Category: Citizens Property Insurance
Increases of up to 10 percent on Citizens Insurance premiums win approval
The last day of the regular session also saw passage of legislation affecting private property insurance rates and companies that offer insurance of last resort to high-risk businesses and homeowners.
The Citizens premium legislation (HB1495/SB1950) sets a so-called ''glide path'' of gradual annual premium increases aimed at reducing Florida's financial risk by boosting cash assets and decreasing the liability in Florida's Hurricane Catastrophe Fund.
''Right now we're the Titanic heading into an iceberg,'' said House sponsor Rep. Bryan Nelson, R-Apopka. ``This glide path is starting to turn this ship in the right direction.''
The fund is $13 billion short of what would be needed to cover devastating property damage likely to come from a major hurricane, thanks in part to the global recession and tightened credit markets.
By gradually letting Citizens' rates rise until they reach sound levels, lawmakers hope the additional revenue will boost the state's cash reserves and reduce the need for bonds.
Citizens' rates have been frozen since 2007. Had lawmakers not passed Friday's glide path bill, Citizens likely would have sought rate hikes of 40 to 55 percent -- the level Citizens officials say is really needed to cover potential storm losses.
''Citizens Insurance has us on the hook for a number of billions of dollars that would scare anybody,'' said bill supporter Rep. Ed Hooper, R-Clearwater. ``To keep the rates where they are is actuarial suicide.''
The House voted 80-35 for the measure, a compromise with the Senate that had called for 5 percent annual hikes. Later Friday, the Senate voted 32-6 to agree with the House. The House originally proposed 20 percent increases per year for any single policyholder, but Gov. Charlie Crist signaled his preference for a smaller increase.
The lawmakers opposed to the bill are concerned about raising rates for Floridians who already are struggling with the economic downturn.
'Now is not the right time to put more of a burden on citizens' pocketbooks,'' said Rep. Evan Jenne, D-Ft. Lauderdale. ``I don't disagree with the premise. I disagree with the timing of this.''
The bill also gradually gets Florida out of the business of providing private insurance companies with cheap reinsurance (basically insurance that insurers buy to protect themselves against losses).
That reinsurance -- known as the TICL, or temporary increase in coverage limit -- has the state on the hook for $12 billion right now if a big storm hits. State officials admit they do not have that money on hand.
Also on Friday, the Legislature approved a bill (SB2036/HB1171) aimed at luring large private insurers like State Farm back to Florida by allowing them to raise rates without approval from the Office of Insurance Regulation. The Senate Friday voted 29-9 for the House bill.
Those companies would be required to disclose, very clearly and in writing, the fact that their higher rates are not regulated by OIR.
Supporters call it the ''consumer choice,'' bill, because they say some property owners would prefer to pay more for an established company with significant assets like State Farm.
But lawmakers and lobbyists concede the governor is likely to veto it.
Also Friday, the Legislature approved a measure (SB 1894) maintaining the deregulated system for insurers, known as ''surplus lines,'' that serve high-risk businesses such as liquor stores and hospitals and some residences. The $4 billionper year industry now includes 165 companies writing 700,000 policies in Florida. Surplus lines have never been regulated by the OIR, but recent Supreme Court cases have called that practice into question. SB1894 clarifies that the last-resort insurance is not subject to OIR regulation.
Louisiana Hunts For Insurance As Audit Fishes Around Citizens Insurance
If there was ever any doubt about both the incompetence and the arrogance in the running of Citizens Property Insurance Company, all you have to do is review the latest Legislative Audit report made public this week. The Legislative Auditor, after a lengthy review, concluded that a number of state officials with oversight over Citizens may have broken the law by taking hunting and fishing trips paid for by the state run insurer of last resort. Could this be the final straw that causes a complete rebuilding of this bungled company that, through outright negligence, has a cost to taxpayers in Louisiana of over $1 billion?
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Judge Rules for Condo Owners in Insurance Case
DESTIN — A judge has awarded residents of a Norriego Point condominium $4.5 million in a fight with their insurance company over damages from Hurricane Ivan.
The East Pass Towers II Condominium Association and Citizens Property Insurance Co. have been in a disagreement over the storm’s damage to 46 units.
In a judgment issued last week, Okaloosa County Circuit Judge Thomas Remington sided with the condo owners.
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