Portfolio.....................................          0.70%      0.02%              0.72%
SAFECO Growth Portfolio.....................................          0.72%      0.07%              0.79%
Neuberger & Berman Limited Maturity Bond Portfolio..........          0.65%      0.13%              0.78%
Neuberger & Berman Partners Portfolio.......................          0.84%      0.11%              0.95%
Strong Discovery Fund.......................................          1.00%      0.21%              1.21%
Strong International Stock Fund.............................          1.00%      0.90%              1.90%
Van Eck Worldwide Bond Fund.................................          1.00%      0.08%              1.08%
Van Eck Worldwide Hard Assets Fund..........................          1.00%      0.08%              1.08%
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(a)  As a percentage of Portfolio average net assets based on historical data
     for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1996 except that the expenses of the
     INVESCO Health Sciences and Technology Portfolios are based upon estimates
     of expenses, since these are both new as of January 1, 1997. In the absence
     of expense and fee waivers or expense reimbursements by the Portfolio
     investment adviser, the total expenses of the following Portfolios would
     have been as hereafter indicated rather than as listed above: Alliance
     International Portfolio--1.91%; Alliance Premier Growth Portfolio--1.23%;
     Federated High Income Bond Fund II--1.39%; Federated Utility Fund
     II--1.36%; Federated American Leaders Fund II--1.07%; Federated Fund for
     U.S. Government Securities Fund II--1.81%; INVESCO Health Sciences
     Portfolio--1.68%; INVESCO Industrial Income Portfolio--1.19%; INVESCO
     Technology Portfolio--1.68%; Lexington Emerging Markets Fund--2.23%; MFS
     Emerging Growth Series--1.16%; MFS High Income Series--1.62%; and MFS World
     Governments Series--2.03%; Montgomery Emerging Markets Fund--2.47%;
     Montgomery Growth Fund--6.98%. The information set forth in this table was
     provided to First Fortis by the Portfolio managers and First Fortis has not
     independently verified such information.
 
(b)  Certain of the unaffiliated investment advisers of the Portfolios reimburse
     First Fortis for costs incurred in connection with administering the
     Portfolios as variable funding options by payment of an amount based on
     assets in the Portfolios attributable to the Contracts. These amounts are
     not charged to the Portfolios or the holders of the Contracts.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
EXAMPLES*
 
If you COMMENCE AN ANNUITY payment option, or whether you DO or DO NOT surrender
your Contract or commence an annuity payment option, you would pay the following
cumulative expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual return on
assets:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
IF ALL AMOUNTS ARE INVESTED IN ONE PORTFOLIO:                 1 YEAR    3 YEARS   5 YEARS   10 YEARS
- ------------------------------------------------------------  -------   -------   -------   --------
<S>                                                           <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
American Century VP Balanced Fund...........................      16        49        84        183
American Century VP Capital Appreciation Fund...............      16        49        84        183
Alliance Money Market Portfolio.............................      13        39        68        149
Alliance International Portfolio............................      15        47        81        177
Alliance Premier Growth Portfolio...........................      15        47        81        177
Federated High Income Fund II...............................      14        42        73        161
Federated Utility Fund II...................................      14        44        76        166
Federated American Leaders Fund II..........................      14        44        76        166
Federated Fund for U.S. Government Securities II............      14        42        73        161
Fortis S & P 500 Index Series...............................      14        42        73        160
INVESCO Industrial Income Portfolio.........................      15        47        81        177
INVESCO Health Services Portfolio...........................      16        49        84        183
INVESCO Technology Portfolio................................      16        49        84        183
Lexington Natural Resources Trust...........................      20        61       105        228
Lexington Emerging Markets Fund.............................      22        68       116        250
MFS Emerging Growth Series..................................      16        49        84        183
MFS High Income Series......................................      16        49        84        183
MFS World Governments Series................................      16        49        84        183
Montgomery Emerging Markets Fund............................      20        62       107        231
Montgomery Growth Fund......................................       6        18        31         70
Neuberger & Berman Limited Maturity Bond Portfolio..........      13        42        72        159
Neuberger & Berman Partners Portfolio.......................      15        47        81        177
SAFECO Equity Portfolio.....................................      13        40        69        152
SAFECO Growth Portfolio.....................................      14        42        73        160
Strong Discovery Fund II....................................      18        55        95        205
Strong International Stock Fund II..........................      25        76       130        276
Van Eck Worldwide Bond Fund.................................      16        51        88        191
Van Eck Worldwide Hard Assets Fund..........................      16        51        88        191
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
* For purposes of these examples, the effect of the annual Contract
  administration charge has been computed based on the average total Contract
  Value during the year ended December 31, 1996 of similar contracts issued by
  an affiliated company and the total actual amount of annual contract
  administration charges collected during the year on those contracts. For the
  purpose of these examples, Portfolio annual expenses are assumed to continue
  at the rates set forth in the table above.
 
THE EXAMPLES SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED A REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR FUTURE
EXPENSES, AND ACTUAL EXPENSES MAY BE GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.
                            ------------------------
 
The foregoing tables and examples are included to assist you in understanding
the transaction and operating expenses imposed directly or indirectly under the
Contracts and the Portfolios. Amounts for state premium taxes or similar
assessments will also be deducted, where applicable.
 
See Appendix B for an explanation of the calculation of the amounts set forth
above.
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
SUMMARY OF CONTRACT FEATURES
 
The following summary should be read in conjunction with the detailed
information in this Prospectus.
 
The Contracts are designed to provide individuals with retirement benefits
through the accumulation of Net Purchase Payments on a fixed or variable basis,
and by the application of such accumulations to provide fixed or variable
annuity payments.
 
"We," "our," and "us" mean First Fortis Life Insurance Company. "You" and "your"
mean a reader of this Prospectus who is contemplating making purchase payments
or taking any other action in connection with a Contract.
 
PURCHASE PAYMENTS
 
The initial purchase payment under a Contract must be at least $5,000 ($2,000
for a Contract pursuant to a qualified contract). Additional purchase payments
under a Contract must be at least $500. See "Issuance of a Contract and Purchase
Payments."
 
On the Contract Issue Date, except as hereafter explained, the initial purchase
payment is allocated, as specified by the Contract Owner in the Contract
application, among one or more of the Subaccounts of the Variable Account, or to
one or more of the Guarantee Periods in the Fixed Account, or to a combination
thereof. Subsequent purchase payments are allocated in the same way, or pursuant
to different allocation percentages that the Contract Owner may subsequently
request In Writing.
 
VARIABLE ACCOUNT INVESTMENT OPTIONS
 
Each of the Subaccounts of the Variable Account invests in shares of a
Portfolio. Contract Value in each of the Subaccounts of the Variable Account
will vary to reflect the investment experience of each of the corresponding
Portfolios, as well as deductions for certain charges.
 
Each Portfolio has a separate and distinct investment objective. A full
description of the Portfolios and their investment objectives, policies, risks
and expenses can be found in the current Prospectus for the Portfolio, which
accompanies this Prospectus, and the Statement of Additional Information for the
Portfolio which is available upon request.
 
FIXED ACCOUNT INVESTMENT OPTIONS
 
Any amount allocated by the Contract Owner to the Fixed Account earns a
Guaranteed Interest Rate. The level of the Guaranteed Interest Rate depends on
the length of the Guarantee Period selected by the Contract Owner. We currently
make available ten different Guarantee Periods, ranging from one to ten years.
If amounts are transferred, surrendered or otherwise paid out more than fifteen
days before or after the end of the applicable Guarantee Period, a Market Value
Adjustment will be applied to increase or decrease the amount that is paid out.
Accordingly, the Market Value Adjustment can result in gains or losses to you.
 
For a more complete discussion of the Fixed Account investment option and the
Market Value Adjustment, see "The Fixed Account."
 
TRANSFERS
 
During the Accumulation Period, you can transfer all or part of your Contract
Value from one Subaccount to another or into the Fixed Account and, subject to
any Market Value Adjustment, from one Guarantee Period of the Fixed Account to
another or into a Subaccount. There is currently no charge for these transfers.
We reserve the right to restrict the frequency of, or otherwise condition,
terminate, or impose charges upon, transfers from a Subaccount during the
Accumulation Period. During the Annuity Period the person receiving annuity
payments may make up to four transfers (but not from a Fixed Annuity Option)
during each year of the Annuity Period. For a description of certain limitations
on transfer rights, see "Allocations of Purchase Payments and Contract Value
Transfers."
 
TOTAL OR PARTIAL SURRENDERS
 
Subject to certain conditions, all or part of the Contract Value may be
surrendered by the Contract Owner before the earlier of the Annuitant's death or
the Annuity Commencement Date. Amounts surrendered from the Fixed Account may be
subject to a Market Value Adjustment. See "Total and Partial Surrenders" and
"Market Value Adjustment." Particular attention should be paid to the tax
implications of any surrender, including possible penalties for premature
distributions. See "Federal Tax Matters."
 
CHARGES AND DEDUCTIONS
 
First Fortis deducts daily charges at a rate of .45 % per annum of the value of
the average net assets in the Variable Account for the mortality and expense
risks it assumes. There is also an annual administrative charge each year for
Contract administration and maintenance. This charge is $30 per year (subject to
any applicable state law limitations) and is deducted on each anniversary of the
Contract Issue Date and upon total surrender of the Contract. Also, there may be
state premium tax charges deducted from your Contract Value. See "Charges and
Deductions."
 
ANNUITY PAYMENTS
 
The Contract provides several types of annuity benefits to Contract Owners or
other persons they properly designate to receive such payments, including Fixed
and Variable Annuity Options. The Contract Owner has considerable flexibility in
choosing the Annuity Commencement Date. However, the tax implications of an
Annuity Commencement Date must be carefully considered, including the
possibility of penalties for commencing benefits either too soon or too late.
See "Annuity Commencement Date," "Annuity Forms" and "Federal Tax Matters" in
this Prospectus and "Taxation Under Certain Retirement Plans" in the Statement
of Additional Information.
 
DEATH BENEFIT
 
In the event that the Annuitant or Contract Owner dies prior to the Annuity
Commencement Date, a death benefit is payable to the Beneficiary. See "Benefit
Payable on Death of Annuitant or Contract Owner."
 
RIGHT TO EXAMINE THE CONTRACT
 
A Contract Owner may elect during a "free look" period to cancel the Contract
and receive a refund. See the cover page of this Prospectus.
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
LIMITATIONS IMPOSED BY RETIREMENT PLANS AND EMPLOYERS
 
Certain rights you would otherwise have under a Contract may be limited by the
terms of any applicable employee benefit plan. These limitations may restrict
such things as total and partial surrenders, the amount or timing of purchase
payments that may be made, when annuity payments must start and the type of
annuity options that may be selected. Accordingly, you should familiarize
yourself with these and all other aspects of any retirement plan in connection
with which a Contract is issued.
 
The record owner of the group variable annuity contract pursuant to which
Contracts may be issued will be a bank trustee whose sole function is to hold
record ownership of the contract or an employer (or the employer's designee) in
connection with an employee benefit plan. In the latter cases, certain rights
that a Contract Owner otherwise would have under a Contract may be reserved
instead by the employer.
 
TAX IMPLICATIONS
 
The tax implications for Contract Owners or any other persons who may receive
payments under a Contract, and those of any related employee benefit plan can be
quite important. A brief discussion of some of these is set out under "Federal
Tax Matters" in this Prospectus and "Taxation Under Certain Retirement Plans" in
the Statement of Additional Information, but such discussion is not
comprehensive. Therefore, you should consider these matters carefully and
consult a qualified tax adviser before making purchase payments or taking any
other action in connection with a Contract or any related employee benefit plan.
Failure to do so could result in serious adverse tax consequences which might
otherwise have been avoided.
 
QUESTIONS AND OTHER COMMUNICATIONS
 
Any question about procedures of the Contract should be directed to your sales
representative, or First Fortis' Home Office: P.O. Box 3249, Syracuse NY 13220;
1-800-591-7333. Purchase payments and Written Requests should be mailed or
delivered to the same Home Office address. All communications should include the
Contract number, the Contract Owner's name and, if different, the Annuitant's
name. The number for telephone transfers is 1-800-591-7333.
 
Any purchase payment or other communication, except a free-look cancellation
notice, is deemed received at First Fortis' Home Office on the actual date of
receipt there in proper form unless received (1) after the close of regular
trading on The New York Stock Exchange, or (2) on a date that is not a Valuation
Date. In either of these two cases, the date of receipt will be deemed to be the
next Valuation Date.
 
FINANCIAL AND PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
 
This Prospectus contains no Accumulation Unit Information for the applicable
Subaccounts of the Variable Account as of December 31, 1996 because no Contracts
have been sold and no Accumulation Units had been issued as of that date.
 
Audited financial statements of the available Subaccounts of the Variable
Account, other than the Fortis S&P 500 Index Series Subaccount, are not included
in the Statement of Additional Information because those Subaccounts had not yet
commenced operations, had no assets or liabilities, and had received no income
nor incurred any expenses as of that date.
 
Advertising and other sales materials may include yield and total return figures
for the Subaccounts of the Variable Account. These figures are based on
historical results and are not intended to indicate future performance. "Yield"
is the income generated by an investment in the Subaccount over a period of time
specified in the advertisement. This rate of return is assumed to be earned over
a full year and is shown as a percentage of the investment. "Total return" is
the total change in value of an investment in the Subaccount over a period of
time specified in the advertisement. The rate of return shown would produce that
change in value over the specified period, if compounded annually. Yield and
total return figures do not reflect premium tax charges. This makes the
performance shown more favorable.
 
Financial information concerning First Fortis is included in this Prospectus
under "Additional Information About First Fortis" and "First Fortis Financial
Statements."
 
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
First Fortis Life Insurance Company, the issuer of the Contracts, was founded in
1971. At the end of 1996, First Fortis had approximately $6.6 billion of total
life insurance in force. First Fortis is a New York corporation and is qualified
to sell life insurance, accident and health and annuity contracts in New York.
First Fortis is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fortis, Inc., which is itself
indirectly owned 50% by Fortis AMEV and 50% by Fortis AG. Fortis, Inc. manages
the United States operations for these two companies.
 
First Fortis is a member of the Fortis Financial Group, a joint effort by First
Fortis, Fortis Benefits Insurance Company, Fortis Advisers, Inc., Fortis
Investors, Inc., and Time Insurance Company, offering financial products through
the management, marketing and servicing of mutual funds, annuities and life
insurance and disability income products.
 
Fortis AMEV is a diversified financial services company headquartered in
Utrecht, The Netherlands, where its insurance operations began in 1847. Fortis
AG is a diversified financial services company headquartered in Brussels,
Belgium, where its insurance operations began in 1824. Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG
have merged their operating companies under the trade name of Fortis. The Fortis
group of companies is active in insurance, banking and financial services, and
real estate development in The Netherlands, Belgium, the United States, Western
Europe, and the Pacific Rim. The Fortis group of companies has assets in excess
of $160 billion.
 
All of the guarantees and commitments under the Contracts are general
obligations of First Fortis, regardless of whether the Contract Value has been
allocated to the Variable Account or to the Fixed Account. None of First Fortis'
affiliated companies has any legal obligation to back First Fortis' obligations
under the Contracts.
 
THE VARIABLE ACCOUNT
 
The Variable Account, which is a segregated investment account of First Fortis,
was established as Variable Account A by First Fortis pursuant to the insurance
laws of New York as of October 1, 1993. Although the Variable Account is an
integral part of First Fortis, the
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
Variable Account is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a
unit investment trust under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Assets in the
Variable Account representing reserves and liabilities under Contracts and other
variable annuity contracts issued by First Fortis will not be chargeable with
liabilities arising out of any other business of First Fortis.
 
There are a number of Subaccounts in the Variable Account. The assets in each
Subaccount are invested exclusively in one of the Portfolios listed on page one
of this Prospectus. Income and both realized and unrealized gains or losses from
the assets of each Subaccount of the Variable Account are credited to or charged
against that Subaccount without regard to income, gains or losses from any other
Subaccount of the Variable Account or arising out of any other business we may
conduct. New Subaccounts may be added as new Portfolios are added and made
available. Correspondingly, if any Portfolios are eliminated, Subaccounts may be
eliminated from the Variable Account.
 
THE PORTFOLIOS
 
Contract holders may choose from among a number of different Portfolios, each of
which is a mutual fund available for purchase only as a funding vehicle for
benefits under variable life insurance and variable annuities issued by First
Fortis and other life insurance companies. (See Appendix C which contains a
summary of the investment objectives of each Portfolio.) Each Portfolio
corresponds to one of the Subaccounts of the Variable Account. The assets of
each Portfolio are separate from the others and each Portfolio operates as a
separate investment portfolio whose performance has no effect on the investment
performance of any other Portfolio. More detailed information for each Portfolio
offered, such as its investment policies and restrictions, charges, risks
attendant to investing in it, and other aspects of its operations, may be found
in the current prospectus for each Portfolio. Such a prospectus for the
Portfolios being considered must accompany this Prospectus and should be read in
conjunction herewith. A copy of each prospectus may be obtained without charge
from First Fortis by calling 1-800-523-4374, or writing P.O. Box 3249, Syracuse,
NY 13220.
 
First Fortis purchases and redeems Portfolios' shares for the Variable Account
at their net asset value without the imposition of any sales or redemption
charges. Any dividend or capital gain distributions attributable to Contracts
are automatically reinvested in shares of the Portfolio from which they are
received at the Portfolio's net asset value on the date paid. Such dividends and
distributions will have the effect of reducing the net asset value of each share
of the corresponding Portfolio and increasing, by an equivalent value, the
number of shares outstanding of the Portfolio. However, the value of your
interest in the corresponding Subaccount will not change as a result of any such
dividends and distributions.
 
As indicated, Portfolios may also be available to registered separate accounts
offering variable annuity and variable life products of other participating
insurance companies, as well as to the Variable Account and other separate
accounts of First Fortis. Although First Fortis does not anticipate any
disadvantages to this, there is a possibility that a material conflict may arise
between the interest of the Variable Account and one or more of the other
separate accounts participating in the Portfolios. A conflict may occur due to a
change in law affecting the operations of variable life and variable annuity
separate accounts, differences in the voting instructions of the Contract Owners
and those of other companies, or some other reason. In the event of conflict,
First Fortis will take any steps necessary to protect the Contract Owners and
variable annuity payees.
 
THE FIXED ACCOUNT
 
GUARANTEE INTEREST RATES/GUARANTEE PERIODS
 
Any amount allocated by the Contract Owner to the Fixed Account earns a
Guaranteed Interest Rate commencing with the date of such allocation. This
Guaranteed Interest Rate continues for a number of years (not to exceed ten)
selected by the Contract Owner. At the end of this Guarantee Period, the
Contract Owner's Contract Value in that Guarantee Period, including interest
accrued thereon, will be allocated to a new Guarantee Period of the same length
unless First Fortis has received a Written Request from the Contract Owner to
allocate this amount to a different Guarantee Period or periods or to one or
more of the Subaccounts. We must receive this Written Request at least three
business days prior to the end of the Guarantee Period. The first day of the new
Guarantee Period (or other reallocation) will be the day after the end of the
prior Guarantee Period. We will notify the Contract Owner at least 45 days and
not more than 60 days prior to the end of any Guarantee Period.
 
We currently make available ten different Guarantee Periods, ranging from one to
ten years. Each Guarantee Period has its own Guaranteed Interest Rate, which may
differ from those for other Guarantee Periods. From time to time we will, at our
discretion, change the Guaranteed Interest Rate for future Guarantee Periods of
various lengths. These changes will not affect the Guaranteed Interest Rates
being paid on Guarantee Periods that have already commenced. Each allocation or
transfer of an amount to a Guarantee Period commences the running of a new
Guarantee Period with respect to that amount, which will earn a Guaranteed
Interest Rate that will continue unchanged until the end of that period. The
Guaranteed Interest Rate will never be less than an effective annual rate of 3%.
 
First Fortis declares the Guaranteed Interest Rates from time to time as market
conditions dictate. First Fortis advises a Contract Owner of the Guaranteed
Interest Rate for a chosen Guarantee Period at the time a purchase payment is
received, a transfer is effectuated or a Guarantee Period is renewed.
 
First Fortis has no specific formula for establishing the Guaranteed Interest
Rates for the Guarantee Periods. The rate may be influenced by, but not
necessarily correspond to, interest rates generally available on the types of
investments acquired with amounts allocated to the Guarantee Period. See
"Investments by First Fortis." First Fortis in determining Guaranteed Interest
Rates, may also consider, among other factors, the duration of a Guarantee
Period, regulatory and tax requirements, sales and administrative expenses borne
by First Fortis, risks assumed by First Fortis, First Fortis' profitability
objectives, and general economic trends.
 
FIRST FORTIS' MANAGEMENT MAKES THE FINAL DETERMINATION OF THE GUARANTEED
INTEREST RATES TO BE DECLARED.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
FIRST FORTIS CANNOT PREDICT OR ASSURE THE LEVEL OF ANY FUTURE GUARANTEED
INTEREST RATES IN EXCESS OF AN EFFECTIVE ANNUAL RATE OF 3%.
 
Information concerning the Guaranteed Interest Rates applicable to the various
Guarantee Periods at any time may be obtained from our Home Office or from your
sales representative.
 
MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT
 
Except as described below, if any Fixed Account Value is surrendered,
transferred or otherwise paid out before the end of the Guarantee Period in
which it is being held, a Market Value Adjustment will be applied. This
generally includes amounts applied to an annuity option, and amounts paid as a
single sum in lieu of an annuity. However, NO Market Value Adjustment will be
applied to amounts that are paid out during the period beginning fifteen days
before and ending fifteen days after the end of a Guarantee Period in which it
was being held. Additionally, no Market Value Adjustment will be applied to
amounts that are withdrawn from a Guarantee Period and paid out to the Contract
Owner, or transferred to the Variable Account, on an automatic periodic basis
under a formal First Fortis program for the withdrawal or transfer of the
earnings of the Fixed Account. (There may be conditions and limitations imposed
by First Fortis associated with such a program. See your First Fortis
representative for the availability of any such program, and the conditions and
limitations of such a program, in your state.)
 
The Market Value Adjustment may increase or decrease the amount of Fixed Account
Value being withdrawn or transferred. The comparison of two Guaranteed Interest
Rates determines whether the Market Value Adjustment produces an increase or a
decrease. The first rate to compare is the Guaranteed Interest Rate for the
amount being transferred or withdrawn. The second rate is the Guaranteed
Interest Rate then being offered for new Guarantee Periods of the same duration
as that remaining in the Guarantee Period from which the funds are being
withdrawn or transferred. If the first rate exceeds the second by more than
1/2%, the Market Value Adjustment produces an increase. If the first rate does
not exceed the second by at least 1/2%, the Market Value Adjustment produces a
decrease. Sample calculations are shown in Appendix A.
 
The Market Value Adjustment will be determined by multiplying the amount being
withdrawn or transferred from the Guarantee Period (before deduction of any
applicable surrender charge) by the following factor:
 
      (  1 + I  )         n / 12
      -----------                 - 1
 (   1 + J + .0025    )
 
where,
 
    - I is the Guaranteed Interest Rate being credited to the amount being
      withdrawn from the existing Guarantee Period,
 
    - J is the Guaranteed Interest Rate then being offered for new Guarantee
      Periods with durations equal to the number of years remaining in the
      existing Guarantee Period (rounded up to the next higher number of years),
      and
 
    - N is the number of months remaining in the existing Guarantee Period
      (rounded up to the next higher number of months).
 
INVESTMENTS BY FIRST FORTIS
 
Our obligations with respect to the Fixed Account are legal obligations of First
Fortis and are supported by our General Account assets, which also support
obligations incurred by us under other insurance and annuity contracts.
Investments purchased with amounts allocated to both Fixed Accounts are the
property of First Fortis and Contract Owners have no legal rights in such
investments. Subject to applicable law, we have sole discretion over the
investment of assets in our General Account and in the Fixed Account.
 
Amounts in the First Fortis' General Account and the Fixed Account will be
invested in compliance with applicable state insurance laws and regulations
concerning the nature and quality of investments for the General Account. Within
specified limits and subject to certain standards and limitations, these laws
generally permit investment in federal, state and municipal obligations,
preferred and common stocks, corporate bonds, real estate mortgages, real estate
and certain other investments. See First Fortis' Financial Statements" for
information on First Fortis' investments. Investment management for amounts in
the General Account and in the Fixed Account is provided to First Fortis by
Fortis Advisers, Inc.
 
First Fortis intends to consider the return available on the instruments in
which it intends to invest amounts allocated to the Fixed Account when it
establishes Guaranteed Interest Rates. Such return is only one of many factors
considered in establishing the Guaranteed Interest Rates. See "Guarantee Periods
Fixed Account."
 
First Fortis expects that amounts allocated to the Fixed Account generally will
be invested in debt instruments that approximately match First Fortis'
liabilities with regard to the Guarantee Periods. First Fortis expects that
these will include primarily the following types of debt instruments: (1)
securities issued by the United States Government or its agencies or
instrumentalities, which securities may or may not be guaranteed by the United
States Government; (2) debt securities which have an investment grade, at the
time of purchase, within the four highest grades assigned by Moody's Investors
Services, Inc. ("Moody's") (Aaa, Aa, A or Baa), Standard & Poor's Corporation
("Standard & Poor's") (AAA, AA, A or BBB), or any other nationally recognized
rating service; (3) other debt instruments including, but not limited to, issues
of or guaranteed by banks or bank holding companies and corporations, which
obligations although not rated by Moody's or Standard & Poor's, are deemed by
First Fortis to have an investment quality comparable to securities which may be
purchased as stated above; and (4) other evidences of indebtedness secured by
mortgages or deeds of trust representing liens upon real estate. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, First Fortis is not obligated to invest amounts allocated to the
Fixed Account according to any particular strategy, except as may be required by
applicable state insurance laws and regulations. See "Regulation and Reserves."
 
FIXED ACCOUNT VALUE
 
The Contract's Fixed Account Value on any Valuation Date is the sum of the Net
Purchase Payments allocated to the Fixed Account, plus any transfers from the
Variable Account, plus interest credited to the Fixed Account, less any
surrender charges or annual administrative charges allocated to the Fixed
Account or transfers to the Variable Account.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
ACCUMULATION PERIOD
 
ISSUANCE OF A CONTRACT AND PURCHASE PAYMENTS
 
First Fortis reserves the right to reject any application for a Contract or any
purchase payment for any reason. If the issuing instructions can be accepted in
the form received, the initial purchase payment will be credited within two
Valuation Dates after the later of receipt of the issuing instructions or
receipt of the initial purchase payment at First Fortis' Home Office. If the
initial purchase payment cannot be credited within five Valuation Dates after
receipt because the issuing instructions are incomplete, the initial purchase
payment will be returned unless the applicant consents to our retaining the
initial purchase payment and crediting it as of the end of the Valuation Period
in which the necessary requirements are fulfilled. The initial purchase payment
must be at least $5,000 ($2,000 for a Contract issued pursuant to a qualified
plan).
 
The date that the initial purchase payment is applied to the purchase of the
Contract is also the Contract Issue Date. The Contract Issue Date is the date
used to determine Contract years, regardless of when the Contract is delivered.
The crediting of investment experience in the Variable Account, or a fixed rate
of return in the Fixed Account, begins as of the Contract Issue Date.
 
The Contract Owner may make additional purchase payments at any time after the
Contract Issue Date and prior to the Annuity Commencement Date, as long as the
Annuitant is living. Purchase payments (together with any required information
identifying the proper Contracts and account to be credited with purchase
payments) must be transmitted to our Home Office. Additional purchase payments
are credited to the Contract and added to the Contract Value as of the end of
the Valuation Period in which they are received in good order.
 
Each additional purchase payment under a Contract must be at least $500. The
total of all purchase payments for all First Fortis annuities having the same
owner or participant, or annuitant, may not exceed $1 million (not more than
$500,000 allocated to the Fixed Account) without First Fortis' prior approval,
and we reserve the right to modify this limitation at any time.
 
Purchase payments in excess of the initial minimum may be made by monthly draft
against the bank account of any Contract Owner who has completed and returned to
us a special "Thrift-O-Matic" authorization form that may be obtained from your
sales representative or from our Home Office. Arrangements can also be made for
purchase payments by wire transfer, payroll deduction, military allotment,
direct deposit and billing. Purchase payments by check should be made payable to
First Fortis Life Insurance Company.
 
If the Contract Value is less than $1,000, we may cancel the Contract on any
Valuation Date. We will notify the Contract Owner at least 90 days in advance of
our intention to cancel the Contract. Such cancellation would be considered a
full surrender of the Contract.
 
CONTRACT VALUE
 
Contract Value is the total of any Variable Account Value in all the Subaccounts
of the Variable Account pursuant to the Contract, plus any Fixed Account Value.
 
There is no guaranteed minimum Variable Account Value. To the extent Contract
Value is allocated to the Variable Account, you bear the entire investment risk.
 
DETERMINATION OF VARIABLE ACCOUNT VALUE. A Contract's Variable Account Value is
based on Accumulation Unit values, which are determined on each Valuation Date.
The value of an Accumulation Unit for a Subaccount on any Valuation Date is
equal to the previous value of that Subaccount's Accumulation Unit multiplied by
that Subaccount's net investment factor (discussed directly below) for the
Valuation Period ending on that Valuation Date. At the end of any Valuation
Period, a Contract's Variable Account Value in a Subaccount is equal to the
number of Accumulation Units in the Subaccount times the value of one
Accumulation Unit for that Subaccount.
 
The number of Accumulation Units in each Subaccount is equal to:
 
    - Accumulation Units purchased at the time that any Net Purchase Payments or
      transferred amounts are allocated to the Subaccount; less
 
    - Accumulation Units redeemed to pay for the portion of any transfers from
      or partial surrenders allocated to the Subaccount; less
 
    - Accumulation Units redeemed to pay charges under the Contract.
 
NET INVESTMENT FACTOR. If a Subaccount's net investment factor is greater than
one, the Subaccount's Accumulation Unit value has increased. If the net
investment factor is less than one, the Subaccount's Accumulation Unit value has
decreased. The net investment factor for a Subaccount is determined by dividing
(1) the net asset value per share of the Portfolio shares held by the
Subaccount, determined at the end of the current Valuation Period, plus the per
share amount of any dividend or capital gains distribution made with respect to
the Portfolio shares held by the Subaccount during the current Valuation Period,
minus a per share charge for the increase, plus a per share credit for the
decrease, in any income taxes assessed which we determine to have resulted from
the investment operation of the subaccount or any other taxes which are
attributable to this Contract, by (2) the net asset value per share of the
Portfolio shares held in the Subaccount as determined at the end of the previous
Valuation Period, and subtracting from that result a factor representing the
mortality risk, expense risk and administrative expense charge.
 
DETERMINATION OF FIXED ACCOUNT VALUE. A Contract's Fixed Account Value is
guaranteed by First Fortis. Therefore, First Fortis bears the investment risk
with respect to amounts allocated to the Fixed Account, except to the extent
that (a) First Fortis may vary the Guaranteed Interest Rate for future Guarantee
Periods (subject to the 3% effective annual minimum) and (b) the Market Value
Adjustment for Fixed Accounts imposes investment risks on the Contract Owner.
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
The Contract's Fixed Account Value on any Valuation Date is equal to the
following amounts, in each case increased by accrued interest:
 
    - The amount of Net Purchase Payments or transferred amounts allocated to
      the Fixed Account; less
 
    - The amount of any transfers or surrenders out of the Fixed Account.
 
ALLOCATION OF PURCHASE PAYMENTS AND CONTRACT VALUE
 
ALLOCATION OF PURCHASE PAYMENTS. In the application for a Contract, the Contract
Owner can allocate Net Purchase Payments, or portions thereof, to the available
Subaccounts of the Variable Account or to the Fixed Account (and to Guarantee
Periods within the Fixed Account), or a combination thereof. Percentages must be
in whole numbers and the total allocation must equal 100%. The percentage
allocations for future Net Purchase Payments may be changed, without charge, at
any time by sending a Written Request to First Fortis' Home Office. Changes in
the allocation of future Net Purchase Payments will be effective on the date we
receive the Contract Owner's Written Request.
 
TRANSFERS. Transfers of Contract Value from one available Subaccount to another
or into the Fixed Account, or from the Fixed Account to one of the available
Subaccounts, or from one Guarantee Period to another Guarantee Period, can be
made by the Contract Owner in Written Request to First Fortis' Home Office, or
by telephone transfer as described below. There is currently no charge for any
transfer, although transfers from a Guarantee Period of a Guarantee Period Fixed
Account that are (1) more than 15 days before or after the expiration thereof,
or (2) are not a part of a formal First Fortis program for the transfer of
earnings of the Fixed Account, are subject to a Market Value Adjustment. See
"Market Value Adjustment."
 
The minimum transfer from a Subaccount or Guarantee Period is the lesser of
$1,000 or all of the Contract Value in the Subaccount or Fixed Account.
Irrespective of the above we may permit a continuing request for transfers of
lesser specified amounts automatically on a periodic basis. However, we reserve
the right to impose charges (not to exceed $25 per transfer) upon transfers.
Nevertheless, we will not impose a transfer charge on the first six transfers
between Guaranty Periods of the Fixed Account, between the Fixed Account and the
Subaccounts, or between the Subaccounts in any calendar year. We will count all
transfers between and among the Subaccounts of the Variable Account and the
Fixed Account as one transfer, if all the transfer requests are made at the same
time as part of one request. We will execute the transfers and determine all
values in connection with transfers as of the end of the Valuation Period in
which we receive the transfer request. The amount of any positive or negative
Market Value Adjustment associated with a transfer from a Guarantee Period,
respectively, will be added to or deducted from the transferred amount.
 
If you complete and return the Telephone Transfer Authorization Form, transfers
may be made pursuant to telephone instructions. We will honor telephone transfer
instructions from any person who provides the correct identifying information.
First Fortis will not be responsible for, and you will bear the risk of loss
from, oral instructions, including fraudulent instructions, which are reasonably
believed to be genuine. We will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that
telephone instructions are genuine, but if such procedures are not deemed
reasonable, we may be liable for any losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent
instructions. Our procedures are to verify address and social security number
and provide written confirmation of the transaction. We may modify or terminate
our telephone transfer procedures at any time. The number for telephone
transfers is 1-800-591-7333.
 
Certain restrictions on very substantial investments in any one Subaccount are
set forth under "Limitations on Allocations" in the Statement of Additional
Information.
 
TOTAL AND PARTIAL SURRENDERS
 
TOTAL SURRENDERS. The Contract Owner may surrender all of the Cash Surrender
Value at any time during the life of the Annuitant and prior to the Annuity
Commencement Date by a Written Request sent to First Fortis' Home Office. We
reserve the right to require that the Contract be returned to us prior to making
payment, although this will not affect our determination of the amount of the
Cash Surrender Value. Cash Surrender Value is the Contract Value at the end of
the Valuation Period during which the Written Request for the total surrender is
received by First Fortis at its Home Office, plus or minus any applicable Market
Value Adjustment. See "Market Value Adjustment."
 
The written consent of all collateral assignees and irrevocable beneficiaries
must be obtained prior to any total surrender. Surrenders from the Variable
Account will generally be paid within seven days of the date of receipt by First
Fortis' Home Office of the Written Request. Postponement of payments may occur,
however, in certain circumstances. See "Postponement of Payment."
 
The amount paid upon total surrender of the Cash Surrender Value (taking into
account any prior partial surrenders) may be more or less than the total Net
Purchase Payments made. After a surrender of the Cash Surrender Value or at any
time the Contract Value is zero, all rights of the Contract Owner, Annuitant, or
any other person will terminate.
 
PARTIAL SURRENDERS. At any time prior to the Annuity Commencement Date and
during the lifetime of the Annuitant, the Contract Owner may surrender a portion
of the Fixed Account Value and/or the Variable Account Value by sending to First
Fortis' Home Office a Written Request. We will not accept a partial surrender
request unless the net proceeds payable to you as a result of the request are at
least $1,000. If the total Contract Value in both the Variable Account and Fixed
Account would be less than $1,000 after the partial surrender, First Fortis will
surrender the entire Cash Surrender Value under the Contract.
 
In order for a request to be processed, the Contract Owner must specify from
which Subaccounts of the Variable Account or Guarantee Periods of the Fixed
Account, if applicable, a partial surrender should be made.
 
We will surrender Accumulation Units from the Variable Account and/ or dollar
amounts from the Fixed Account so that the total amount of the partial surrender
equals the dollar amount of the partial surrender request. If the surrender is
from a Guarantee Period, the amount payable to the Contract Owner will be
reduced by any applicable
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
negative Market Value Adjustment, or increased by any positive Market Value
Adjustment unless the surrender is (1) within 15 days before or after the
expiration of a Guarantee Period, or (2) is a part of a formal First Fortis
program for the transfer of earnings from the Fixed Account. The partial
surrender will be effective at the end of the Valuation Period in which First
Fortis receives the Written Request for partial surrender at its Home Office.
Payments will generally be made within seven days of the effective date of such
request, although certain delays are permitted. See "Postponement of Payment."
 
The Internal Revenue Code provides that a penalty tax will be imposed on certain
premature surrenders. For a discussion of this and other tax implications of
total and partial surrenders, including withholding requirements, see "Federal
Tax Matters." Also, under tax deferred annuity Contracts pursuant to Section
403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, no distributions of voluntary salary
reduction amounts will be permitted prior to one of the following events:
attainment of age 59 1/2 by the employee or the employee's separation from
service, death, disability or hardship. (Hardship distributions will be limited
to the lesser of the amount of the hardship or the amount of salary reduction
contributions, exclusive of earnings thereon.)
 
BENEFIT PAYABLE ON DEATH OF ANNUITANT OR CONTRACT OWNER
 
If the Annuitant or Contract Owner dies prior to the Annuity Commencement Date,
a death benefit will be paid to the Beneficiary. If more than one Annuitant has
been named, the death benefit payable upon the death of an Annuitant will only
be paid upon the death of the last survivor of the persons so named. The death
benefit will equal the greater of:
 
(1)  the sum of all Net Purchase Payments made less all prior
     surrenders and any applicable prior negative Market Value Adjustments, or
 
(2)  the Contract Value as of the date used for valuing the death
     benefit.
 
The value of the death benefit is determined as of the end of the Valuation
Period in which we receive, at our Home Office, proof of death and the written
request as to the manner of payment. Upon receipt of these items, the death
benefit generally will be paid within seven days. Under certain circumstances,
payment of the death benefit may be postponed. See "Postponement of Payment." If
we do not receive a Written Request for a settlement method, we will pay the
death benefit in a single sum, based on values determined at that time.
 
The Beneficiary may (a) receive a single sum payment, which terminates the
Contract, or (b) select an annuity option. If the Beneficiary selects an annuity
option, he or she will have all the rights and privileges of a payee under the
Contract. If the Beneficiary desires an Annuity option, the election should be
made within 60 days of the date the death benefit becomes payable. Failure to
make a timely election can result in unfavorable tax consequences. For further
information, see "Federal Tax Matters."
 
We accept any of the following as proof of death: a copy of a certified death
certificate; a copy of a certified decree of a court of competent jurisdiction
as to the finding of death; or a written statement by a medical doctor who
attended the deceased at the time of death.
 
If the Contract Owner dies before the Annuitant and before the Annuity
Commencement Date with respect to a Non-Qualified Contract certain additional
requirements are mandated by the Internal Revenue Code, which are discussed
below under "Federal Tax Matters-- Required Distributions for Non-Qualified
Contracts." It is imperative that Written Notice of the death of the Contract
Owner be promptly transmitted to First Fortis at its Home Office, so that
arrangements can be made for distribution of the entire interest in the Contract
to the Beneficiary in a manner that satisfies the Internal Revenue Code
requirements. Failure to satisfy these requirements may result in the Contract
not being treated as an annuity contract for federal income tax purposes, which
could have adverse tax consequences.
 
THE ANNUITY PERIOD
 
ANNUITY COMMENCEMENT DATE
 
The Contract Owner may specify an Annuity Commencement Date in the application
not later than the Annuitant's 90th birthday. The Annuity Commencement Date
marks the beginning of the period during which an Annuitant or other payee
designated by the Contract Owner receives annuity payments under the Contract.
We reserve the right to not permit an Annuity Commencement Date which is on or
after the Annuitant's 75th birthday.
 
Depending on the type of retirement arrangement involved, amounts that are
distributed either too soon or too late may be subject to penalty taxes under
the Internal Revenue Code. See "Federal Tax Matters." You should consider this
carefully in selecting or changing an Annuity Commencement Date.
 
In order to advance or defer the Annuity Commencement Date, the Contract Owner
must submit a Written Request during the Annuitant's lifetime. The request must
be received at our Home Office at least 30 days before the then-scheduled
Annuity Commencement Date. The new Annuity Commencement Date must also be at
least 30 days after the Written Request is received. There is no right to make
any total or partial surrender during the Annuity Period.
 
COMMENCEMENT OF ANNUITY PAYMENTS
 
If the Contract Value at the end of the Valuation Period which contains the
Annuity Commencement Date is less than $1,000, we may pay the entire Contract
Value, without the imposition of any charges other than the premium tax charge,
if applicable, in a single sum payment to the Annuitant or other payee chosen by
the Contract Owner and cancel the Contract.
 
Otherwise, First Fortis will apply (1) the Fixed Account Value to provide a
Fixed Annuity Option and (2) the Variable Account Value in any Subaccount to
provide a Variable Annuity Option using the same Subaccount, unless the Contract
Owner has notified us by Written Request to apply the Fixed Account Value and
Variable Account Value
 
                                       12
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in different proportions. Any such Written Request must be received by us at our
Home Office at least 30 days before the Annuity Commencement Date.
 
Annuity payments under a Fixed or Variable Annuity Option will be made on a
monthly basis to the Annuitant or other properly-designated payee, unless we
agree to a different payment schedule. If more than one person is named as an
Annuitant, the Contract Owner may elect to name one of such persons to be the
sole Annuitant as of the Annuity Commencement Date. We reserve the right to
change the frequency of any annuity payment so that each payment will be at
least $50. There is no right to make any total or partial surrender during the
Annuity Period.
 
The amount of each annuity payment will depend on the amount of Contract Value
applied to an annuity option, the form of annuity selected and the age of the
Annuitant. Information concerning the relationship between the Annuitant's sex
and the amount of annuity payments, including special requirements in connection
with employee benefits plans, is set forth under "Calculations of Annuity
Payments" in the Statement of Additional Information. The Statement of
Additional Information also contains detailed information about how the amount
of each annuity payment is computed.
 
The dollar amount of any fixed annuity payments is specified during the entire
period of annuity payments according to the provisions of the annuity form
selected. The dollar amount of variable annuity payments varies during the
annuity period based on changes in Annuity Unit Values for the Subaccounts that
you choose to use in connection with your payments.
 
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SUBACCOUNT INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE AND AMOUNT OF VARIABLE
ANNUITY PAYMENTS
 
If a Subaccount on which a variable annuity payment is based has an average
effective net investment return higher than 3% per annum during the period
between two such annuity payments, the Annuity Unit Value will increase, and the
second payment will be higher than the first. Conversely, if the Subaccount's
average effective net investment return over the period between the annuity
payments is less than 3% per annum, the Annuity Unit Value will decrease, and
the second payment will be lower than the first. "Net investment return," for
this purpose, refers to the Subaccount's overall investment performance, net of
the mortality and expense risk and administrative expense charges, which are
assessed at a nominal aggregate annual rate of .45%. We guarantee that the
amount of each variable annuity payment after the first payment will not be
affected by variations in our mortality experience or our expenses.
 
TRANSFERS. During the Annuity Period, the person receiving annuity payments may
make up to four transfers a year among Subaccounts. The current procedures for
and conditions on these transfers are the same as described above under
"Allocation of Purchase Payments and Contract Value Transfers." Transfers from a
Fixed Annuity Option are not permitted during the Annuity Period.
 
ANNUITY FORMS
 
The Contract Owner may select an annuity form or change a previous selection by
Written Request, which must be received by us at least 30 days before the
Annuity Commencement Date. One annuity form may be selected, although as
discussed above, payments under that form may be received on a combination fixed
and variable basis. If no annuity form selection is in effect on the Annuity
Commencement Date, in most cases we automatically apply Option B (described
below), with payments guaranteed for 10 years. If the Contract is issued under
certain retirement plans, however, federal pension law may require that payments
be made pursuant to Option D (described below), unless otherwise elected. Tax
laws and regulations may impose further restrictions to assure that the primary
purpose of the plan is distribution of the accumulated funds to the employee.
 
The following options are available for fixed annuity payments and for variable
annuity payments.
 
OPTION A, LIFE ANNUITY. Payments are made as of the first Valuation Date of each
monthly period during the Annuitant's life, starting with the Annuity
Commencement Date. No payments will be made after the Annuitant dies. It is
possible for the payee to receive only one payment under this option, if the
Annuitant dies before the second payment is due.
 
OPTION B, LIFE ANNUITY WITH PAYMENTS GUARANTEED FOR 10 YEARS TO 20
YEARS. Payments are made as of the first Valuation Date of each monthly period
starting on the Annuity Commencement Date. Payments will continue as long as the
Annuitant lives. If the Annuitant dies before all of the guaranteed payments
have been made, we will continue installments of the guaranteed payments to the
Beneficiary.
 
OPTION C, JOINT AND FULL SURVIVOR ANNUITY. Payments are made as of the first
Valuation Date of each monthly period starting with the Annuity Commencement
Date. Payments will continue as long as either the Annuitant or the joint
Annuitant is alive. Payments will stop when both the Annuitant and the joint
Annuitant have died. It is possible for the payee or payees under this option to
receive only one payment, if both Annuitants die before the second payment is
due.
 
OPTION D, JOINT AND ONE-HALF CONTINGENT SURVIVOR ANNUITY. Payments are made as
of the first Valuation Date of each monthly period starting with the Annuity
Commencement Date. Payments will continue as long as either the Annuitant or the
joint Annuitant is alive. If the Annuitant dies first, payments will continue to
the joint Annuitant at one-half the original amount. If the joint Annuitant dies
first, payments will continue to the Annuitant at the original full amount.
Payments will stop when both the Annuitant and the joint Annuitant have died. It
is possible for the payee or payees under this option to receive only one
payment if both Annuitants die before the second payment is due.
 
We also have other annuity forms available and information about them can be
obtained from your sales representative or by calling or writing to our Home
Office.
 
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DEATH OF ANNUITANT OR OTHER PAYEE
 
Under most annuity forms offered by First Fortis, the amounts, if any, payable
on the death of the Annuitant during the Annuity Period are the continuation of
annuity payments for any remaining guarantee period or for the life of any joint
Annuitant. In all such cases, the person entitled to receive payments also
receives any rights and privileges under the annuity form in effect.
 
Additional rules applicable to such distributions under Non-Qualified Contracts
are described under "Federal Tax Matters--Required Distributions for
Non-Qualified Contracts." Though the rules there described do not apply to
Contracts issued in connection with qualified plans, similar rules apply to the
plans themselves.
 
CHARGES AND DEDUCTIONS
 
PREMIUM TAXES
 
First Fortis will deduct a charge for state premium taxes or similar assessments
from the Contract Value at the time that annuity payments begin. The charge will
be deducted on a pro-rata basis from the then-current Fixed Account Value and,
by redemption of Accumulation Units, the then-current Variable Account Value in
each Subaccount. Similarly, First Fortis may deduct premium taxes from Contract
Value when no deduction was made from purchase payments, but is subsequently
determined to be due. Conversely, First Fortis will credit to the Contract Value
the amount of any deductions for premium taxes or similar assessments that are
subsequently determined not to be owed.
 
Applicable premium tax rates depend upon the Contract Owner's then-current place
of residence. Applicable rates are subject to change by legislation,
administrative interpretations or judicial acts.
 
CHARGES AGAINST THE VARIABLE ACCOUNT
 
MORTALITY AND EXPENSE RISK CHARGE. We will assess each Subaccount of the
Variable Account with a daily charge for mortality and expense risk at a nominal
annual rate of .45% of the average daily net assets of the Variable Account
(consisting of approximately .30% for mortality risk and approximately .15% for
expense risk). This charge is assessed during both the Accumulation Period and
the Annuity Period. We guarantee not to increase this charge for the duration of
the Contract.
 
The mortality risk borne by First Fortis arises from its obligation to make
annuity payments (determined in accordance with the annuity tables and other
provisions contained in the Contract) for the full life of all Annuitants
regardless of how long all Annuitants or any individual Annuitant might live. In
addition, First Fortis bears a mortality risk in that it guarantees to pay a
death benefit upon the death of an Annuitant or Contract Owner prior to the
Annuity Commencement Date.
 
The expense risk assumed is that actual expenses incurred in connection with
issuing and administering the Contract will exceed the limits on administrative
charges set in the Contract.
 
If the administrative charges and the mortality and expense risk charge are
insufficient to cover the expenses and costs assumed, the loss will be borne by
the Company. Conversely, if the amount deducted proves more than sufficient, the
excess will be profit to the Company.
 
ANNUAL ADMINISTRATIVE CHARGE
 
A $30 annual administrative charge is deducted each Contract year from the
Contract Value on each anniversary of the Contract Issue Date. (This charge will
be lower to the extent legally required in some states.) This charge is to help
cover administrative costs such as those incurred in issuing Contracts,
establishing and maintaining the records relating to Contracts, making
regulatory filings and furnishing confirmation notices, voting materials and
other communications, providing computer, actuarial and accounting services, and
processing Contract transactions. This charge will initially be waived during
the Annuity Period, although First Fortis reserves the right to reinstitute it
at any time.
 
The annual administrative charge will be deducted by redemption of Accumulation
Units from each Subaccount of the Variable Account and from the Fixed Account in
the same proportion as the then-current Contract Value is then allocated among
those alternatives pursuant to the Contract. If the Contract is totally
surrendered, the full annual administrative charge will be deducted at the time
of surrender.
 
The annual administrative charge and charges against the Separate Account
described above are for the purposes described and First Fortis may receive a
profit as a result of these charges.
 
TAX CHARGE
 
We currently impose no charge for taxes payable by us in connection with the
Contract, other than for premium taxes and similar assessments when applicable.
We reserve the right to impose a charge for any other taxes that may become
payable by us in the future in connection with the Contracts or the Variable
Account.
 
MISCELLANEOUS
 
Because the Variable Account invests in shares of the Portfolios, the net assets
of the Variable Account will reflect the investment advisory fees and certain
other expenses incurred by the Portfolios that are described in their
prospectuses.
 
GENERAL PROVISIONS
 
THE CONTRACTS
 
The Contract, copies of any applications, amendments, riders, or endorsements
attached to the Contract and copies of any supplemental applications,
amendments, endorsements, or revised Contract pages which are mailed to you are
the entire Contract. Only an officer of First Fortis can agree to change or
waive any provisions of a Contract. Any change or waiver must be in writing and
signed by an officer of First Fortis. The Contracts are non-participating and do
not share in dividends or earnings of First Fortis.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
POSTPONEMENT OF PAYMENT
 
First Fortis may defer for up to 15 days the payment of any amount attributable
to a purchase payment made by check to allow the check reasonable time to clear.
For a description of other circumstances in which amounts payable out of
Variable Account assets could be deferred, see "Postponement of Payments" in the
Statement of Additional Information. First Fortis may also defer payment of
surrender proceeds payable out of the Fixed Account for a period of up to 6
months.
 
MISSTATEMENT OF AGE OR SEX AND OTHER ERRORS
 
If the age or sex of the Annuitant has been misstated, any amount payable will
be that which the purchase payments paid would have purchased at the correct age
and sex. If we have made any overpayments because of incorrect information about
age or sex, or any other miscalculation, First Fortis will deduct the
overpayment from the next payment or payments due. We add underpayments to the
next payment. The amount of any adjustment will be credited or charged with
interest at the effective annual rate of 3% per year.
 
ASSIGNMENT
 
Rights and interests under a Qualified Contract may be assigned only in certain
narrow circumstances referred to in the Contract. Contract Owners and other
payees may assign their rights and interests under Non-Qualified Contracts,
including their ownership rights.
 
We take no responsibility for the validity of any assignment. A change in
ownership rights must be made in writing and a copy must be sent to First
Fortis' Home Office. The change will be effective on the date it was made,
although we are not bound by a change until the date we record it.
 
The rights under a Contract are subject to any assignment of record at the Home
Office of First Fortis. An assignment or pledge of a Contract may have adverse
tax consequences. See below under "Federal Tax Matters."
 
BENEFICIARY
 
Before the Annuity Commencement Date and while the Annuitant is living, the
Contract Owner may name or change a beneficiary or a contingent beneficiary by
sending a Written Request of the change to First Fortis. Under certain
retirement programs, however, spousal consent may be required to name or change
a beneficiary, and the right to name a beneficiary other than the spouse may be
subject to applicable tax laws and regulations. We are not responsible for the
validity of any change. A change will take effect as of the date it is signed
but will not affect any payments we make or action we take before receiving the
Written Request. We also need the consent of any irrevocably named person before
making a requested change.
 
In the event of the death of a Contract Owner or Annuitant prior to the Annuity
Commencement date the Beneficiary will be determined as follows:
 
    - If upon the death of a Contract Owner there is one or more surviving
      Contract Owners, the surviving Contract Owner(s) will be the beneficiary
      (these override any other beneficiary designations).
 
    - If upon the death of a Contract Owner there are no surviving Contract
      Owners, and upon the death of the Annuitant, the Beneficiary will be the
      beneficiary designated by the Contract Owner. If there is no surviving
      beneficiary who has been designated by the Contract Owner, then the
      Contract Owner, or the Contract Owner's estate, will be the Beneficiary.
 
REPORTS
 
We will mail to the Contract Owner (or to the person receiving payments during
the annuity period), at the last known address of record, any reports and
communications required by any applicable law or regulation. You should
therefore give us prompt written notice of any address change. This will include
annual audited financial statements of the Portfolios, but not necessarily of
the Variable Account or First Fortis.
 
RIGHTS RESERVED BY FIRST FORTIS
 
First Fortis reserves the right to make certain changes if, in its judgment,
they would best serve the interests of Contract Owners and Annuitants or would
be appropriate in carrying out the purposes of the Contracts. Any changes will
be made only to the extent and in the manner permitted by applicable laws. Also,
when required by law, First Fortis will obtain your approval of the changes and
approval from any appropriate regulatory authority. Such approval may not be
required in all cases, however. Examples of the changes First Fortis may make
include:
 
    - To operate the Variable Account in any form permitted under the Investment
      Company Act of 1940 or in any other form permitted by law.
 
    - To transfer any assets in any Subaccount to another Subaccount, or to one
      or more separate accounts, or to the Fixed Account; or to add, combine or
      remove Subaccounts in the Variable Account.
 
    - To substitute, for the Portfolio shares held in any Subaccount, the shares
      of another Portfolio or the shares of another investment company or any
      other investment permitted by law.
 
    - To make any changes required by the Internal Revenue Code or by any other
      applicable law in order to continue treatment of the Contract as an
      annuity.
 
    - To change the time or time of day at which a Valuation Date is deemed to
      have ended.
 
    - To make any other necessary technical changes in the Contract in order to
      conform with any action the above provisions permit First Fortis to take,
      including to change the way First Fortis assesses charges, but without
      increasing as to any then outstanding Contract the aggregate amount of the
      types of charges which First Fortis has guaranteed.
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
DISTRIBUTION
 
The Contracts will be sold by individuals who, in addition to being licensed by
state insurance authorities to sell the Contracts of First Fortis, are also
registered representatives of Jack White & Company, an unaffiliated
broker-dealer. The selling activities of Jack White & Company are by means of a
dealer agreement with Fortis Investors, Inc., the principal underwriter of the
Contracts. Fortis Investors and Jack White & Company are registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as
broker-dealers and are members of the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc.
 
As compensation for distributing the Contracts, First Fortis pays Fortis
Investors, who in turn pays Jack White & Company, a fee not in excess of .40%
per annum of the average daily Contract Value of the Contracts sold by it.
 
First Fortis did not pay any amount to Fortis Investors in 1996 associated with
distribution of the Contracts since no Contracts were sold in 1996 and prior
years. In the distribution agreement, First Fortis has agreed to indemnify
Fortis Investors (and its agents, employees, and controlling persons) for
certain damages and expenses, including those arising under federal securities
laws.
 
See Note 9 to the Notes to First Fortis' Financial Statements as to amounts it
has paid to Fortis, Inc., Fortis Advisers, Inc. and Fortis Benefits Insurance
Company, affiliates of First Fortis, for various services.
 
Fortis Investors is an indirect subsidiary of Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG and is
therefore under common control with First Fortis. Fortis Investors' principal
business address is 500 Bielenberg Drive, Woodbury Minnesota 55125 and its
mailing address is P.O. Box 64284, St. Paul MN 55164. Fortis Investors is not
obligated to sell any specific amount of interests under the Contracts.
$20,000,000 of interests in the Fixed Account and an indefinite amount of
interests in the Variable Account have been registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
 
FEDERAL TAX MATTERS
 
The following description is a general summary of the tax rules, primarily
related to federal income taxes, which in the opinion of First Fortis are
currently in effect. These rules are based on laws, regulations and
interpretations which are subject to change at any time. This summary is not
comprehensive and is not intended as tax advice. Federal estate and gift tax
considerations, as well as state and local taxes, may also be material. You
should consult a qualified tax adviser as to the tax implications of taking any
action under a Contract or related retirement plan.
 
NON-QUALIFIED CONTRACTS
 
Section 72 of the Internal Revenue Code ("Code") governs the taxation of
annuities in general. Purchase payments made under Non-Qualified Contracts are
not excludible or deductible from the gross income of the Contract Owner or any
other person. However, any increase in the accumulated value of a Non-Qualified
Contract resulting from the investment performance of the Variable Account or
interest credited to the Fixed Account is generally not taxable to the Contract
Owner or other payee until received by him or her, as surrender proceeds, death
benefit proceeds, or otherwise. The exception to this rule is that, generally,
Contract Owners who are not natural persons are taxed annually on any increase
in the Contract Value. However, this exception does not apply in all cases, and
you may wish to discuss this with your tax adviser.
 
The following discussion applies generally to Contracts owned by natural
persons.
 
In general, surrenders or partial withdrawals under Contracts are taxed as
ordinary income to the extent of the accumulated income or gain under the
Contract. If a Contract Owner assigns or pledges any part of the value of a
Contract, the value so pledged or assigned is taxed to the Contract Owner as
ordinary income to the same extent as a partial withdrawal.
 
With respect to annuity payment options, although the tax consequences may vary
depending on the option elected under the Contract, until the investment in the
Contract is recovered, generally only the portion of the annuity payment that
represents the amount by which the Contract Value exceeds the "investment in the
Contract" will be taxed. In general, a person's "investment in the Contract" is
the aggregate amount of purchase payments made by him or her. After an
Annuitant's or other payee's "investment in the Contract" is recovered, the full
amount of any additional annuity payments is taxable. For variable annuity
payments, in general, the taxable portion of each annuity payment (prior to
recovery of the "investment in the Contract") is determined by a formula which
establishes the specific dollar amount of each annuity payment that is not
taxed. This dollar amount is determined by dividing the "investment in the
Contract" by the total number of expected annuity payments. For fixed annuity
payments, in general, prior to recovery of the "investment in the Contract,"
there is no tax on the amount of each payment which bears the same ratio to that
payment as the "investment in the Contract" bears to the total expected value of
the annuity payments for the term of the payments. However, the remainder of
each annuity payment is taxable. The taxable portion of a distribution (in the
form of an annuity or a single sum payment) is taxed as ordinary income.
 
For purposes of determining the amount of taxable income resulting from
distributions, all Contracts and other annuity contracts issued by us or our
affiliates to the Contract Owner within the same calendar year will be treated
as if they were a single Contract.
 
There is a 10% penalty under the Code on the taxable portion of a "premature
distribution." Generally, an amount is a "premature distribution" unless the
distribution is (1) made on or after the Contract Owner or other payee reaches
age 59 1/2, (2) made to a Beneficiary on or after death of the Contract Owner,
(3) made upon the disability of the Contract Owner or other payee, or (4) part
of a series of substantially equal annuity payments for the life or life
expectancy of the Contract Owner or the Contract Owner and Beneficiary.
Premature distributions may result, for example, from an early Annuity
Commencement Date,
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
an early surrender, partial surrender or assignment of a Contract or the early
death of an Annuitant who is not also the Contract Owner or other person
receiving annuity payments under the Contract.
 
A transfer of ownership of a Contract, or designation of an Annuitant or other
payee who is not also the Contract Owner, may result in certain income or gift
tax consequences to the Contract Owner that are beyond the scope of this
discussion. A Contract Owner contemplating any transfer or assignment of a
Contract should contact a competent tax adviser with respect to the potential
tax effects of such transaction.
 
REQUIRED DISTRIBUTIONS FOR NON-QUALIFIED CONTRACTS
 
In order that a Non-Qualified Contract be treated as an annuity contract for
federal income tax purposes, Section 72(s) of the Code requires (a) if any
person receiving annuity payments dies on or after the Annuity Commencement Date
but prior to the time the entire interest in the Contract has been distributed,
the remaining portion of such interest will be distributed at least as rapidly
as under the method of distribution being used as of the date of the person's
death; and (b) if any Contract Owner dies prior to the Annuity Commencement
Date, the entire interest in the Contract will be distributed (1) within five
years after the date of that person's death or (2) as annuity payments which
will begin within one year of that Contract Owner's death and which will be made
over the life of the Contract Owner's designated Beneficiary or over a period
not extending beyond the life expectancy of that Beneficiary. However, if the
Contract Owner's designated Beneficiary is the surviving spouse of the Contract
Owner, the Contract may be continued with the surviving spouse deemed to be the
new Contract Owner. Where the Contract Owner or other person receiving payments
is not a natural person, the required distributions provided by Section 72(s)
apply upon the death of the primary Annuitant.
 
No regulations interpreting the requirements of Section 72(s) have yet been
issued (although proposed regulations have been issued interpreting similar
requirements for qualified plans). First Fortis intends to review and modify the
Contract if necessary to ensure that it complies with the requirements of
Section 72(s) when clarified by regulation or otherwise.
 
Generally, unless the Beneficiary elects otherwise, the above requirements will
be satisfied where the death occurs prior to the Annuity Commencement Date by
paying the death benefit in a single sum, subject to proof of the Contract
Owner's death. The Beneficiary, however, may elect by Written Request to receive
an annuity option instead of a lump sum payment. However, if the election is not
made within 60 days of the date the single sum death benefit otherwise becomes
payable, particularly where the annuitant dies and the annuitant is not the
Contract Owner, the IRS may disregard the election for tax purposes and tax the
Beneficiary as if a single sum payment had been made.
 
QUALIFIED CONTRACTS
 
The Contracts may be used with several types of tax-qualified plans. The tax
rules applicable to Contract Owners, Annuitants and other payees vary according
to the type of plan and the terms and conditions of the plan itself. In general,
purchase payments made under a retirement program recognized under the Code on
behalf of an individual are excludable from the individual's gross income for
tax purposes during the Accumulation Period. The portion, if any, of any
purchase payment made by or on behalf of an individual under a Contract that is
not excluded from the individual's gross income for tax purposes during the
Accumulation Period constitutes the individual's "investment in the Contract."
Aggregate deferrals under all plans at the employee's option may be subject to
limitations.
 
When annuity payments begin, the individual will receive back his or her
"investment in the Contract" if any, as a tax-free return of capital. The dollar
amount of annuity payments received in any year in excess of such return is
taxable as ordinary income. When payments are received as an annuity, the
tax-free return of capital is treated as if received ratably over the entire
period of the annuity until fully recovered (as described above with respect to
Non-Qualified Contracts).
 
The Contracts are available in connection with the following types of retirement
plans: Section 403(b) annuity plans for employees of certain tax-exempt
organizations and public educational institutions; Section 401 or 403(a)
qualified pension, profit-sharing or annuity plans; individual retirement
annuities ("IRAs") under Section 408(b); simplified employee pension plans
("SEPs") under Section 408(k); Section 457 unfunded deferred compensation plans
of public employers and tax-exempt organizations' and private employer unfunded
deferred compensation plans. The tax implications of these plans are further
discussed in the Statement of Additional Information under the heading "Taxation
Under Certain Retirement Plans."
 
WITHHOLDING
 
Annuity payments and other amounts received under Contracts are subject to
income tax withholding unless the recipient elects not to have taxes withheld.
The amounts withheld will vary among recipients depending on the tax status of
the individual and the type of payments from which taxes are withheld.
 
Notwithstanding the recipient's election, withholding may be required with
respect to certain payments to be delivered outside the United States and with
respect to certain distributions from certain types of qualified retirement
plans, unless the proceeds are transferred directly from the qualified plan to
another qualified retirement plan. Moreover, special "backup withholding" rules
may require First Fortis to disregard the recipient's election if the recipient
fails to supply First Fortis with a "TIN" or taxpayer identification number
(social security number for individuals), or if the Internal Revenue Service
notifies First Fortis that the TIN provided by the recipient is incorrect.
 
PORTFOLIO DIVERSIFICATION
 
The United States Treasury Department has adopted regulations under Section
817(h) of the Code which set standards of diversification for the investments
underlying the Contracts, in order for the Contracts to be treated as annuities.
First Fortis believes that these diversification standards will be satisfied.
Failure to do so would result in immediate taxation to Contract Owners or
persons receiving annuity payments of all returns credited to Contracts, except
in the case of certain Qualified Contracts. Also, current regulations do not
provide
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
guidance as to any circumstances in which control over allocation of values
among different investment alternatives may cause Contract Owners or persons
receiving annuity payments to be treated as the owners of Variable Account
assets for tax purposes. First Fortis reserves the right to amend the Contracts
in any way necessary to avoid any such result. The Treasury Department may
establish standards in this regard through regulations or rulings. Such
standards may apply only prospectively, although retroactive application is
possible if such standards were considered not to embody a new position.
 
CERTAIN EXCHANGES
 
Section 1035 of the Code provides generally that no gain or loss will be
recognized under the exchange of a life insurance or annuity contract for an
annuity contract. Thus, a properly completed exchange from one of these types of
products into a Contract pursuant to the special annuity contract exchange form
we provide for this purpose is not generally a taxable event under the Code, and
your investment in the Contract will be the same as your investment in the
product you exchanged out of.
 
Because of the complexity of these and other tax aspects in connection with an
exchange, you should consult a tax adviser before making any exchange.
 
TAX LAW RESTRICTIONS AFFECTING SECTION 403(B) PLANS
 
Section 403(b)(12) of the Internal Revenue Code restricts the distribution under
Section 403(b) annuity contracts of:
 
(1)  elective contributions made for years beginning after December 31, 1988;
 
(2)  earnings on those contributions; and
 
(3)  earnings on amounts held as of December 31, 1988.
 
Distribution of these amounts may only occur upon death of the employee,
attainment of age 59 1/2, separation from service, disability, or financial
hardship. In addition, income attributable to elective contributions made after
December 31, 1988 may not be distributed in the case of hardship.
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT FIRST FORTIS
 
GENERAL
 
First Fortis is engaged in the offer and sale of insurance products, including
fixed life insurance policies, fixed and variable annuity contracts, and group
life, accident and health insurance policies. The Company markets its products
to small business and individuals through a national network of independent
agents, brokers, and financial institutions.
 
SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
 
The following is a summary of certain financial data of First Fortis. This
summary has been derived in part from, and should be read in conjunction with,
the financial statements of First Fortis included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                          -------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             1996          1995          1994          1993          1992
                                          -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                                                                    (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                       <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
INCOME STATEMENT DATA
  Premiums..............................  $    67,517   $    81,202   $    92,056   $    75,393   $    58,209
  Net investment income.................        7,891         7,466         6,261         6,074         6,245
  Realized investment gains (losses)....           (4)        2,683        (1,057)        3,062         1,773
  Other income..........................          336           297           287           533           296
                                          -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
    TOTAL REVENUES......................       75,740        91,648        97,547        85,062        66,523
                                          -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
  Total benefits and expenses...........       75,596        96,371       104,582        85,170        63,215
  Income tax expense (benefit)..........          (39)       (1,563)         (999)         (686)        1,058
                                          -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
    NET INCOME (LOSS)...................  $       183   $    (3,160)  $    (6,036)  $       578   $     2,250
                                          -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
                                          -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
BALANCE SHEET DATA
  Total assets..........................  $   143,139   $   139,913   $   123,954   $   132,077   $   109,565
  Total liabilities.....................  $   107,447   $   101,523   $    97,913   $    92,863   $    73,209
  Total shareholder's equity............  $    35,692   $    38,390   $    26,041   $    39,214   $    36,356
</TABLE>
 
MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF
OPERATIONS
 
REVENUES
 
Life premiums of First Fortis (the "Company") are principally composed of group
life coverages. Total life premiums in 1996 increased 21% over 1995 due to
strong group life sales and premium rate increases on the group life line in
1996. Also, the Company began issuing variable annuity products in 1996.
 
Total accident and health premiums continued to decrease in 1996. Effective
January 1, 1996, the Company ceased new sales of group medical policies,
however, the Company continues to renew and service the existing group medical
business. On July 1, 1996, $5.4 million of group dental premium lapsed. The
historical benefit loss experience on the lapsed business was worse than the
experience on the remaining business. On-going marketing efforts have continued
to increase the Company's group disability income business. The group accident
and health premium mix continues to shift. In 1996, the premium mix was 35%
medical; 40% disability income; and, 25% dental compared to the 1995 mix of 54%
medical; 26% disability income; and 20% dental and the 1994 mix of 66% medical;
18% disability income; and 16% dental.
 
The Company continues to match investment portfolio composition to liquidity
needs and capital requirements. Changes in interest rates during 1996, 1995 and
1994 resulted in recognition of realized gains and losses.
 
BENEFITS
 
During 1995 and the first six months of 1996, the Company's group life claims
ratio was higher than expected as a result of increased mortality and larger
average claim amounts. During the last six months of 1996, mortality and average
claim amounts began to decrease. In 1994, the group life mortality experience
level was consistent with Management's expectations. Improved accident and
health benefit results from 1994 through 1996 are attributable to actions taken
by the Company on its medical and dental business along with continuous
improvement in recovery rates on existing group disability income claimants.
 
EXPENSES
 
The Company continues to monitor its commission rate structures, and, as
indicated by market conditions, periodically adjusts rates paid. Rates paid vary
by product type, group size and duration. Changes in the mix of business has
resulted in an increase in the Company's average commission rate. During the
last six months of 1995, as the Company's inforce medical lives began to
decrease, the Company began to experience a reduction in medical related
expenses. This trend continued through 1996.
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
The liquidity requirements of the Company have been met by funds provided from
operations, including investment income. Funds are principally used to provide
for policy benefits, operating expenses, commissions and investment purchases.
The impact of the declining inforce medical business has been considered in
evaluating the Company's future liquidity needs. The Company expects its
operating activities to continue to generate sufficient funds.
 
The NAIC has implemented risk-based capital standards to determine the capital
requirements of a life insurance company based upon the risks inherent in its
operations. These standards require the computation of a risk-based capital
amount which is then compared to a company's actual total adjusted capital.
Based upon current calculation using these risk-based capital standards, the
Company's percentage of total adjusted capital is in excess of ratios which
would require regulatory attention.
 
The Company has no long or short term debt. The Company's fixed maturity
investments consisted of 97% investment grade bonds as of December 31, 1996 and
the Company does not expect this percentage to change significantly in the
future.
 
REGULATION
 
The Company is subject to the laws and regulations established by the New York
State Insurance Department governing insurance business conducted in New York
State. Periodic audits are conducted by the New York Insurance Department
related to the Company's compliance with these laws and regulations. To date
there have been no adverse findings regarding the Company's operations.
 
As a small group (1-50 lives) medical insurer in the State of New York, First
Fortis was impacted by the passage in 1992 of Regulation 145, "Open Enrollment
and Community Rating of Individual and Small Group Health Insurance" and
Regulation 146, "Establishment and Operation on Market Stabilization Mechanisms
for Individuals and Small Group Health Insurance". The purpose of Regulation 145
is to promote competition among insurers and facilitate access to health
insurance by all New York residents. Beginning April 1, 1993, Regulation 145
required insurers to apply a rating methodology (community rate) in which the
premium for all persons covered by a policy or contract form is the same based
on the experience of the entire pool of risks covered by that policy or contract
form without regard to age, sex, health status or occupation. Regulation 146
established a market stabilization process to share among insurers substantive
cost variations attributable to significant differences in demographic
characteristics of the persons covered. During 1996, 1995, and 1994, demographic
characteristics of the Company's medical business resulted in payments to the
pools which have been reflected in accident and health benefits.
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
 
Set forth is information concerning the Company's directors and executive
officers, to the extent responsible for its variable annuity operations,
together with their business experience and principal occupations for the past
five years:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>
OFFICER-DIRECTORS
Larry M. Cains, 50               Treasurer; Senior Vice President of Fortis, Inc.
Director since 1995
 
Allen R. Freedman, 57            Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Director Since 1989              of Fortis, Inc.
 
Thomas M. Keller, 49             President of Time Insurance Company; President--Fortis Healthcare of Fortis Benefits
Director Since 1994              Insurance Company; before that Senior Vice President of Fortis, Inc.
 
Dean C. Kopperud, 44             Chief Executive Officer of Fortis Advisers, Inc. and President of Fortis Investors,
Director Since 1994              Inc.; President--Fortis Financial Group of Fortis Benefits Insurance Company
 
Terry J. Kryshak, 46             Senior Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer
Director Since 1991
 
Susie Gharib, 46                 Anchorwoman, Cable NBC; before that, Anchorwoman, Financial News Network
Director Since 1991
 
Guy Gerard Rutherfurd, Jr., 57   Senior Vice President, Dean Witter Intercapital; before that Executive Vice President
Director Since 1989              and Chief Investment Officer of Nomura Asset Management, Inc.
 
Dale Edward Gardner, 66          President, Gardner & Bull
Director Since 1989
 
Kenneth W. Nelson, 75            President, Tech Products, Inc.
Director Since 1989
 
Clarence Elkus Galston, 87       Attorney at Law
Director Since 1989
 
Robert B. Pollock, 42            President and Chief Executive Officer of Fortis Benefits Insurance Company
Director Since 1995
 
Leanne F. Hughes, 36             Assistant Treasurer and Director of Accounting; before that Senior Manager of Ernst &
                                 Young LLP
 
Jerome A. Atkinson, 47           Secretary; Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel of Fortis, Inc.; before that
                                 Senior Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel of American Security Insurance
                                 Company
</TABLE>
 
First Fortis' officers serve at the pleasure of the Board of Directors, and
members of the Board who are also officers or employees of First Fortis serve
without compensation. All Directors serve until their successors are duly
elected and qualified. The compensation of members of the Board who are not also
officers or employees of First Fortis or its affiliates is as follows. The
Director receives $1,000 for attendance at the annual Board meeting. If the
Director is also a member of the Audit Committee and/or the Investment
Committee, the Director also receives $1,000 for attending any meeting of such
committee unless the committee meeting date is the same as the annual meeting,
in which case the committee meeting compensation is $500.
 
Mr. Freedman is a director of Systems and Computer Technology Corporation. Mr.
Freedman is also a director of the following registered investment companies:
Fortis Equity Portfolios, Inc.; Fortis Growth Fund, Inc.; Fortis Fiduciary Fund,
Inc., Fortis Income Portfolios, Inc.; Fortis Securities, Inc.; Fortis Tax-Free
Portfolios, Inc.; Fortis Money Portfolios, Inc.; Fortis Advantage Portfolios,
Inc.; Fortis World Wide Portfolios, Inc.; Fortis Series Fund, Inc.; Special
Portfolios, Inc.
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
Set forth below is certain information concerning the compensation of the named
executive officers of First Fortis. Mr. Freedman is compensated by other
affiliates of First Fortis.
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    ANNUAL COMPENSATION
                                          ---------------------------------------
                                                                  OTHER ANNUAL        ALL OTHER
                                           SALARY      BONUS      COMPENSATION     COMPENSATION (1)
 NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION     YEAR        ($)        ($)            ($)               ($)
- -----------------------------  ---------  ---------  ---------  -----------------  ---------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>                <C>
Allen R. Freedman                   1996  $       0  $       0      $       0         $       0
 President                          1995          0          0              0                 0
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry J. Kryshak                    1996    111,000     34,000              0             6,660
 Senior Vice President and          1995    107,350     25,764              0             8,288
 Chief Administrative Officer       1994     95,000     30,780              0             1,535
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert O. Blaber                    1996     78,234    256,647              0                 0
 Senior Vice President              1995     75,000    263,654              0            14,852
                                    1994     75,000    246,032              0            14,140
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
1   This column includes contributions made by First Fortis for the year for the
    benefit for the named individual to defined contribution retirement plans.
 
As additional compensation to its employees and executive officers, First Fortis
has an Employees' Uniform Retirement Plan and an Executive Retirement Plan which
generally provide an annual annuity benefit upon retirement at age 65 (or a
reduced benefit upon early retirement) equal to: .9% of the employee's Average
Annual compensation up to the employee's social security covered compensation,
plus 1.3% of Average Annual compensation above the employee's social security
covered compensation up to $235,840, as adjusted by an index, multiplied by the
employee's years of credited services.
 
The following table illustrates the combined estimated life annuity benefit
payable from the Employees Uniform Retirement Plan and the Executive Retirement
Plan to employees with the specified Final Average Salary and Years of Service
upon retirement.
PENSION TABLE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     YEARS OF SERVICE
                             ----------------------------------------------------------------
FINAL AVERAGE EARNINGS          10         15         20         25         30         35
- ---------------------------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                          <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
125,000....................     15,147     22,720     30,294     37,867     45,441     53,014
150,000....................     18,397     27,595     36,794     45,992     55,191     64,389
175,000....................     21,647     32,470     43,294     54,117     64,941     75,764
200,000....................     24,897     37,345     49,794     62,242     74,691     87,139
225,000....................     28,147     42,220     56,294     70,367     84,441     98,514
250,000....................     30,214     45,321     60,428     75,536     90,643    105,750
275,000+...................     30,352     45,528     60,704     75,880     91,056    106,232
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
The table above excludes social security benefits. In general, for the purposes
of these plans compensation includes salary and bonuses. The credited years of
service with First Fortis for those individuals named in the Summary
Compensation Table above are as follows: 0, 7, and 10.
 
OWNERSHIP OF SECURITIES
 
All of First Fortis' outstanding shares are owned by Fortis, Inc., One Chase
Manhattan Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10005. Fortis, Inc., in turn is wholly owned by
Fortis International, Inc., which is wholly owned by AMEV/VSB 1990 N.V., both of
which share the same address with N.V. AMEV., Archimedeslaan 10, 3584 BA,
Utrecht, The Netherlands. AMEV/ VSB 1990 N.V. is 50% owned by Fortis AMEV and
50% owned, through certain subsidiaries, by Fortis AG, Boulevard Emile Jacqmain
53, 1000 Brussels, Belgium.
 
VOTING PRIVILEGES
 
In accordance with its view of current applicable law, First Fortis will vote
shares of each of the Portfolios which are attributable to a Contract at regular
and special meetings of the shareholders of the Portfolios in proportion to
instructions received from the persons having the voting interest in the
Contract as of the record date for the corresponding Portfolio shareholders
meeting. Contract Owners have the voting interest during the Accumulation
Period, persons receiving annuity payments during the Annuity Period, and
Beneficiaries after
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
the death of the Annuitant or Contract Owner. However, if the Investment Company
Act of 1940 or any rules thereunder should be amended or if the present
interpretation thereof should change, and as a result First Fortis determines
that it is permitted to vote shares of the Portfolios in its own right, it may
elect to do so.
 
During the Accumulation Period, the number of shares of a Portfolio attributable
to a Contract is determined by dividing the amount of Contract Value in the
corresponding Subaccount pursuant to the Contract as of the record date for the
shareholders meeting by the net asset value of one Portfolio share as of that
date. During the Annuity Period, or after the death of the Annuitant or Contract
Owner, the number of Portfolio shares deemed attributable to the Contract will
be computed in a comparable manner, based on the liability for future variable
annuity payments allocable to that Subaccount under the Contract as of the
record date. Such liability for future payments will be calculated on the basis
of the mortality assumptions and the assumed interest rate used in determining
the number of Annuity Units credited to the Contract and the applicable Annuity
Unit value on the record date. During the Annuity Period, the number of votes
attributable to a Contract will generally decrease since funds set aside to make
the annuity payments will decrease.
First Fortis will vote shares for which it has received no timely instructions,
and any shares attributable to excess amounts First Fortis has accumulated in
the related Subaccount, in proportion to the voting instructions which it
receives with respect to all Contracts and other variable annuity contracts
participating in a Portfolio. To the extent that First Fortis or any affiliated
company holds any shares of a Portfolio, they will be voted in the same
proportion as instructions for that Portfolio that are received from persons
holding the voting interest with respect to all First Fortis separate accounts
participating in that Portfolio. Shares held by separate accounts other than the
Variable Account will in general be voted in accordance with instructions of
participants in such other separate accounts. This diminishes the relative
voting influence of the Contracts.
 
Each person having a voting interest in a Subaccount of the Separate Account
will receive proxy material, reports and other materials relating to the
appropriate Portfolio. Pursuant to the procedures described above, these persons
may give instructions regarding the election of the Board of Directors of the
Portfolios, ratification of the selection of its independent auditors, the
approval of the investment managers of a Portfolio, changes in fundamental
investment policies of a Portfolio and all other matters that are put to a vote
by Portfolio shareholders.
 
LEGAL MATTERS
 
The legality of the Contracts described in this Prospectus has been passed upon
by David A. Peterson, Esquire, Assistant General Counsel with the law department
of Fortis Benefits Insurance Company. Messrs. Freedman, Levy, Kroll & Simonds,
Washington, D.C., have advised First Fortis on certain federal securities law
matters.
 
OTHER INFORMATION
 
Registration Statements have been filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission under the Securities Act of 1933 as amended, with respect to the
Contracts discussed in this Prospectus. Not all of the information set forth in
the Registration Statement, amendments and exhibits thereto has been included in
this Prospectus. Statements contained in this Prospectus concerning the content
of the Contracts and other legal instruments are intended to be summaries. For a
complete statement of the terms of these documents, reference should be made to
the instruments filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
 
A Statement of Additional Information is available upon request. Its contents
are as follows:
 
CONTENTS OF STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    PAGE
                                                     ---
<S>                                              <C>
First Fortis and the Variable Account..........           1
Calculation of Annuity Payments................           2
Postponement of Payments.......................           3
Services.......................................           3
  - Safekeeping of Variable Account Assets.....           3
  - Experts....................................           3
  - Principal Underwriter......................           4
Taxation Under Certain Retirement Plans........           4
Withholding....................................           7
Variable Account Financial Statements..........           8
APPENDIX A--Performance Information............         A-1
</TABLE>
 
FIRST FORTIS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
The financial statements of First Fortis that are included in this Prospectus
should be considered primarily as bearing on the ability of First Fortis to meet
its obligations under the Contracts. The Contracts are not entitled to
participate in earnings, dividends or surplus of First Fortis.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
 
Board of Directors
First Fortis Life Insurance Company
 
We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of First Fortis Life Insurance
Company (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fortis AMEV) as of December 31, 1996 and
1995, and the related statements of operations, changes in shareholder's equity,
and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31,
1996. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audits.
 
We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of First Fortis Life Insurance
Company at December 31, 1996 and 1995, and the results of its operations and its
cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 1996, in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
                                                    /s/ Ernst & Young LLP
Syracuse, New York
February 21, 1997
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
BALANCE SHEETS
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 DECEMBER 31
                                                                        -----------------------------
                                                                            1996             1995
                                                                        ------------     ------------
<S>                                                                     <C>              <C>
ASSETS
Investments--(Note 3):
  Fixed maturities, at fair value (amortized cost 1996--$111,970,939;
   1995--$106,648,754)................................................  $113,136,650     $112,183,452
  Preferred stock at fair value (cost 1995--$92,029)..................            --           89,345
  Short-term investments..............................................            --        6,850,000
                                                                        ------------     ------------
                                                                         113,136,650      119,122,797
Cash..................................................................     1,544,745        1,145,131
 
Receivables:
  Uncollected premiums, less allowance--$100,000......................     3,890,111        4,440,446
  Reinsurance recoverable on unpaid and paid losses...................    14,731,285        9,335,947
  Prepaid federal income taxes and other assets.......................     4,311,855        2,255,199
                                                                        ------------     ------------
                                                                          22,933,251       16,031,592
Accrued investment income.............................................     1,739,498        1,814,291
Property and equipment at cost, less accumulated depreciation
 (1996--$1,395,517; 1995--$1,249,280).................................     1,027,576        1,199,482
Goodwill..............................................................       554,000          600,000
Assets held in separate accounts......................................     2,203,109               --
                                                                        ------------     ------------
TOTAL ASSETS..........................................................  $143,138,829     $139,913,293
                                                                        ------------     ------------
                                                                        ------------     ------------
 
RESERVES, LIABILITIES, AND SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
POLICY RESERVES AND LIABILITIES
  Future policy benefit reserves:
    Life insurance....................................................  $ 25,225,095     $ 22,529,817
    Accident and health...............................................    60,774,384       59,442,638
                                                                        ------------     ------------
                                                                          85,999,479       81,972,455
  Other policy claims and benefits payable............................    14,798,802       13,561,740
  Other liabilities...................................................     4,445,831        5,988,794
  Liabilities related to separate accounts............................     2,203,109               --
                                                                        ------------     ------------
TOTAL POLICY RESERVES AND LIABILITIES.................................   107,447,221      101,522,989
 
SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY (Notes 1, 8, 9, and 10):
  Common stock, $20 par value 100,000 shares authorized, issued, and
   outstanding........................................................     2,000,000        2,000,000
  Additional paid-in capital..........................................    37,440,000       37,440,000
  Retained earnings (deficit).........................................    (4,517,761)      (4,700,825)
  Unrealized appreciation of investment securities, net of tax (Note
   3).................................................................       769,369        3,651,129
                                                                        ------------     ------------
TOTAL SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY............................................    35,691,608       38,390,304
                                                                        ------------     ------------
TOTAL RESERVES, LIABILITIES, AND SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY.................  $143,138,829     $139,913,293
                                                                        ------------     ------------
                                                                        ------------     ------------
</TABLE>
 
                            See accompanying notes.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                                        ------------------------------------------
                                                                           1996            1995           1994
                                                                        -----------    ------------    -----------
<S>                                                                     <C>            <C>             <C>
REVENUES
  Insurance operations (NOTE 7):
    Life insurance premiums...........................................  $22,850,286    $ 18,879,246    $19,431,130
    Accident and health premiums......................................   44,666,246      62,322,484     72,624,559
  Net investment income (NOTE 3)......................................    7,891,048       7,465,751      6,261,593
  Realized (losses) gains on investments (NOTE 3).....................       (3,650)      2,683,100     (1,057,438)
  Other income........................................................      335,934         297,767        287,426
                                                                        -----------    ------------    -----------
      TOTAL REVENUES..................................................   75,739,864      91,648,348     97,547,270
 
BENEFITS AND EXPENSES
  Benefits to policyholders:
    Life insurance....................................................   19,792,653      16,206,930     15,345,645
    Accident and health...............................................   37,987,686      56,592,227     68,115,512
  Amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs (NOTE 2)..........            -       4,595,000      1,838,000
  Insurance commissions...............................................    5,213,744       5,070,934      5,768,504
  General and administrative expenses.................................   12,601,939      13,906,043     13,514,820
                                                                        -----------    ------------    -----------
      TOTAL BENEFITS AND EXPENSES.....................................   75,596,022      96,371,134    104,582,481
                                                                        -----------    ------------    -----------
  Income (loss) before federal income taxes...........................      143,842      (4,722,786)    (7,035,211)
  Federal income tax benefit (NOTE 6).................................      (39,222)     (1,562,943)      (999,671)
                                                                        -----------    ------------    -----------
  NET INCOME (LOSS)...................................................  $   183,064    $ (3,159,843)    (6,035,540)
                                                                        -----------    ------------    -----------
                                                                        -----------    ------------    -----------
</TABLE>
 
                            See accompanying notes.
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                  UNREALIZED
                                                                                                 APPRECIATION
                                                                  ADDITIONAL      RETAINED      (DEPRECIATION)
                                                      COMMON        PAID-IN       EARNINGS       OF INVESTMENT
                                                      STOCK         CAPITAL       (DEFICIT)     SECURITIES, NET        TOTAL
                                                    ----------    -----------    -----------    ---------------     -----------
<S>                                                 <C>           <C>            <C>            <C>                 <C>
Balance January 1, 1994...........................  $2,000,000    $30,440,000    $ 4,494,558    $    2,280,000      $39,214,558
Net loss..........................................          --             --     (6,035,540)               --       (6,035,540)
Unrealized depreciation of investment securities,
 net..............................................          --             --             --        (5,486,586)      (5,486,586)
Change in deferred tax valuation allowance for
 unrealized depreciation on investment
 securities.......................................          --             --             --        (1,651,877)      (1,651,877)
                                                    ----------    -----------    -----------    ---------------     -----------
Balance December 31, 1994.........................   2,000,000     30,440,000     (1,540,982)       (4,858,463)      26,040,555
Additional paid-in capital from Fortis AMEV.......          --      7,000,000             --                --        7,000,000
Net loss..........................................          --             --     (3,159,843)               --       (3,159,843)
Unrealized appreciation of investment securities,
 net..............................................          --             --             --         6,857,715        6,857,715
Change in deferred tax valuation allowance for
 unrealized depreciation on investment
 securities.......................................          --             --             --         1,651,877        1,651,877
                                                    ----------    -----------    -----------    ---------------     -----------
Balance December 31, 1995                            2,000,000     37,440,000     (4,700,825)        3,651,129       38,390,304
  Net income......................................          --             --        183,064                --          183,064
Unrealized depreciation of investment securities.
 net..............................................          --             --             --        (2,881,760)      (2,881,760)
                                                    ----------    -----------    -----------    ---------------     -----------
Balance December 31, 1996.........................  $2,000,000    $37,440,000    $(4,517,761)   $      769,369      $35,691,608
                                                    ----------    -----------    -----------    ---------------     -----------
                                                    ----------    -----------    -----------    ---------------     -----------
</TABLE>
 
                            See accompanying notes.
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                         --------------------------------------------------
                                                              1996              1995              1994
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
<S>                                                      <C>               <C>               <C>
OPERATING ACTIVITIES
  Net income (loss)....................................  $      183,064    $   (3,159,843)   $   (6,035,540)
  Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net
   cash (used in) provided by operating activities:
    Non-cash transactions:
      Change in deferred tax valuation allowance.......              --          (177,708)        1,515,531
      Depreciation, amortization and accretion.........         803,858           750,029           716,129
      Net realized losses (gains) on investments.......           3,650        (2,683,100)        1,057,438
    Changes in assets and liabilities:
      (Increase) decrease in uncollected premiums,
       accrued investment income and other.............      (1,322,446)          112,767         2,258,061
      (Increase) decrease in reinsurance recoverable...      (5,395,338)         (460,598)          333,480
      Increase (decrease) in income taxes..............       1,771,804        (1,569,235)       (2,903,210)
      Amortization of policy acquisition costs.........              --         4,595,000         1,838,000
      Policy acquisition costs deferred................              --                --          (432,000)
      Increase in future policy benefit reserves and
       other policy claims and benefits................       5,264,086         3,481,220         7,835,342
      (Decrease) increase in other liabilities.........      (1,939,303)          128,321        (2,118,752)
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
        NET CASH (USED IN) PROVIDED BY OPERATING
         ACTIVITIES....................................        (630,625)        1,016,853         4,064,479
 
INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Purchases of fixed maturity investments..............    (140,954,176)     (122,289,460)      (77,995,025)
  Sales and maturities of fixed maturity investments...     135,352,498       120,298,152        69,440,809
  Decrease (increase) in equity securities and
   short-term investments..............................       6,942,029        (5,042,029)        3,731,866
  Purchase of property and equipment...................        (310,112)         (321,460)         (562,438)
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
        NET CASH PROVIDED BY (USED IN) INVESTING
         ACTIVITIES....................................       1,030,239        (7,354,797)       (5,384,788)
FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Proceeds from additional paid-in capital.............              --         7,000,000                --
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
        NET CASH PROVIDED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES......              --         7,000,000                --
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
  Increase (decrease) in cash..........................         399,614           662,056        (1,320,309)
        CASH AT BEGINNING OF YEAR......................       1,145,131           483,075         1,803,384
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
        CASH AT END OF YEAR............................  $    1,544,745    $    1,145,131    $      483,075
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
                                                         --------------    --------------    --------------
</TABLE>
 
                            See accompanying notes.
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
DECEMBER 31, 1996
 
1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
NATURE OF OPERATIONS
 
First Fortis Life Insurance Company ("First Fortis" or "the Company") is an
affiliate of the worldwide Fortis group of companies owned by Fortis AMEV of the
Netherlands and Fortis AG of Belgium. First Fortis is wholly-owned by Fortis
AMEV. The other U.S. subsidiaries of Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG operate under the
holding company name Fortis, Inc. Subject to regulatory approval by the New York
State Insurance Department, the Company will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Fortis, Inc. in 1997. The Company was organized to enable the Fortis group of
companies to distribute their products to the New York State marketplace. To
date, the Company's revenues have been derived primarily from group employee
benefits products. During 1996, the Company had $11,425,000 of direct premium
written principally by two third party administrators ("TPA's"). Effective
January 1, 1996, the Company stopped offering its group medical products;
however, the Company will continue to renew and service existing medical
business, which represented $17,871,000 and $34,011,000 of 1996 and 1995
accident and health premiums, respectively. During 1996, $250,000 of related
termination benefits were paid, which were accrued for and included in general
and administrative expenses in 1995.
 
BASIS OF STATEMENT PRESENTATION
 
The financial statements are presented in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles which differ in certain respects from statutory accounting
practices prescribed or permitted by the New York State Insurance Department.
Significant accounting policies followed by the Company are:
 
    POLICY REVENUES
 
    For group life, medical, disability, and credit life products, amounts
    collected from policyholders are recognized as premium income over the
    premium paying period and are reported net of experience rating refunds and
    unearned premiums.
 
    CLAIMS AND BENEFITS PAYABLE
 
    Claims and benefits payable for reported and incurred but not reported
    losses are determined using case base estimates and prior experience. These
    estimates are subject to the effects of trends in claim severity and
    frequency and represent the estimates of the ultimate cost of all unpaid
    losses incurred through December 31 of each year. Although considerable
    variability is inherent in such estimates, management believes that the
    reserve for claims and benefits payable is adequate. The methods of making
    such estimates and establishing the related liabilities are continually
    reviewed and updated, and any adjustments resulting therefrom are reflected
    in operations currently.
 
    RESERVES FOR FUTURE POLICY BENEFITS
 
    Active life reserves for future policy and contract benefits on life and
    accident and health products are provided on the net level premium method.
    The reserves are calculated based upon assumptions as to interest,
    withdrawal, mortality, and morbidity that were appropriate at the date of
    issue. Interest rate assumptions range principally from 3.0% to 5.5% for
    traditional life products and 4.0% to 10.0% for annuity products. Withdrawal
    assumptions are based on actual Company experience. Mortality and morbidity
    assumptions are based upon industry standards adjusted as appropriate to
    reflect actual Company experience. The assumptions vary by plan, year of
    issue, and policy duration and include a provision for adverse deviation.
 
    Disabled lives reserves for future policy and contract benefits on
    disability income policies are calculated based upon assumptions as to
    interest and claim termination rates that are currently appropriate.
    Disabled lives reserves for group life policies are based on a 3.5% interest
    rate assumption. For group long-term disability income policies, the
    interest rate assumption on claims is 6.0%. Termination rate assumptions are
    based upon industry standards adjusted as appropriate to reflect actual
    Company experience. The assumptions vary by year of claim incurred.
 
    INVESTMENTS
 
    The Company's investment strategy is developed based on many factors
    including insurance liability matching, rate of return, maturity, credit
    risk, tax considerations, and regulatory requirements.
 
    All fixed maturities are considered available-for-sale and are reported at
    fair value; short-term investments are reported at cost, which approximates
    fair value. Changes in the fair values of available-for-sale securities, net
    of deferred income taxes, are reported as unrealized appreciation or
    depreciation directly in shareholder's equity and, accordingly, have no
    effect on net income. Realized gains and losses on sales of investments, and
    declines in value judged to be other-than-temporary, are recognized on the
    specific identification basis.
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
    PROPERTY AND DEPRECIATION
 
    The Company provides depreciation (principally on the straight-line method)
    over the estimated useful life of the related property.
 
    INCOME TAXES
 
    Income taxes have been provided using the liability method. Deferred tax
    assets and liabilities are determined based on the differences between their
    financial reporting and tax bases, and are measured using the enacted tax
    rates.
 
    SEPARATE ACCOUNTS
 
    The Company began selling variable annuity products July 1, 1996. Assets and
    liabilities associated with separate accounts relate to premium and annuity
    considerations for which the policyholder, rather than the Company, bears
    the investment risk. Separate account assets are reported at fair value.
    Revenues and expenses related to the separate account assets and
    liabilities, to the extent of benefits paid or provided to the separate
    account policyholders, are excluded from the amounts reported in the
    accompanying statements of operations.
 
    USE OF ESTIMATES
 
    The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
    accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
    assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and
    accompanying notes. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
2.  DEFERRED POLICY ACQUISITION COSTS
On October 1, 1991, First Fortis Life Insurance Company and an affiliate, Fortis
Benefits Insurance Company, (the "Companies") entered into an Asset Transfer and
Acquisition Agreement (the "Agreement") with Mutual Benefit Life Insurance
Company in Rehabilitation ("MBL). Pursuant to the Agreement, the Companies
acquired certain assets and assumed certain liabilities of MBL relating to the
group life, disability, dental and medical insurance business (the "Business")
of MBL. That portion of the Business conducted in New York was assumed by First
Fortis, while the most substantial portion of the Business was assumed by Fortis
Benefits Insurance Company. First Fortis paid $10,166,000 for its portion of the
Business acquired including contingent Promissory Note ("Note") payments
aggregating $1,366,000 from 1992 to 1994 which were based on the persistency of
the acquired Business through September 30, 1994. No additional payments will be
made. Note payments were added to deferred policy acquisition costs ("DPAC")
when made. The DPAC amortization period, which was originally scheduled through
September 30, 1997, was completed December 31, 1995 (an acceleration of
$2,749,000 into 1995), based on the overall experience of the acquired block of
business.
 
3.  INVESTMENTS
FIXED MATURITIES
 
The following is a summary of the amortized cost and fair value of fixed
maturity securities:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            GROSS           GROSS
                                                          AMORTIZED       UNREALIZED     UNREALIZED
                                                             COST            GAIN           LOSS          FAIR VALUE
                                                         ------------    ------------    -----------     ------------
<S>                                                      <C>             <C>             <C>             <C>
December 31, 1996:
  Governments..........................................  $ 13,463,189    $    92,446     $  (44,103)     $ 13,511,532
  Public utilities.....................................     6,445,882         66,809        (24,710)        6,487,981
  Industrial and miscellaneous.........................    92,061,868      1,425,693       (350,424)       93,137,137
                                                         ------------    ------------    -----------     ------------
    Total..............................................  $111,970,939    $ 1,584,948     $ (419,237)     $113,136,650
                                                         ------------    ------------    -----------     ------------
                                                         ------------    ------------    -----------     ------------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                      <C>             <C>             <C>             <C>
December 31, 1995:
  Governments..........................................  $ 17,068,216    $ 1,025,440     $       --      $ 18,093,656
  Public utilities.....................................     4,906,703        262,773             --         5,169,476
  Industrial and miscellaneous.........................    84,673,835      4,272,901        (26,416)       88,920,320
                                                         ------------    ------------    -----------     ------------
    Total..............................................  $106,648,754    $ 5,561,114     $  (26,416)     $112,183,452
                                                         ------------    ------------    -----------     ------------
                                                         ------------    ------------    -----------     ------------
</TABLE>
 
The fair values for fixed maturity securities are based on quoted market prices,
where available. For fixed maturity securities not actively traded, fair values
are estimated using values obtained from independent pricing services or, in the
case of private placements, are estimated by discounting expected future cash
flows using a current market rate applicable to the yield, credit quality, and
maturity of the investments.
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
3.  INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
The amortized cost and fair value of fixed maturity securities at December 31,
1996, by contractual maturity, are shown below. Expected maturities will differ
from contractual maturities because borrowers may have the right to call or
prepay obligations with or without call or prepayment penalties.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          AMORTIZED
                                                             COST       FAIR VALUE
                                                         ------------  ------------
<S>                                                      <C>           <C>
Due in one year or less................................  $    502,354  $    503,010
Due after one year through five years..................    38,588,214    39,067,289
Due after five years through ten years.................    39,780,501    40,023,689
Due after ten years....................................    33,099,870    33,542,662
                                                         ------------  ------------
                                                         $111,970,939  $113,136,650
                                                         ------------  ------------
                                                         ------------  ------------
</TABLE>
 
Proceeds from sales and maturities of fixed maturity securities were
$135,352,498, $120,298,152 and $69,440,809 in 1996, 1995, and 1994,
respectively. Gross gains of $1,551,135, $3,373,880 and $510,242 and gross
losses of $1,554,785, $690,780 and $1,572,163 were realized on the sales in
1996, 1995, and 1994 respectively.
 
NET INVESTMENT INCOME AND NET REALIZED GAINS (LOSSES) ON INVESTMENTS
 
Major categories of net investment income and realized gains (losses) on
investments for each year were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                NET REALIZED GAINS (LOSSES) ON
                                                NET INVESTMENT INCOME                     INVESTMENTS
                                          ----------------------------------  -----------------------------------
                                             1996        1995        1994        1996        1995         1994
                                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  -----------  ----------
<S>                                       <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>          <C>
Fixed maturities........................  $7,940,703  $7,578,652  $6,341,978  $   (3,650) $ 2,683,100  $(1,061,921)
Short-term investments..................     231,448     152,211     200,274          --           --       4,483
                                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  -----------  ----------
                                           8,172,151   7,730,863   6,542,252  $   (3,650) $ 2,683,100  $(1,057,438)
                                                                              ----------  -----------  ----------
                                                                              ----------  -----------  ----------
Expenses................................    (281,103)   (265,112)   (280,659)
                                          ----------  ----------  ----------
Net investment income...................  $7,891,048  $7,465,751  $6,261,593
                                          ----------  ----------  ----------
                                          ----------  ----------  ----------
</TABLE>
 
4.  LEASES
The Company leases office space under operating lease arrangements that have
various renewal options and are subject to escalation clauses for real estate
taxes and operating expenses. Rent expense was $691,588, $673,407 and $597,365
in 1996, 1995, and 1994, respectively. Future minimum payments required under
operating lease arrangements that have initial or noncancelable terms in excess
of one year or more are: 1997--$715,797, 1998--$739,352, 1999--$569,049,
2000--$18,830, and 2001--$15,691.
 
5.  UNPAID LOSSES AND LOSS EXPENSE ALLOWANCE
Activity for the liability for unpaid accident and health losses and related
loss expense allowance is summarized as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                           -----------------------------------------
                                                              1996           1995           1994
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------
<S>                                                        <C>            <C>            <C>
Balance as of January 1, net of reinsurance
 recoverable...........................................    $65,764,070    $66,136,369    $58,646,889
Add: Incurred losses related to:
  Current year.........................................     38,798,085     57,400,613     66,066,609
  Prior years..........................................       (810,399)      (808,386)     2,048,903
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------
    Total incurred losses..............................     37,987,686     56,592,227     68,115,512
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------
Deduct: Paid losses related to:
  Current year.........................................     23,727,017     35,779,078     40,882,341
  Prior years..........................................     18,543,303     21,185,448     19,743,691
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------
    Total paid losses..................................     42,270,320     56,964,526     60,626,032
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------
Balance as of December 31, net of reinsurance
 recoverable...........................................    $61,481,436    $65,764,070    $66,136,369
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------
</TABLE>
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
5.  UNPAID LOSSES AND LOSS EXPENSE ALLOWANCE (CONTINUED)
As discussed in Note 1, the Company stopped offering group medical products in
1996 but continues to service and renew existing business, resulting in lower
incurred and paid loss activity for the year ended December 31, 1996.
 
The total balance of unpaid losses and loss expense allowances are reported in
the balance sheets gross of reinsurance as components of future accident and
health policy benefit reserves, other policy claims and benefits payable and
other liabilities.
 
In 1994, lower than anticipated recovery rates on existing long-term disability
income claimants, offset by a favorable refinement in the claims reserve
estimates contributed to the "incurred losses related to prior years" result.
The liability for unpaid accident and health losses and loss expense allowance
includes $55,152,000, $53,953,000 and $47,489,000 of long-term disability income
reserves as of December 31, 1996, 1995, and 1994, respectively, which were
discounted for anticipated interest earnings assuming a 6.0% interest rate.
 
6.  FEDERAL INCOME TAXES
Deferred income taxes reflect the net tax effects of temporary differences
between the basis of assets and liabilities for financial statement purposes and
for income tax purposes. The significant components of the Company's deferred
tax assets and liabilities as of December 31 are as follows (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            DECEMBER 31
                                                                        --------------------
                                                                          1996       1995
                                                                        ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                     <C>        <C>
Deferred tax assets:
  Reserves............................................................  $   2,006  $   2,104
  Deferred policy acquisition costs...................................        555        470
  Alternative minimum tax credit carryforward.........................        392        191
  Net operating loss carryforward.....................................        216         --
  Other...............................................................        299        485
                                                                        ---------  ---------
    Total gross deferred tax assets...................................      3,468      3,250
Valuation allowance...................................................     (1,338)    (1,338)
                                                                        ---------  ---------
Net deferred tax assets...............................................      2,130      1,912
Deferred tax liabilities:
  Unrealized gains....................................................        396      1,881
  Other...............................................................        206         31
                                                                        ---------  ---------
    Total gross deferred tax liabilities..............................        602      1,912
                                                                        ---------  ---------
    Net deferred tax asset............................................  $   1,528  $      --
                                                                        ---------  ---------
                                                                        ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
The net deferred tax asset is reported as a component of "prepaid federal income
taxes and other assets" in the balance sheet.
 
As of December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively, the Company had a deferred tax
asset valuation allowance of $1,337,823. The valuation allowance decrease of
$1,829,585 in 1995 was recognized as a $1,651,877 increase to the "unrealized
appreciation (depreciation) of investment securities, net" component of
shareholder's equity and a $177,708 tax benefit in the statement of operations
in 1995.
 
The income tax provision is summarized as follows (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       1996       1995       1994
                                                      -------    -------    -------
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Current...........................................    $  (131)   $   393    $(1,775)
Deferred..........................................         92     (1,778)      (740)
Valuation allowance...............................         --       (178)     1,516
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Federal income tax benefit........................    $   (39)   $(1,563)   $  (999)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      -------    -------    -------
</TABLE>
 
Tax payments of $32,000, $251,591 and $1,442,818 were made in 1996, 1995, and
1994, respectively.
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
6.  FEDERAL INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)
The differences between the provision (benefit) for income taxes at the federal
statutory income tax rate and the tax benefit were as follows (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       1996       1995       1994
                                                      -------    -------    -------
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>
Federal statutory rate............................      (34.0)%    (34.0)%    (34.0)%
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Tax provision (benefit) at statutory rate.........    $    49    $(1,606)   $(2,392)
Tax exempt interest...............................         --       (188)      (406)
Other, net........................................        (88)       409        283
Valuation allowance...............................         --       (178)     1,516
                                                      -------    -------    -------
Tax benefit as reported...........................    $   (39)   $(1,563)   $  (999)
                                                      -------    -------    -------
                                                      -------    -------    -------
</TABLE>
 
At December 31, 1996, the Company has net operating loss carryforwards for
federal income tax purposes of $636,000 which are available to offset future
federal taxable income, if any, through 2011. The Company also has alternative
minimum tax credit carryforwards of $392,000, which are available to reduce
future federal regular income taxes, if any, over an indefinite period of time.
 
7.  REINSURANCE
The maximum amounts that the Company retains on any one life are $500,000 for
group life; $250,000 for group accidental death; $2,000 net monthly benefit for
long-term disability; from 10% to 50% of possible benefits payable under credit
life and credit disability insurance; and 0% of a closed block of individual
life business. Amounts in excess of these limits are reinsured with various
insurance companies on a yearly renewable term, coinsurance or other basis.
 
In the second quarter of 1996, the Company received approval from the New York
State Insurance Department for a reinsurance agreement with Fortis Benefits
Insurance Company ("Fortis Benefits"), an affiliate. The agreement, which became
effective as of January 1, 1996, decreased the Company's long-term disability
reinsurance retention from a $10,000 net monthly benefit to a $2,000 net monthly
benefit for claims incurred on and after January 1, 1996. Through December 31,
1996, the Company has ceded $6,144,000 of premium to Fortis Benefits and Fortis
Benefits has assumed $3,599,000 of reserves from the Company. In the future, the
agreement is expected to reduce the variability of financial results for this
product line.
 
Future policy benefits and other policy claims and benefits payable are reported
gross of reinsurance. The reinsured portion of future policy benefits and other
policy claims and benefits payable are $14,731,285 and $9,335,947 in 1996 and
1995, respectively. The Company remains contingently liable in the event the
reinsuring companies are unable to meet their obligations under such reinsurance
agreements.
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
7.  REINSURANCE (CONTINUED)
Additional information regarding the Company's reinsurance activity for the
years ended December 31, 1996, 1995, and 1994 is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                     GROSS AMOUNT      CEDED        NET AMOUNT
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
<S>                                 <C>             <C>           <C>
1996
Life insurance in force...........  $6,576,692,000  $238,628,000  $6,338,064,000
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
Premiums:
  Group and individual life.......  $   24,216,176  $  1,365,890  $   22,850,286
  Accident and health.............      51,751,740     7,085,494      44,666,246
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
Total premiums....................  $   75,967,916  $  8,451,384  $   67,516,532
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
1995
Life insurance in force...........  $6,864,625,000  $321,785,000  $6,542,840,000
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
Premiums:
  Group and individual life.......  $   20,376,696  $  1,497,450  $   18,879,246
  Accident and health.............      63,696,935     1,374,451      62,322,484
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
Total premiums....................  $   84,073,631  $  2,871,901      81,201,730
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
1994
Life insurance in force...........  $5,116,384,000  $297,027,000  $4,819,357,000
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
Premiums:
  Group and individual life.......  $   20,508,492  $  1,077,362  $   19,431,130
  Accident and health.............      72,835,490       210,931      72,624,559
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
Total premiums....................  $   93,343,982  $  1,288,293  $   92,055,689
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
                                    --------------  ------------  --------------
</TABLE>
 
8.  DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS
The Company is subject to insurance regulatory restrictions that limit cash
dividends which can be paid from the Company to its Parent. All dividends
require prior approval by the New York State Insurance Department.
 
9.  TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATED COMPANIES
Affiliates of the Company provide services, such as information systems,
actuarial and investment management, in return for payment representing the
costs incurred for such services. In 1996, 1995, and 1994, the Company incurred
$1,648,000, $1,581,000 and $1,443,000, respectively, in service fees under the
arrangements with the affiliates. In 1995, the Company received cash of
$7,000,000 representing additional paid-in capital from Fortis AMEV.
 
The Company participates in the Fortis, Inc. noncontributory defined benefit
pension plan and a contributory profit sharing plan covering substantially all
of its employees. Amounts expensed under these plans were $253,609, $232,252 and
$171,519 in 1996, 1995, and 1994, respectively.
 
10. STATUTORY ACCOUNTING PRACTICES
The Company prepares its statutory-basis financial statements in accordance with
accounting practices prescribed or permitted by insurance regulatory
authorities. Prescribed statutory accounting practices include a variety of
publications of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners ("NAIC"), as
well as state laws, regulations and general administrative rules. Permitted
statutory accounting practices encompass all accounting practices not so
prescribed; such practices may differ from state to state, may differ from
company to company within a state, and may change in the future. The NAIC is
currently in the process of recodifying statutory accounting practices. This
project, which is expected to be completed in 1998, may result in changes to the
accounting practices that insurance enterprises use to prepare their
statutory-basis financial statements.
 
Insurance enterprises are required by state insurance departments to adhere to
minimum risk-based capital ("RBC") requirements developed by the NAIC. The
Company exceeds minimum RBC requirements.
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
10. STATUTORY ACCOUNTING PRACTICES (CONTINUED)
Reconciliations of net income or loss and shareholder's equity on the basis of
statutory accounting to the related amounts presented in the accompanying
statements were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              NET INCOME (LOSS)              SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
                                                    -------------------------------------  ------------------------
                                                       1996         1995         1994         1996         1995
                                                    -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                 <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Based on statutory accounting practices...........  $  (427,557) $(1,627,624) $(2,004,993) $27,466,966  $27,773,005
Deferred policy acquisition costs.................           --   (4,595,000)  (1,838,000)          --           --
Deferred and uncollected premiums.................       76,233           --     (100,000)     358,155      149,066
Property and equipment............................           --           --           --      481,875      583,613
Policy reserves...................................      476,177       68,018      (16,872)     658,723      182,546
Investment valuation difference...................           --           --           --    1,165,710    5,532,013
Realized gains (losses) on investments............       (3,650)   2,683,736   (1,060,352)          --           --
Amortization of goodwill..........................      (46,000)     (46,000)     (46,000)     554,000      600,000
Income taxes......................................      115,009      674,642    1,035,479    2,865,246    1,337,823
Deferred tax valuation allowance..................           --      177,708   (1,515,531)  (1,337,823)  (1,337,823)
Interest maintenance reserve ("IMR")..............           --           --           --    2,001,250    2,430,093
Amortization of IMR...............................     (426,200)    (432,656)    (451,286)          --           --
Asset valuation reserve...........................           --           --           --      997,799      881,150
Other.............................................      419,052      (62,667)     (37,985)     479,707      258,818
                                                    -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                    $   183,064  $(3,159,843) $(6,035,540) $35,691,608  $38,390,304
                                                    -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                    -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
11. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
The Company is party to various legal actions arising in the normal course of
its operations. The Company does not believe that the eventual outcome of any
such litigation will have a materially adverse effect on its financial condition
or future operations.
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
APPENDIX A--SAMPLE MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT CALCULATIONS
 
The formula which will be used to determine the Market Value Adjustment is:
 
      (  1 + I  )         n/12
      -----------               - 1
 (   1 + J + .0025   )
 
Sample Calculation 1: Positive Adjustment
 
Amount withdrawn or transferred           $10,000
Existing Guarantee Period                 7 years
Time of withdrawal or transfer            beginning of 3rd year of Existing
                                          Guarantee Period
Guaranteed Interest Rate (I)              8%*
Guaranteed Interest Rate for
  new 5-year guarantee (J)                7%*
Remaining Guarantee Period (N)            60 months
Market Value Adjustment
 
                       1 + .08            60/12
 $10,000 x          -------------               - 1]      = $354.57
              [(   1 + .07 + .0025   )
 
              Amount transferred or withdrawn (adjusted for Market Value
Adjustment): $10,354.57
 
Sample Calculation 2: Negative Adjustment
 
Amount withdrawn or transferred           $10,000
Existing Guarantee Period                 7 years
Time of withdrawal or transfer            beginning of 3rd year of Existing
                                          Guarantee Period
Guaranteed Interest Rate (I)              8%*
Guaranteed Interest Rate for
  new 5-year guarantee (J)                9%*
Remaining Guarantee Period (N)            60 months
Market Value Adjustment:
 
                       1 + .08            60/12
 $10,000 x          -------------               - 1]      = - $559.14
              [(   1 + .09 + .0025   )
 
              Amount transferred or withdrawn (adjusted for Market Value
Adjustment): $9,440.86
 
Sample Calculation 3: Negative Adjustment
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                       <C>
Amount withdrawn or transferred           $10,000
Guarantee Period                          7 years
Time of withdrawal or transfer            beginning of 3rd year of Existing
                                          Guarantee Period
Guaranteed Interest Rate (I)              8%*
Guaranteed Interest Rate for
  new 5-year guarantee (J)                7.75%*
Remaining Guarantee Period (N)            60 months
Market Value Adjustment:
</TABLE>
 
                       1 + .08             60/12
$10,000 x          ---------------               - 1]      = 0
             [(   1 + .0775 + .0025   )
 
              Amount transferred or withdrawn (adjusted for Market Value
Adjustment): $10,000.00
- ------------------------
*Assumed for illustrative purposes only.
 
                                      A-1
<PAGE>
APPENDIX B--EXPLANATION OF EXPENSE CALCULATIONS
 
The expense for a given year is calculated by multiplying the projected
beginning of the year policy value by the total expense rate. The total expense
rate is the sum of the variable account expense rate plus the total Portfolio
expense rate plus the annual administrative charge rate.
 
The policy values are projected by assuming a single payment of $1,000 grows at
an annual rate equal to 5% reduced by the total expense rate described above.
 
For example, the 3 year expense for the Alliance Money Market Portfolio is
calculated as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>                                                 <C>
     Total Variable Account Annual Expenses                 0.45%
+    Total Portfolio Operating Expenses                     0.69%
+    Annual Administrative Charges (see below)              0.11%
=    Total Expense Rate                                     1.25%
</TABLE>
 
The Annual Administrative Charge rate is calculated by dividing the total Annual
Contract Charges collected in 1996 on similar contracts by an affiliated company
by the average policy value in force in 1996 on such contracts.
 
Year 1 Beginning Policy Value = $1000.00
Year 1 Expense = 1000.00 x 0.0125 = $12.53
 
Year 2 Beginning Policy Value = $1037.47
Year 2 Expense = 1037.47 x 0.0125 = $13.00
 
Year 3 Beginning Policy Value = $1076.34
Year 3 Expense = 1076.34 x 0.0125 = $13.49
 
So the cumulative expenses for years 1-3 for the Alliance Money Market Portfolio
are equal to:
    $12.53 + $13.00 + $13.49 = $39.02
 
                                      B-1
<PAGE>
APPENDIX C--PARTICIPATING FUNDS
 
AMERICAN CENTURY VARIABLE PORTFOLIOS, INC.
 
American Century Variable Portfolios, Inc. is a open-end management investment
company. It was organized as a Maryland corporation on June 4, 1987. American
Century Investment Management, Inc., serves as the investment manager of
American Century Portfolios.
 
AMERICAN CENTURY VP BALANCED FUND
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Capital growth and current income. Seeks to achieve its
investment objective by maintaining approximately 60% of the assets in common
stocks that are considered to have better-then-average prospects for
appreciation and the remaining assets in bonds and other fixed income
securities.
 
ALLIANCE VARIABLE PRODUCTS SERIES FUND, INC.
 
The Alliance Variable Products Series Fund, Inc. is an open-ended series
investment company. It was incorporated under Maryland law on November 17, 1987.
Alliance Capital Management L.P. serves as the Fund's manager.
 
ALLIANCE MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks safety of principal, maintenance of liquidity and
maximum current income by investing in a broadly diversified portfolio of money
market securities.
 
ALLIANCE INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks to obtain a total return on its assets from
long-term growth of capital and from income principally through a broad
portfolio of marketable securities of established non-United States companies
(or United States companies having their principal activities and interests
outside the United States), companies participating in foreign economies with
prospects for growth, and foreign government securities.
 
ALLIANCE PREMIER GROWTH PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks growth of capital rather than current income. In
pursuing its investment objective, the Premier Growth Portfolio will employ
aggressive investment policies. Since investments will be made based upon their
potential for capital appreciation, current income will be incidental to the
objective of capital growth.
 
FEDERATED INSURANCE SERIES
 
Federated Insurance Series is an open-end management investment company. It was
established as a Massachusetts business trust under a Declaration of Trust dated
September 15, 1993. Federated Advisers is the investment adviser.
 
FEDERATED FUND FOR U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES II
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks to provide current income. Under normal
circumstances, the portfolio pursues its investment objective by investing at
least 65% of the value of its total assets in securities issued or guaranteed as
to payment of principal and interest by the U.S. Government, its agencies or
instrumentalities.
 
AMERICAN LEADERS FUND II
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: To achieve long-term growth of capital and to provide
income.
 
UTILITY FUND II
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: To achieve high current income and moderate capital
appreciation.
 
HIGH INCOME BOND FUND II
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: To seek high current income.
 
FORTIS SERIES FUND, INC.
 
The Fortis Series Fund, Inc. is an open-end series investment fund. It was
incorporated under Minnesota law in 1986. Fortis Advisers, Inc. serves as the
fund's manager.
 
                                      C-1
<PAGE>
FORTIS S & P 500 INDEX SERIES
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks to replicate the total return of the Standard &
Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index primarily through investment in equity
securities.
 
INVESCO VARIABLE INVESTMENT FUNDS, INC.
 
The INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc. is an open-end series management
investment company. It was incorporated under Maryland law on August 19, 1993.
INVESCO Funds Group, Inc. serves as the Fund's manager.
 
INVESCO INDUSTRIAL INCOME PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks the best possible current income while following
sound investment practices. Capital growth potential is an additional
consideration in the selection of the portfolio securities. The portfolio
normally invests at least 65% of its total assets in dividend-paying common
stocks.
 
INVESCO HEALTH SERVICES PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks capital appreciation. The portfolio normally invests
at least 80% of its total assets in equity securities of companies that develop,
produce, or distribute products or services related to health care.
 
INVESCO TECHNOLOGY PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks capital appreciation. The portfolio normally invests
at least 80% of its total assets in equity securities of companies in
technology-related industries such as computers, communications, video,
electronics, oceanography, office and factory automation, and robotics.
 
LEXINGTON NATURAL RESOURCES TRUST
 
The Lexington Natural Resources Trust is an open-end management investment
company. It was organized as a Massachusetts business trust on October 7, 1988.
Lexington Management Corporation is the Investment Adviser of the fund.
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: To seek long-term growth of capital through investment
primarily in common stocks of companies that own or develop natural resources
and other basic commodities, or supply goods and services to such companies.
 
LEXINGTON EMERGING MARKETS FUND, INC.
 
The Lexington Emerging Markets Fund, Inc. is an open-end management investment
company. It was organized as a corporation under Maryland law on December 27,
1993. Lexington Management Corporation is the fund's investment adviser.
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: To seek long-term growth of capital primarily through
investment in equity securities of companies domiciled in, or doing business in,
emerging countries and emerging markets.
 
MFS-REGISTERED TRADEMARK- VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST
 
MFS Variable Insurance Trust is an open-end management investment company. It
was organized as a business trust under the laws of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts by a Declaration of Trust dated February 1, 1994. Massachusetts
Financial Services Company manages each series.
 
MFS EMERGING GROWTH SERIES
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks to provide long-term growth of capital. The series'
policy is to invest primarily in common stocks of small and medium-sized
companies that are early in their life cycle but which have the potential to
become major enterprises.
 
MFS HIGH INCOME SERIES
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks high current income by investing primarily in a
professionally managed portfolio of fixed income securities, some of which may
involve equity features.
 
                                      C-2
<PAGE>
MFS WORLD GOVERNMENTS SERIES
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks preservation and growth of capital, together with
moderate current income. The series attempts to provide investors with an
opportunity to enhance the value and increase the protection of their investment
against inflation and otherwise by taking advantage of investment opportunities
in the U.S. as well as in other countries where opportunities may be more
rewarding.
 
THE MONTGOMERY FUNDS III
 
The Montgomery Funds III is an open-end investment company. This Delaware
business trust was organized on August 24, 1994. The trust is managed by
Montgomery Asset Management, L.P.
 
MONTGOMERY VARIABLE SERIES: GROWTH FUND
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks capital appreciation by investing primarily in
equity securities, usually common stock, of domestic companies of all sizes.
 
MONTGOMERY VARIABLE SERIES: EMERGING MARKETS FUND
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks capital appreciation by investing primarily in
equity securities of companies in countries having economies and markets
generally considered by the World Bank or the United Nations to be emerging or
developing.
 
NEUBERGER & BERMAN ADVISERS MANAGERS TRUST
 
Neuberger & Berman Advisers Managers Trust is an open-end diversified series
management investment company. It was established as a Delaware business trust
on May 23, 1994. Neuberger & Berman Management Incorporated serves as manager of
the Fund.
 
NEUBERGER & BERMAN LIMITED MATURITY BOND PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks highest current income consistent with low risk to
principal and liquidity; and secondarily, total return. Principal investments
are short-to-intermediate term debt securities, primarily investment grade.
 
NEUBERGER & BERMAN PARTNERS PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks capital growth. Principal investments are common
stocks and other equity securities of established companies.
 
SAFECO RESOURCE SERIES TRUST
 
The SAFECO Resource Series Trust is an open-end series management investment
company. It is a Delaware business trust established by a trust instrument dated
May 13, 1993. SAFECO Asset Management Company is the fund's manager.
 
SAFECO EQUITY PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks long-term growth of capital and reasonable current
income. The Equity Portfolio ordinarily invests principally in common stocks or
securities convertible into common stocks.
 
SAFECO GROWTH PORTFOLIO
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks growth of capital and the increased income that
ordinarily follows from such growth. The Growth Portfolio ordinarily invests a
preponderance of its assets in common stock selected for potential appreciation.
 
STRONG VARIABLE INSURANCE FUNDS, INC.
 
The Strong Variable Insurance Funds, Inc. is an open-end management investment
company. It was incorporated in Wisconsin. Strong Capital Management, Inc. is
the investment adviser.
 
THE STRONG DISCOVERY FUND II
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks to identify emerging investment trends and
attractive growth opportunities.
 
THE STRONG INTERNATIONAL STOCK FUND II
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks capital growth. The fund invests primarily in the
equity securities of issuers located outside of the United States.
 
                                      C-3
<PAGE>
VAN ECK WORLDWIDE INSURANCE TRUST
 
Van Eck Worldwide Insurance Trust is an open-end management investment company.
It was organized as a business trust under the laws of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts on January 7, 1987. Van Eck Associates Corporation serves as
investment adviser and manager to the two funds listed below.
 
WORLDWIDE HARD ASSETS FUND
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks long-term capital appreciation by investing
globally, primarily in (i) precious metals, (ii) ferrous and non-ferrous metals,
(iii) oil and gas, (iv) forest products, (v) real estate, and (vi) other basic
non-agricultural commodities.
 
WORLDWIDE BOND FUND
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE: Seeks high total return through a flexible policy of
investing globally, primarily in debt securities.
 
                                      C-4
<PAGE>

                                   CONTRACTS UNDER
                              FLEXIBLE PREMIUM DEFERRED
                   COMBINATION VARIABLE AND FIXED ANNUITY CONTRACTS
                        VALUE ADVANTAGE PLUS VARIABLE ANNUITY


                                      Issued by

                         FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY


                         STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                                     MAY 1, 1997

This Statement of Additional Information is not a Prospectus.  It is intended
that this Statement of Additional Information be read in conjunction with the
Prospectus for certificates under flexible premium deferred combination variable
and fixed annuity contracts ("Contracts"), dated May 1, 1997.  A copy of the
Prospectus may be obtained without charge from Fortis Investors, Inc.
1-800-827-5877, mailing address:  P.O. Box 64272, St. Paul, MN 55164.  You have
the option of receiving benefits under a Contract through First Fortis' Variable
Account A or through First Fortis' Fixed Account.

TABLE OF CONTENTS


First Fortis and the Variable Account. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    1
Calculation of Annuity Payments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    2
Postponement of Payments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    3
Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    4
  - Safekeeping of Variable Account Assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    4
  - Experts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    4
  - Principal Underwriter  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    4
Taxation Under Certain Retirement Plans. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    4
Withholding. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    8
Variable Account Financial Statements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    8
Appendix A -- Performance Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  A-1

In order to supplement the description in the Prospectus, the following provides
additional information about the Contracts and other matters which may be of
interest to you.  Terms used in this Statement of Additional Information have
the same meanings as are defined in the Prospectus under the heading "Special
Terms Used in This Prospectus."



FIRST FORTIS AND THE VARIABLE ACCOUNT

First Fortis Life Insurance Company, the issuer of the Contracts, is a New York
corporation qualified to sell life insurance and annuity contracts in the state
of New York.  First Fortis is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fortis, Inc.  Fortis,
Inc. is a corporation based in New York,  which manages the United States
operations of Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG.

Fortis AMEV has been in business since 1847 and is a publicly-traded,
multi-national insurance, real estate, and financial services group
headquartered in The Netherlands.  It is one of the largest holding companies in


                                                                          Page 1


<PAGE>

Europe, with subsidiary companies in twelve countries on four continents. 
Fortis AMEV is the third largest insurance company in the Netherlands.

Fortis AG is a multi-national insurance, real estate and financial services firm
that has been in business since 1824.  It has subsidiary companies in eight
countries.  Fortis AG is one of the largest life insurance companies in Belgium.
Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG have combined assets of approximately $160 billion.

The assets allocated to the Variable Account are the exclusive property of First
Fortis.  Registration of the Variable Account under the Investment Company Act
of 1940 does not involve supervision of the management or investment practices
or policies of the Variable Account or of First Fortis by the Securities and
Exchange Commission.  First Fortis may accumulate in the Variable Account
proceeds from charges under the Contracts and other amounts in excess of the
Variable Account assets representing reserves and liabilities under Contracts
and other variable annuity contracts issued by First Fortis.  First Fortis may
from time to time transfer to its General Account any of such excess amounts. 
Under certain remote circumstances the assets of one Subaccount may not be
insulated from liability associated with another Subaccount.

Best's Insurance Reports has assigned First Fortis a rating of A (Excellent) for
financial position and operating performance.  First Fortis has a rating of AA
from Standard & Poor's.  As defined by Standard & Poor's, insurers rated AA
offer "excellent financial security."  These ratings represent such rating
agencies' independent opinion of First Fortis' financial strength and ability to
meet policy holder obligations, but have no relevance to the performance and
quality of the assets in Subaccounts of the Variable Account.

CALCULATION OF ANNUITY PAYMENTS

FIXED ANNUITY OPTION

The amount of each annuity payment under a Fixed Annuity Option is fixed and
guaranteed by First Fortis.  Monthly fixed annuity payments will start as of the
end of the Valuation Period that contains the Annuity Commencement Date.  At
that time, the Contract Value, after any Market Value Adjustment, is computed
and that portion of the Contract Value which will be applied to the Fixed
Annuity Option selected is determined.  The amount of the first monthly payment
under the Fixed Annuity Option selected will be at least as large as would
result from using the annuity tables contained in the Contract to apply such
amount of Contract Value to the annuity form selected.  The dollar amounts of
any fixed annuity payments after the first are specified during the entire
period of annuity payments according to the provisions of the annuity form
selected.

VARIABLE ANNUITY OPTION

ANNUITY UNITS.  To the extent a Variable Annuity Option has been selected, we
convert the Accumulation Units for each Subaccount of the Variable Account into
Annuity Units for each Subaccount at their values determined as of the end of
the Valuation Period which contains the Annuity Commencement Date.  As of such
time, any Fixed Account Value to be applied to a Variable Annuity Option is also
converted, after any Market Value Adjustment, to Annuity Units in the
Subaccounts selected based on the then-current Annuity Unit value.  The initial
number of Annuity Units in each Subaccount is determined by dividing the amount
of the initial monthly variable annuity payment (see "Variable Annuity Option --
Variable Annuity Payments," below) allocable to that Subaccount by the value of
one Annuity Unit in that Subaccount as of the time of the conversion.  The
number of Annuity Units for each Subaccount will remain constant, as long as an
annuity remains in force and the allocation among the Subaccounts has not
changed.

The value of each Subaccount's Annuity Units will vary to reflect the investment
experience of the Subaccount as well as charges deducted from the Subaccount. 
The value of each Subaccount's Annuity Units is equal to the prior value of the
Subaccount's Annuity Units multiplied by the net investment factor for that
Subaccount (discussed in the Prospectus under "Contract Value") for the
Valuation Period ending on that Valuation Date, with an offset for the 4%
assumed interest rate used in the annuity tables of the Contract.


                                                                         Page 2


<PAGE>

VARIABLE ANNUITY PAYMENTS.  Variable annuity payments start at the end of the
Valuation Period that contains the Annuity Commencement Date, and will vary in
amount as the related Annuity Unit values vary.  The amount of the first monthly
payment is shown on the annuity tables contained in the Contract for each $1,000
of Contract Value applied to the Variable Annuity Option selected as of the end
of such Valuation Period.  The first variable annuity payment is, in effect,
allocated among the Subaccounts in the same proportion as the Contract Value is
allocated among the Subaccounts upon commencement of annuity payments.

Payments after the first will vary in amount and are determined on the first
Valuation Date of each subsequent monthly period.  If the monthly payment under
the annuity form selected is based on the value of Annuity Units of a single
Subaccount, the monthly payment is found by multiplying the number of the
Contract's Annuity Units for the Subaccount by the Annuity Unit value of such
Subaccount as of the first Valuation Date in each monthly period following the
Annuity Commencement Date.  If the monthly payment under the Variable Annuity
Option selected is based upon the value of Annuity Units in more than one
Subaccount, this is repeated for each applicable Subaccount.  The sum of these
payments is the variable annuity payment.

GENDER OF ANNUITANT

The amount of each annuity payment ordinarily will be higher for a male
Annuitant than for a female Annuitant with an otherwise identical Contract. 
This is because, statistically, females tend to have longer life expectancies
than males.  However, there will be no differences between male and female
Annuitants in any jurisdiction, including Montana, where such differences are
not permitted.  We will also make available Contracts with no such differences
in connection with certain employer-sponsored benefit plans.  Employers should
be aware that, under most such plans, Contracts that make distinctions based on
gender are prohibited by law.

POSTPONEMENT OF PAYMENTS

With respect to amounts in the Subaccounts of the Variable Account, payment of
any amount due upon a total or partial surrender, death or under an annuity
option will ordinarily be made within seven days after all documents required
for such payment are received by First Fortis at its Home Office.  However,
First Fortis may defer the determination, application or payment of any death
benefit, transfer, partial or total surrender or annuity payment, to the extent
dependent on Accumulation or Annuity Unit Values, for any period during which
the New York Stock Exchange is closed (other than customary weekend and holiday
closings) or trading on the New York Stock Exchange is restricted as determined
by the Securities and Exchange Commission, for any period during which any
emergency exists as a result of which it is not reasonably practicable for First
Fortis to determine the investment experience for the Contract, or for such
other periods as the Securities and Exchange Commission may by order permit for
the protection of investors.

SERVICES

SAFEKEEPING OF VARIABLE ACCOUNT ASSETS

Title to the assets of the Variable Account is held by First Fortis.  The assets
of the Variable Account are kept segregated and held separate and apart from
First Fortis' other assets.  Fortis Advisers, Inc., an affiliate of First
Fortis, maintains records of all purchases and redemptions of shares of the
Portfolios held by each of the Subaccounts of the Variable Account.

EXPERTS

The financial statements of First Fortis Life Insurance Company appearing in the
Prospectus and those of Variable Account A appearing in this Statement of
Additional Information and Registration Statement have been audited by Ernst &
Young LLP, independent auditors, as set forth in their reports thereon also
appearing in the Prospectus or this Statement of Additional Information and are
included in reliance upon such reports given upon the authority of such firm as
experts in accounting and auditing.  The New York address of Ernst & Young LLP
is 787 Seventh Avenue, New York, New York 10019.


                                                                         Page 3


<PAGE>

PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER

Fortis Investors, Inc. ("Fortis Investors"), the principal underwriter of the
Contracts, is a Minnesota corporation and a member of the Securities Investors
Protection Corporation.  The address of Fortis Investors is 500 Bielenberg
Drive, Woodbury, Minnesota 55125.  The offering of the Contracts is continuous,
and Fortis Investors does not anticipate discontinuing the offering of the
Contracts, although it reserves the right to do so.  Contracts generally will be
issued for Annuitants from ages zero to ninety in all states.

TAXATION UNDER CERTAIN RETIREMENT PLANS

Federal income tax information concerning the purchase of Contracts for specific
types of retirement plans is set forth below.  You should also refer to "Federal
Tax Matters" in the Prospectus.  The tax information provided is not
comprehensive, and you should consult a qualified tax adviser before taking any
action in connection with a retirement plan.

SECTION 403(b) ANNUITIES FOR EMPLOYEES OF CERTAIN TAX-EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS
OR PUBLIC EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS

PURCHASE PAYMENTS.  Under Section 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code ("Code"),
payments made by certain employers (i.e., tax-exempt organizations meeting the
requirements of Section 501(c)(3) of the Code, or public educational
institutions) to purchase Contracts for their employees are excludible from the
gross income of employees to the extent that such aggregate purchase payments do
not exceed certain limitations prescribed by the Code.  This is the case whether
the purchase payments are a result of voluntary salary reduction amounts or
employer contributions.  Salary reduction payments are, however, subject to FICA
(social security) taxes.

TAXATION OF DISTRIBUTIONS.  Distributions from a Section 403(b) tax-deferred
annuity are taxed as ordinary income to the recipient as described under
"Federal Tax Matters" in the Prospectus.  Taxable distributions received before
the employee attains age 59 1/2 generally are subject to a 10% penalty tax in
addition to regular income tax.  Certain distributions are excepted from this
penalty tax, including distributions following the employee's death, disability,
separation from service after age 55, separation from service at any age if the
distribution is in the form of an annuity for the life (or life expectancy) of 
the employee (or the employee and Beneficiary) and distributions not in excess
of deductible medical expenses.  In addition, no distributions of voluntary
salary reduction amounts will be permitted prior to one of the following events:
attainment of age 59 1/2 by the employee or the employee's separation from
service, death , disability or hardship.  (Hardship distributions will be
limited to the lesser of the amount of the hardship or the amount of salary
reduction contributions, exclusive of earnings thereon.)

REQUIRED DISTRIBUTIONS.  Generally, distributions from Section 403(b) annuities
must commence not later than April 1 of the calendar year following the calendar
year in which the employee attains age 70 1/2, and such distributions must be
made over a period that does not exceed the life expectancy of the employee (or
the employee and Beneficiary).  A penalty tax of 50% would be imposed on any
amount by which the minimum required distribution in any year exceeded the
amount actually distributed in that year.  In addition, in the event that the
employee dies before his or her entire interest in the Contract has been
distributed, the employee's entire interest must be distributed in accordance
with rules similar to those applicable upon the death of the Contract Owner or
Payee in the case of a Non-Qualified Contract, as described in the Prospectus. 
Certain of these and other provisions are incorporated in a special endorsement
attached to Contracts that are intended to qualify under Section 403(b), and
reference should be made to that endorsement for its complete terms.

TAX-FREE EXCHANGES AND ROLLOVERS.  The Code provides for the tax-free transfer
of one Section 403(b) annuity for another Section 403(b) annuity, and the IRS
has ruled (Revenue Ruling 90-24) that amounts transferred may qualify as
tax-free transfers under certain circumstances.  In addition, Section 403(b)(8)
of the code permits tax-free rollovers from Section 403(b) programs to
individual retirement annuities or other Section 403(b) programs under certain
circumstances.


                                                                         Page 4


<PAGE>

SECTION 401 QUALIFIED PENSION, PROFIT-SHARING OR ANNUITY PLANS

PURCHASE PAYMENTS.  Subject to certain limitations prescribed by the Code,
purchase payments made by an employer (or a self-employed individual) under a
pension, profit-sharing or annuity plan qualified under Section 401 or Section
403(a) of the Code are generally deductible by the employer and excluded from
the taxable income of the employee for federal income tax purposes, whether made
under a salary reduction agreement or directly by employer contributions. 
Salary reduction payments are, however, subject to FICA (social security) taxes.
Purchase payments made directly by an employee generally are made on an
after-tax basis.

TAXATION OF DISTRIBUTIONS.  Distributions from Contracts purchased under these
qualified plans are taxable as ordinary income, except to the extent allocable
to an employee's after-tax contributions, as described under "Federal Tax
Matters -- Qualified Plans," in the Prospectus.  However, if an employee or
other payee receives a "lump sum" distribution, as defined in the Code, from an
exempt employees' trust, the taxable portion of the distribution may be subject
to special tax treatment.  For most individuals receiving lump sum distributions
after attaining age 59 1/2, the rate of tax may be determined under a special
5-year income averaging provision.  Those who attained age 50 by January 1, 1986
may instead elect to use a 10-year income averaging provision based on the
income tax rates in effect for 1986.  Taxable distributions received prior to
attainment of age 59 1/2  under a Contract purchased under a qualified plan are
subject to the same 10% penalty tax (and the same exceptions) as described above
with respect to Section 403(b) annuities.

REQUIRED DISTRIBUTIONS.  The minimum distribution requirements for these
qualified plans are generally the same as described above with respect to
Section 403(b) annuities.

TAX-FREE ROLLOVERS.  If, within 60 days of receipt, an employee who receives a
single sum distribution transfers all of the taxable amount received to another
plan qualified under Section 401 or 403(a), or to an individual retirement
account or annuity as provided for under the Code, the transferred amount will
not be taxed in the year of distribution.  Certain "partial" distributions may
also qualify for tax-free rollover treatment, but only if transferred to an
individual retirement account or annuity.  However, income tax may be withheld
from the distribution unless the distribution is transferred directly from the
qualified plan to the individual retirement account or individual retirement
annuity.

SECTION 408(p) SIMPLE IRA PLANS

PURCHASE PAYMENTS:  Under Section 408(p) of the Code, small employers may
establish a type of IRA plan referred to as a Savings Incentive Match Plan for
Employees (SIMPLE Plan). An employee may contribute annually through his or her
employer a pre-tax salary reduction contribution not to exceed the lesser of
$6,000 or 100% of compensation. The employer must annually either (1) match the
employee contribution dollar for dollar up to 3% of pay, or (2) make a 2% of pay
contribution for each eligible employee regardless of whether the employee makes
any salary reduction contribution. In two out of every five years, the employer
has the option to reduce the matching contribution as low as 1% of pay but
advance notice must be provided to employees.

TAXATION OF DISTRIBUTIONS:  Generally, distributions from SIMPLE IRA Plans are
subject to the same distribution rules described above for IRAs. However, if an
individual withdraws any amount from his SIMPLE IRA Plan within the first two
years of his or her commencement of participation in the employer's SIMPLE IRA
Plan, the 10% penalty tax for premature distribution, if such tax applies, will
be increased to 25%.

REQUIRED DISTRIBUTIONS:  SIMPLE distributions are subject to the same minimum
distribution rules described above for IRAs.

TAX-FREE ROLLOVERS:  Generally, rollovers and direct transfers may be made to
and from SIMPLE IRAs in the same manner as described above for IRAs, subject to
the same conditions and limitations. Rollovers or transfers to other IRAs, other
than SIMPLE IRAs, are also possible but only after the second anniversary of
commencement of participation in the employer's SIMPLE IRA Plan.


                                                                         Page 5


<PAGE>

SECTION 457 UNFUNDED DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLANS OF PUBLIC EMPLOYERS 
AND TAX-EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS

PURCHASE PAYMENTS.  Under Section 457 of the Code, all individuals who perform
services for a state or local government or governmental agency may participate
in a deferred compensation program.  Other tax-exempt employers may establish
unfunded deferred compensation plans under Section 457 for employees and/or
independent contractors.

Though not actually a qualified plan as that term is normally used, this type of
program allows individuals to defer the receipt of compensation that otherwise
would be currently payable and therefore to defer the payment of federal income
taxes on such amounts.  Assuming that the program meets the requirements to be
considered an eligible deferred compensation plan (an "EDCP"), an individual may
contribute (and thereby defer from current income for tax purposes) the lesser
of $7,500 or 33-1/3% of the individual's includible compensation.  (Includible
compensation means compensation from the employer which would be currently
includible in gross income for federal tax purposes.)  In addition, during the
last three years before an individual attains normal retirement age, additional
"catch-up" deferrals are permitted.

The amounts which are deferred may be used by the employer to purchase the
Contracts offered by this Prospectus.  The Contract is owned by the employer and
is subject to the claims of the employer's creditors.  The employee has no
rights or interest in the Contract and is entitled only to payment in accordance
with the EDCP provisions.

TAXATION OF DISTRIBUTIONS.  Amounts received by an individual from an EDCP are
includible in gross income for the taxable year in which such amounts are paid
or otherwise made available.

DISTRIBUTIONS BEFORE SEPARATION FROM SERVICE.  Distributions generally are not
permitted under an EDCP prior to separation from service or reaching age 70 1/2,
except in cases of severe financial hardship.  Hardship distributions are
includible in the gross income of the individual in the year in which paid.  

REQUIRED DISTRIBUTIONS.  The distribution requirements for these qualified plans
are generally the same as described above with respect to Section 403(b)
annuities.  However, if distributions do not commence before the employee's
death, the entire interest in the Contract must be distributed within 15 years
if the beneficiary is not the employee's surviving spouse.

TAX-FREE TRANSFERS.  The Code permits the tax-free direct transfer of EDCP
amounts to another EDCP, subject to certain conditions. Any transfer must be
with employer consent.  Any transfer must be with employer consent.

PRIVATE EMPLOYER UNFUNDED DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLANS

PURCHASE PAYMENTS.  Private taxable employers may establish unfunded,
non-qualified deferred compensation plans for a select group of management or
highly compensated employees and/or for independent contractors.  Certain
arrangements of tax-exempt employers entered into prior August 16, 1986, and not
subsequently modified, are also subject to the rules for private taxable
employer deferred compensation plans discussed below.  (Unfunded deferred
compensation plans of other tax-exempt employers are generally subject to the
requirements of Section 457.)

These types of programs allow individuals to defer receipt of up to 100% of
compensation which would otherwise be includible in income and therefore to
defer the payment of federal income taxes on such amounts.  Purchase payments
made by the employer, however are not immediately deductible by the employer,
and the employer is currently taxed on any increase in Contract Value.

Deferred compensation plans represent a contractual promise on the part of the
employer to pay current compensation at some future time.  The Contract is owned
by the employer and is subject to the claims of the employer's creditors.  The
individual has no right or interest in the Contract and is entitled only to
payment from the employer's general assets in accordance with plan provisions.


                                                                         Page 6


<PAGE>

TAXATION OF DISTRIBUTIONS.  Amounts received by an individual from a private
employer deferred compensation plan are includible in gross income for the
taxable year in which such amounts are paid or otherwise made available.

EXCESS DISTRIBUTIONS--15% TAX.

Certain persons, particularly those who participate in more than one
tax-qualified retirement plan, may be subject to an additional tax of 15% on
certain excess aggregate distributions from those plans.  In general, excess
distributions are taxable distributions for all tax qualified plans in excess of
a specified annual limit for payments made in the form of an annuity (currently
$160,000) or five times the annual limit for lump sum distributions.

WITHHOLDING

Annuity payments and other amounts received under Contracts are subject to
income tax withholding unless the recipient elects not to have taxes withheld. 
The amounts withheld will vary among recipients depending on the tax status of
the individual and the type of payments from which taxes are withheld.

Notwithstanding the recipient's election, withholding may be required with
respect to certain payments to be delivered outside the United States and, with
respect to certain distributions from certain types of qualified retirement
plans, unless the proceeds are transferred directly to another qualified
retirement plan.  Moreover, special "backup withholding" rules may require First
Fortis to disregard the recipient's election if the recipient fails to supply
First Fortis with a "TIN" or taxpayer identification number (social security
number for individuals), or if the Internal Revenue Service notifies First
Fortis that the TIN provided by the recipient is incorrect.

VARIABLE ACCOUNT FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

This Statement of Additional Information contains no financial statements for
the Subaccounts of the Variable Account which are available under the Contracts,
other than for the Fortis S & P 500 Index Series Subaccount, because the other
available Subaccounts of the Variable Account had not yet commenced operations
as of December 31, 1996, had no assets or liabilities, and had received no
income nor incurred any expenses as of that date.


                                                                         Page 7
<PAGE>



                         Report of Independent Auditors

Board of Directors
First Fortis Life Insurance Company

We have audited the accompanying statement of net assets of First Fortis Life
Insurance Company Variable Account A (comprising, respectively, the Fortis
Series Fund's Growth Stock, U.S. Government Securities, Money Market, Asset
Allocation, Diversified Income, Global Growth, Aggressive Growth, Growth &
Income, High Yield, Global Asset Allocation, Global Bond, International Stock,
Value, S&P 500 and Blue Chip Stock Subaccounts) as of December 31, 1996, and the
related statement of changes in net assets for the period from July 1, 1996
(commencement of operations) to December 31, 1996. These financial statements
are the responsibility of the management of First Fortis Life Insurance Company.
Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based
on our audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of each of the portfolio
subaccounts constituting First Fortis Life Insurance Company Variable Account A
at December 31, 1996, and the results of their operations and changes in their
net assets for the period from July 1, 1996 (commencement of operations) to
December 31, 1996, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.

                                                           /s/ Ernst & Young LLP


April 11, 1997


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                       First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                             Statement of Net Assets

                                December 31, 1996


                                                                                                                 NET ASSET VALUE FOR
                                                                                               ACCUMULATION        VARIABLE ANNUITY
                                                                              NET                 UNITS            CONTRACTS PER
                                                                             ASSETS            OUTSTANDING        ACCUMULATION UNIT
                                                                      --------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                         <C>                <C>               <C>
Investments in Fortis Series Fund, Inc., at market value (NOTE 2):
   Growth Stock Series (6,446 shares; cost--$209,123)                       $210,096              70,686                $2.97
   U.S. Government Securities Series (644 shares;                              6,811                 427                15.95
    cost--$6,946)
   Money Market Series (4,123 shares; cost--$44,752)                          45,122              31,800                 1.42
   Asset Allocation Series (8,791 shares; cost--$153,046)                    149,379              63,004                 2.37
   Diversified Income Series (3,185 shares; cost--$36,245)                    37,255              20,649                 1.80
   Global Growth Series (6,723 shares; cost--$126,179)                       127,713               6,899                18.51
   Aggressive Growth Series (14,041 shares;                                  191,234              14,449                13.24
    cost--$198,975)
   Growth & Income Series (14,703 shares; cost--$216,541)                    222,945              14,412                15.47
   High Yield Series (11,954 shares; cost--$122,360)                         117,452               9,846                11.93
   Global Asset Allocation Series (7,928 shares; cost                         97,859               7,591                12.89
    $98,478)
   Global Bond Series (1,456 shares; cost--$16,409)                           16,149               1,347                11.99
   International Stock Series (11,222 shares;                                139,620              10,999                12.69
    cost--$137,017)
   Value Series (15,235 shares; cost--$165,866)                              173,386              15,690                11.05
   S&P 500 Series (5,083 shares; cost--$56,857)                               58,280               5,144                11.33
   Blue Chip Stock Series (9,337 shares; cost--$106,411)                     108,962               9,457                11.52
                                                                      -----------------------------------
   Total net assets                                                       $1,702,263             282,400
                                                                      -----------------------------------
                                                                      -----------------------------------
</TABLE>

SEE ACCOMPANYING NOTES.
                                                                               2

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                                                         Variable Account A

                                                 Statement of Changes in Net Assets

                             Period from July 1, 1996 (commencement of operations) to December 31, 1996




                                                         U.S.
                                            GROWTH    GOVERNMENT   MONEY       ASSET   DIVERSIFIED   GLOBAL   AGGRESSIVE  GROWTH &
                                             STOCK    SECURITIES   MARKET    ALLOCATION  INCOME      GROWTH     GROWTH     INCOME
                                            SERIES      SERIES     SERIES      SERIES     SERIES     SERIES     SERIES     SERIES
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 <S>                                       <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>       <C>
 OPERATIONS
 Dividend income                           $   677      $  386    $   204    $  7,449   $    --    $    148   $    318  $   5,819
 Mortality and expense and policy advance
  charges (NOTE 3)                            (127)        (27)      (378)       (262)      (30)        235       (631)       290
 Net realized gain (loss) on investments     2,290          --        863         396        --         225       (259)      (761)
 Net change in unrealized appreciation
  (depreciation) of investments                973        (135)       370      (3,667)    1,010       1,534     (7,741)     6,404
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Net increase (decrease) in net assets
  resulting from operations                  3,813         224      1,059       3,916       980       2,142     (8,313)    11,752

 CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS
 Purchase of Variable Account A units      264,460       6,560    162,462     158,453    36,245     151,125     220,356   298,353
 Redemption of Variable Account A units    (58,304)         --   (118,777)    (13,252)       --     (25,319)    (21,440)  (86,870)
 Mortality and expense charges redeemed        127          27        378         262        30        (235)        631      (290)
                                          -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Net increase resulting from capital       206,283       6,587     44,063     145,463    36,275     125,571     199,547   211,193
  transactions

 Net assets at beginning of period              --          --         --          --        --          --          --        --
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Net assets at end of period              $210,096      $6,811    $45,122    $149,379   $37,255    $127,713    $191,234  $222,945
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

3

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                                                         Variable Account A

                                           Statement of Changes in Net Assets (continued)



                                                       GLOBAL
                                             HIGH       ASSET     GLOBAL                                     BLUE CHIP   COMBINED
                                             YIELD   ALLOCATION    BOND   INTERNATIONAL   VALUE    S&P 500    STOCK      VARIABLE
                                            SERIES     SERIES     SERIES  STOCK SERIES   SERIES     SERIES    SERIES     ACCOUNT
                                          -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 <S>                                      <C>        <C>        <C>       <C>           <C>        <C>       <C>       <C>
 OPERATIONS
 Dividend income                          $  6,166    $  3,734  $   643     $  3,888    $    942   $   337   $    360  $   31,071
 Mortality and expense and policy advance
  charges (NOTE 3)                            (107)      (187)      (55)          57        (217)     (138)       203      (1,374)
 Net realized (loss) gain on investments       154          4        --         (343)        265       274        595       3,703
 Net change in unrealized appreciation
  (depreciation) of investments             (4,908)      (619)     (260)       2,603       7,520     1,423      2,551       7,058
 Net increase (decrease) in net assets    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  resulting from operations                  1,305      2,932       328        6,205       8,510     1,896      3,709      40,458

 CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS
 Purchase of Variable Account A units      147,387     95,193    15,766      170,797     169,800    62,552    169,424   2,128,933
 Redemption of Variable Account A units    (31,347)      (453)       --      (37,325)     (5,141)   (6,306)   (63,968)   (468,502)
 Mortality and expense charges redeemed        107        187        55          (57)        217       138       (203)      1,374
 Net increase resulting from capital      ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  transactions                             116,147     94,927    15,821      133,415     164,876    56,384    105,253   1,661,805

 Net assets at beginning of period              --         --        --           --          --        --         --          --
 Net assets at end of period              ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          $117,452    $97,859   $16,149     $139,620    $173,386   $58,280   $108,962  $1,702,263
                                          ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

SEE ACCOMPANYING NOTES.

 4

<PAGE>


                      First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                          Notes to Financial Statements

                                December 31, 1996

1. GENERAL

FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

Variable Account A (the Account) was established as a segregated asset account
of First Fortis Life Insurance Company (First Fortis) on October 1, 1993 under
New York law and became operational July 1, 1996. The Account is registered
under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as a unit investment trust.  The
variable annuity contracts are sold under the names Opportunity Variable Annuity
and Masters Variable Annuity.

First Fortis was founded in 1971. At the end of 1996, First Fortis had
approximately $6 billion of total life insurance in force. First Fortis is a New
York corporation and is qualified to sell life, accident and health insurance
and annuity contracts in New York. First Fortis is an affiliate of the worldwide
Fortis group of companies owned by Fortis AMEV of The Netherlands and Fortis AG
of Belgium. First Fortis is wholly-owned by Fortis AMEV. The other U.S.
subsidiaries of Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG operate under the holding company name
of Fortis, Inc. Subject to regulatory approval, First Fortis will become a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Fortis, Inc. in 1997.

Fortis AMEV is a diversified financial services company headquartered in
Utrecht, The Netherlands, where its insurance operations began in 1847. Fortis
AG is a diversified financial services company headquartered in Brussels,
Belgium, where its insurance operations began in 1824. Fortis AMEV and Fortis AG
have merged their operating companies under the trade name of Fortis. The Fortis
group of companies is active in insurance, banking, and financial services, and
real estate development in The Netherlands, Belgium, United States, Western
Europe, and the Pacific Rim. The Fortis group of companies had over $160 billion
in assets at the end of 1996.

Fortis Advisers, Inc. (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Fortis, Inc.) provides
investment management services to the portfolios in exchange for investment
advisory and management fees. Investment advisory and management fees are based
on each portfolio's daily net assets and decrease in reduced percentages as
average daily net assets increase. The fees represent an investment expense to
Fortis Series Fund, Inc. which reduces the portfolios' net assets. These fees
charged by Fortis Advisers, Inc. are not available on an individual variable
account basis. Fees for all variable accounts to which Fortis Advisers, Inc.
provided investment management services amounted to $168,412 in 1996.

                                                                             5

<PAGE>

                      First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                    Notes to Financial Statements (continued)

1. GENERAL (CONTINUED)

There are fifteen subaccounts within the Account, each of which invests only in
a corresponding portfolio of Fortis Series Fund, Inc. (the Fund). The investment
objectives and policies of each of the Account's subaccounts are as follows:

 -   GROWTH STOCK PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks growth of capital through short-
     term and long-term appreciation.

 -   U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks to earn a high level
     of current income consistent with prudent investment risk.

 -   MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks high level of capital stability 
     and liquidity and, to the extent consistent with these objectives, a high 
     level of current income.

 -   ASSET ALLOCATION PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks favorable overall rates of
     return on capital, primarily through increased ownership of equity
     securities during periods when stock market conditions appear favorable,
     and short-term and long-term debt instruments during periods when stock
     market conditions are less favorable.

 -   DIVERSIFIED INCOME PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks high level of current income
     by investing primarily in a diversified portfolio of government securities
     and investment grade corporate bonds.

 -   GLOBAL GROWTH PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks growth of capital through long-
     term capital appreciation, through ownership of equity securities,
     allocated among diverse international markets.

 -   AGGRESSIVE GROWTH PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks long-term capital 
     appreciation in equity securities.

 -   GROWTH & INCOME PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks growth of capital and current
     income, through ownership of equity securities that provide an income
     component and the potential for growth.


                                                                              6
<PAGE>


                      First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                    Notes to Financial Statements (continued)

1. GENERAL (CONTINUED)

 -   HIGH YIELD PORTFOLIO SUBACCOUNT--seeks maximum total return through current
     income and capital appreciation, through ownership of a diversified
     portfolio of high-yielding fixed-income securities.

 -   GLOBAL ASSET ALLOCATION SUBACCOUNT--seeks favorable overall rates of return
     on capital, primarily through increased ownership of foreign and domestic
     equity securities during periods when stock market conditions appear
     favorable, and short-term and long-term foreign and domestic debt
     instruments during periods when stock market conditions are less favorable.

 -   GLOBAL BOND SUBACCOUNT--seeks total return from current income and capital
     appreciation, by investing in a global portfolio of high quality fixed
     income securities.

 -   INTERNATIONAL STOCK SUBACCOUNT--seeks capital appreciation by investing
     primarily in equity securities of non-United States companies.

 -   VALUE SUBACCOUNT--seeks growth of capital through short and long-term
     capital appreciation. Investing in equity securities based on the "Value"
     philosophy.

 -   S&P 500 INDEX SUBACCOUNT--seeks growth of capital by replicating the total
     return of the Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock Price Index.

 -   BLUE CHIP STOCK SUBACCOUNT--seeks capital appreciation by investing
     primarily in large and medium-sized blue chip companies.

2. INVESTMENTS

Investments in shares of Fortis Series Fund, Inc. are stated at market value,
which is based on the percentage owned by the Account of the net asset value of
the respective portfolios of the Funds. The Funds' net asset value is based on
market quotations of the securities held in the portfolios. The cost of
investments sold and redeemed is determined using the average cost method.
Unrealized appreciation or depreciation of investments represents the Account's
share of the mutual fund's undistributed net investment income, undistributed
realized gains and losses and unrealized appreciation or depreciation in the
Funds' investments.


                                                                              7
<PAGE>

                      First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                    Notes to Financial Statements (continued)

2. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)

Purchases and sales of shares of the Funds are recorded on the trade date. The
number of shares and aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of
shares were as follows:


                                          SHARES          
                                    ------------------    COST OF     PROCEEDS
                                    PURCHASED     SOLD    PURCHASES   FROM SALES
                                    --------------------------------------------
PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996     
                                   
Fortis Series Fund, Inc.:          
  Growth Stock Series                  8,206     1,780     $264,460   $ 58,304
  U.S. Government Securities Series      606         -        6,560          -
  Money Market Series                 14,970    10,866      162,462    118,777
  Asset Allocation Series              9,092       738      158,453     13,252
  Diversified Income Series            3,185         -       36,245          -
  Global Growth Series                 8,075     1,360      151,125     25,319
  Aggressive Growth Series            15,539     1,521      220,356     21,440
  Growth & Income Series              20,795     6,480      298,353     86,870
  High Yield Series                   14,352     3,030      147,387     31,347
  Global Asset Allocation Series       7,656        36       95,193        453
  Global Bond Series                   1,398         -       15,766          -
  International Stock Series          14,083     3,184      170,797     37,325
  Value Series                        15,600       448      169,800      5,141
  S&P 500 Series                       5,598       544       62,552      6,306
  Blue Chip Stock Series              15,531     6,225      169,424     63,968


                                                                           8

<PAGE>

                      First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                    Notes to Financial Statements (continued)

2. INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)

The number of shares and cost of shares issued from reinvestment of dividends
with the Funds were as follows:


                                                               COST OF
                                                   SHARES      SHARES
                                                 --------------------------
PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996

Fortis Series Fund, Inc.:
  Growth Stock Series                                20        $  677
  U.S. Government Securities Series                  38           386
  Money Market Series                                19           204
  Asset Allocation Series                           437         7,449
  Diversified Income Series                           -             -
  Global Growth Series                                8           148
  Aggressive Growth Series                           23           318
  Growth & Income Series                            388         5,819
  High Yield Series                                 632         6,166
  Global Asset Allocation Series                    308         3,734
  Global Bond Series                                 58           643
  International Stock Series                        323         3,888
  Value Series                                       83           942
  S&P 500 Series                                     29           337
  Blue Chip Series                                   31           360

3. ORGANIZATIONAL EXPENSES AND OTHER CHARGES

ORGANIZATIONAL EXPENSES

First Fortis assumes all organizational expenses of the Account.


                                                                            9

<PAGE>

                      First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                    Notes to Financial Statements (continued)


3. ORGANIZATIONAL EXPENSES AND OTHER CHARGES (CONTINUED)

PREMIUM TAXES

Where premium taxes or similar assessments are imposed by states or other 
jurisdictions upon receipt of purchase payments, First Fortis pays such taxes 
on behalf of the contract owner and then will deduct a charge for these 
amounts from the contract value upon surrender, death of the annuitant or 
contract owner, or annuitization of the contract. In jurisdictions where 
premium taxes or similar assessments are imposed at the time annuity payments 
begin, First Fortis will deduct a charge on a pro rata basis from the 
contract value at that time.

POLICY ADMINISTRATION CHARGE

A $30 annual policy administrative charge is deducted each contract year from 
the value of each Opportunity Variable Annuity contract on the anniversary of 
the contract date or upon surrender of the contract. This charge will be 
waived during the accumulation period if the contract value at the end of the 
contract year (or upon surrender) is $25,000 or more.

MORTALITY AND EXPENSE RISK CHARGE

First Fortis assesses each subaccount of the Account a daily charge for 
mortality and expense risk at an annual rate of 1.25% of the net assets 
representing equity of contract owners held in each subaccount.

ADMINISTRATIVE CHARGE

First Fortis assesses each subaccount of the Account a daily charge for 
mortality and expense risk at an annual rate of .10% of the net assets 
representing equity of contract owners held in each subaccount.


                                                                          10
<PAGE>


                      First Fortis Life Insurance Company
                               Variable Account A

                    Notes to Financial Statements (continued)


3. ORGANIZATIONAL EXPENSES AND OTHER CHARGES (CONTINUED)

SURRENDER CHARGE

FREE SURRENDERS--The following amounts can be withdrawn from the contract 
without a surrender charge:

 -   Any purchase payment received more than five years prior to the surrender
     date for Opportunity Variable Annuity and seven years for Masters Variable
     Annuity contracts.

 -   In any contract year, up to 10% of the purchase payments received less than
     five years prior to the surrender date for Opportunity Variable Annuity and
     seven years prior to the surrender date for Masters Variable Annuity
     Contracts.

 -   For Masters Variable Annuity Contracts, any earnings that have not been
     previously surrendered.

AMOUNT OF SURRENDER CHARGE--Surrender charges apply only if the amount being
withdrawn exceeds the sum of the amounts listed above under Free Surrenders. The
surrender charge is based on a percentage of the amount of purchase payments
surrendered. The percentage of payments is set at 5% during the first five years
on Opportunity Variable Annuity contracts, and is set at 7% during the first
year of the Masters Variable Annuity contracts with a sliding scale down to zero
by the end of the seventh year. There were no surrender charges collected by
First Fortis during 1996.

4. FEDERAL INCOME TAXES

The operations of the Account form part of, and are taxed with, the operations
of First Fortis, which is taxed as an insurance company under the Internal
Revenue Code. As a result, the net asset value of the subaccounts are not
affected by income taxes on income distributions received by the subaccounts.


                                                                           11

<PAGE>

APPENDIX A

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

In advertising and other sales material for the Certificates, yield and total
return information for the Subaccounts of the Variable Account may be included. 
The information below provides investment results for the indicated Subaccounts
of the Variable Account.  The results shown in this section are not an estimate
or guarantee of future investment performance, and do not represent the actual
experience of amounts invested by a particular Participant.

YIELD CALCULATIONS

Yield information for the Alliance Money Market Subaccount will be based on the
seven days ended on a specified date.  It will be computed by determining the
net change, exclusive of capital changes, in the value of a hypothetical
pre-existing account (after the deduction of all asset based charges) having a
balance of one Accumulation Unit at the beginning of the period and dividing the
difference by the value of the account at the beginning of the base period to
obtain the base period return, and multiplying the base period return by
(365/7), with the resulting yield figure carried to the nearest hundredth of one
percent.  The seven day yield for the Alliance Money Market Subaccount as of
December 31, 1996 was 4.36%.

An effective yield may also be quoted for the Alliance Money Market Subaccount. 
Effective yield is calculated by compounding the current yield as follows:  

Effective Yield =     [(Base Period Return + 1) 365/7  ]  - 1

The seven day effective yield for the Alliance Money Market Subaccount as of
December 31, 1996 was 4.45%.

Yield information for the other Subaccounts will be based on the thirty days
ended on a specified date and carried to the nearest hundredth of a percent,
according to the following formula:

                                   -             -
                                  |   A-B     6   |
                                 2| (----- +1) - 1|
                                  |    CD         |
                                   -             -
Where:
A = net investment income earned during the period by the Portfolio whose shares
are owned by the Subaccount,

B = expenses accrued for the period,

C = the average daily number of Accumulation Units outstanding during the
period, and

D = the offering price per Accumulation Unit at the end of the last day of the
period.

The following table sets figures for the thirty days ended December 31, 1996.

         Subaccount                              Yield
         ----------                              -----

    Federated High Yield Bond  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.40%
    MFS High Income. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.99%
    MFS World Governments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.32%
    Van Eck Worldwide Bond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.42%


                                         A-1

<PAGE>

First Fortis may advertise its relative performance as compiled by outside
organizations.  Following is a list of ratings services which may be referred to
in advertisements, along with the category in which the applicable Subaccount is
included:

    Rating Service                                 Category                    
    --------------                                 --------
                           Alliance Money Market Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.     
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                          Alliance International Subaccount
 
    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 International              
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               International               

                          Alliance Premier Growth Subaccount
  
    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Growth                      
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               Growth                      

                         Federated High Yield Bond Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 High Yield Bond             
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                             Federated Utility Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Specialty Fund              
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                        Federated American Leaders Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Growth & Income             
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                        Lexington Natural Resources Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Specialty Fund              
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                        Lexington Emerging Markets Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 International Stock         
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.


                                         A-2

<PAGE>

                            MFS Emerging Growth Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Aggressive Growth           
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               Mid Cap Funds               

                              MFS High Income Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 High Yield Bonds            
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               Mid Cap Funds               

                           MFS World Governments Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 International Bonds         
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.   

                        Montgomery Emerging Markets Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Diversified Emerging Markets
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               Emerging Markets Funds      

                             Montgomery Growth Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Growth                      
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               Growth                      

                             Strong Discovery Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Aggressive Growth           
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               Capital Appreciation Fund   

                       Strong Government Securities Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Government Bond - General   
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                             Strong Advantage Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Corporate Bond - General    
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                        Strong International Stock Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Foreign Stock               
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               International Fund          

                               TCI Balanced Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Balanced                    
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.


                                         A-3

<PAGE>

                                TCI Growth Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Growth                      
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                          Van Eck Worldwide Bond Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 International Bond          
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.

                    Van Eck Gold and Natural Resources Subaccount

    Morningstar Publications, Inc.                 Specialty Fund              
    Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.               Gold Oriented Fund          


                                         A-4
<PAGE>

                                       PART II.

                        INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

Item 13.  Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution

    The estimated expenses of the issuance and distribution of the Contracts,
other than commissions on sales of the Contracts are as follows:
                                                 Amount
                                                 ------
    Securities and Exchange Commission
         registration fee                        $6,060.61
    Printing and engraving                       $1,500.00
    Accounting fees and expenses                 $1,500.00
    Legal fees and expenses                      $3,000.00

Item 14.  Indemnification of Directors and Officers

    First Fortis' By-Laws provide for indemnity and payment of expenses of
First Fortis' officers and directors in connection with certain legal
proceedings, judgments, and settlements arising by reason of their service as
such, all to the extent and in the manner permitted by law.  Applicable New York
law generally permits payment of such indemnification and expenses if the person
seeking indemnification has acted in good faith and for a purpose that he
reasonably believed to be in, or not opposed to, the best interests of the
Company, and, in a criminal proceeding, if the person seeking indemnification
also has no reasonable cause to believe his conduct was unlawful.  No
indemnification is further permitted to an individual if there has been an
adjudication, and a judgement rendered adverse to the individual seeking
indemnification, finding that the acts were committed in bad faith, as the
result of active and deliberate dishonesty, or that there was personal gain,
financial profit, or other advantage which he or she was not otherwise legally
entitled.

    Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the
registrant pursuant to the indemnification provision described in response to
Item 14, or otherwise, the registrant has been advised that in the opinion of
the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public
policy as expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.  In the event
that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the
payment by the registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or
controlling person of the registrant in the successful defense of any action,
suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person
in connection with the securities being registered, the registrant will, unless
in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling
precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether
such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and
will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

<PAGE>

Item 15.  Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities

    None.

Item 16.  Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedule

    a.  Exhibits

    1.   Form of Principal Underwriter and Servicing Agreement -- filed as an
         exhibit to Registration Statement No. 33-71686 on Form N-4 filed April
         11, 1994 and incorporated by reference.

    2.   None.
       
    3.   (a) Charter of First Fortis Life Insurance Company (Incorporated by
         reference from Form 10-K405, File No. 33-71690, of registrant filed
         March 29, 1996).

         (b) By-laws of First Fortis Life Insurance Company (Incorporated by
         reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686, of
         registrant and its Separate Account A filed on November 15, 1993);

    4.   (a) Form of Combination Fixed and Variable Annuity Contract
         (Incorporated by Reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File
         No. 333-20343, of Registrant and its Separate Account A, filed May 9,
         1997);

         (b) Form of Application to be used in connection with Contract
         (Incorporated by Reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File
         No. 333-20343, of Registrant and its Separate Account A, filed May 9,
         1997);

         -C- Form of IRA Endorsement (Incorporated by reference from Form N-4
         Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686, of registrant and its
         Separate Account A filed April 27, 1995);

         (d) Form of Section 403(b) Annuity Endorsement (Incorporated by
         reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686, of
         registrant and its Separate Account A filed April 27, 1995);

         (e) Form of Automatic Portfolio Rebalancing Endorsement (Incorporated
         by reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686,
         of registrant and its Separate Account A filed April 27, 1995);

         (f) Form of Systematic Withdrawal Option Endorsement (Incorporated by
         reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686, of
         registrant and its Separate Account A filed April 27, 1995);

<PAGE>

         (g) Form of Systematic Transfer Endorsement (Incorporated by reference
         from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686, of registrant
         and its Separate Account A filed April 27, 1995);

    5.   Opinion and consent of David A. Peterson, Esq., Corporate Counsel of
         Fortis Benefits Insurance Company, as to the legality of the
         securities being registered (filed as a part of this Form S-1
         registration statement filed on January 24, 1997).

    10.  Administrative Service Agreement (Incorporated by reference from Form
         N-4 Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686, of registrant and its
         Separate Account A filed on November 15, 1993).

    24.  Consent of Ernst & Young LLP -- filed herewith.

    25.  (a) Power of Attorney for Messrs. Rutherfurd, Freedman and Madame
         Gharib. (Incorporated by reference from Form N-4 Registration
         Statement, File No. 33-71686, of registrant and its Separate Account A
         filed on November 15, 1993).

         (b) Power of Attorney for Messrs. Gardner, Nelson and Galston.
         (Incorporated by reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File
         No. 33-71686, of registrant and its Separate Account A filed on April
         12, 1994.)

         -C- Power of Attorney for Messrs. Keller and Kopperud (Incorporated by
         reference from Form N-4 Registration Statement, File No. 33-71686, of
         registrant and its Separate Account A filed April 27, 1995.)

    28.  (b) Financial statement schedules.

         None.
                       

Item 17.  Undertakings

    The Registrant hereby undertakes:

    (1) To file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made, a
    post-effective amendment to this registration statement:

         (i) To include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the
         Securities Act of 1933;

         (ii) To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising after
         the effective date of the registration statement (or the most recent
         post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the
         aggregate, 

<PAGE>

         represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in the
         registration statement;

         (iii) To include any material information with respect to the plan of
         distribution not previously disclosed in the  registration statement
         or any material change to such information in the registration
         statement, including (but not limited to) any addition or deletion of
         a managing underwriter.

    (2) That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities
    Act of 1933, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new
    registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the
    offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial
    bona fide offering thereof.

    (3) To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any
    of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination
    of the offering.


<PAGE>

                                      SIGNATURES

As required by the Securities Act of 1933, the Registrant has caused this
Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf in the Town of Salina, County
of Onondaga, State of New York on this 7th day of May 1997.

                   FIRST FORTIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                   By:   /s/ Terry J. Kryshak
                       ------------------------------------
                      Terry J. Kryshak
                      Sr. Vice President & Chief Administrative Officer
                        (Principal Executive Officer)

As required by the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been
signed by the following persons, in the capacities indicated, on May 7, 1997






Signature                                    Title With First Fortis
- ---------                                    -----------------------


/s/ Terry J. Kryshak                         Sr. Vice President and Chief
   -----------------------------             Administrative Officer and
 Terry J. Kryshak                            Director (Principal Executive
                                             Officer)

/s/ Larry M. Cains                           Treasurer and Director
   -----------------------------             (Principal Financial Officer)
 Larry M. Cains

/s/ Leanne F. Hughes                         Assistant Treasurer and Director of
   -----------------------------             Accounting (Principal
 Leanne F. Hughes                            Accounting Officer)



                                             President and Director
*-------------------------------
 Allen Royal Freedman         



                                             Director
*-------------------------------
 Susie Gharib

                                             Director
*-------------------------------
 Guy Gerard Rutherfurd, Jr.

                                             Director
*-------------------------------
 Dale Edward Gardner

<PAGE>

                                             Director
*-------------------------------
 Kenneth Warwick Nelson



                                             Director 
 -------------------------------
 Robert B. Pollock



/s/ Dean C. Kopperud                         Director
   -----------------------------
 Dean C. Kopperud



                                             Director
*-------------------------------
 Thomas M. Keller



                                             Director
*-------------------------------
 Clarence Elkus Galston





*By/s/ Terry J. Kryshak
      --------------------------
    Terry J. Kryshak
    Attorney-in-fact 

<PAGE>

                                    EXHIBIT INDEX




Item
Number   Description              
- ------    -----------


24.      Consent of Accountants



<PAGE>

                           Consent of Independent Auditors



We consent to the reference to our firm under the caption "Experts" and to the
use of our reports a) dated February 21, 1997 with respect to the financial
statements of First Fortis Life Insurance Company and b) dated April 11, 1997
with respect to the financial statements of Variable Account A in the Amendment
No. 1 to the Registration Statement (Form S-1 No. 333-20345) and related
Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information of First Fortis Life
Insurance Company for the registration of flexible premium deferred combination
variable and fixed annuity contracts.



                                       /s/
                                       Ernst & Young LLP

New York, New York
May 8, 1997



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