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Florida Insurance Law Tightens Filing Windows, Combats Fraud

First Coast News
by Ken Amaro
May 23, 2011

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Florida’s homeowners insurance market hasn’t been the same since Hurricane Andrew slammed the state in 1992.

Insurance expert David Miller, CEO of Brightway Insurance and independent agency, said change is long overdue and that recently passed state insurance laws will reduce fraud.

“We’ve seen a tremendous increase in fraud over the last few years,” he said. “The law is meant to clamp down on … (fraud) which does not help anyone.”

Among the changes, homeowners now must have repairs completed before their insurance company pays the claim in full. “We had a system before that favored people getting claim money and not doing repairs and that was not good,” said Miller.

The change will make Florida consistent with the laws in other states, he said.

The way sinkhole claims are processed will also change. Miller said the law closed loopholes that led to fraud.

“The difference is if you have a crack in your sidewalk, the insurance industry is not going to pay you to rebuild your entire house. And that is some of the problems that were going on and plaguing the industry,” he said.

The bill also shortens the window for filing windstorm and hurricane claims from five years to three after a storm hits. It allows the companies to raise rates by up to 15 percent to cover re-insurance costs.

Even so, in the end, Miller said everyone wins under the new law. “The industry is going to be better off and consumers will end up having better rates in the long run,” said Miller.

The changes to the insurance law take effect July 1.

Miller said if the industry has any regrets, it is the failed attempt to raise rates for policyholders of the Citizens Property Insurance. The industry is concerned about the financial strength of the Citizens Property Insurance if there is a major disaster.

http://www.firstcoastnews.com/news/article/205073/3/Florida-Insurance-Law-Tightens-Filing-Windows-Combats-Fraud

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Fla. Property Bill Helps, But Citizens Competition Will Keep Large Insurers Away

PropertyCasualty360.com
by Phil Gusman
May 23, 2011

The property-insurance reform bill recently signed in Florida will help improve insurers’ bottom lines, but large homeowners insurers are unlikely to expand their presence in the state due to continued competition from the insurer of last resort, according to Moody’s.

The bill, SB 408, is credit-positive for insurers, says Moody’s, adding that provisions addressing hurricane and sinkhole claims and allowing insurers to increase rates by 15 percent a year instead of 10 percent will help insurers’ profitability in a state known for a “difficult regulatory environment.”

Moody’s says 10 of the top 20 Florida homeowners insurers have 84-100 percent concentrations in the homeowners line “and therefore will benefit from the law’s implementation, which is effective immediately.”

Still, Moody’s says, “we think [Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state’s last-resort insurer,] will continue to compete with the private-insurance market to such an extent that large homeowners-insurance carriers are unlikely to expand their presence in the state.”

According to a chart accompanying Moody’s analysis in its Weekly Credit Outlook, Citizens held a 28.9 percent share of the homeowners market as of 2010, leading all insurers in the state.

“Profitability for Florida homeowners insurers has been under pressure over the past several years,” says Moody’s. “The state is a peak U.S. catastrophe zone, and many large insurers have reduced their market share or exited the Florida property-insurance market over the past six years, with [Citizens] and smaller, private insurers assuming the risk.”

http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2011/05/23/fla-property-bill-helps-but-citizens-competition-w

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NOAA forecasters predict up to 18 named storms during hurricane season

The Palm Beach Post
by Eliot Kleinberg
May 19, 2011

FORT LAUDERDALE — Federal meteorologists today called for an above-average hurricane season, while at the same time warning that even a below-average season still would be an active one.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration called for 12 to 18 named storms, six to 10 hurricanes, and three to six major storms, of Category 3 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson scale, with top sustained winds of at least 111 mph.

In 2010, NOAA forecast 14 to 23 named storms, eight to 14 hurricanes and three to 7 majors; there were 19, 12 and five.

The historical average is 11, six and two.

“The United States was fortunate last year. Winds steered most of the season’s tropical storms and all hurricanes away from our coastlines,” NOAA administrator Jane Lubchenco said in a release. “However we can’t count on luck to get us through this season.”

No one hazards to guess whether or where a storm will hit.

And as always, whether anyone predicts a below average or above average season is more a mental exercise than anything else. It has nearly no effect on the odds a storm will strike an individual place. So managers urge people to prepare as if one will.

Last season was the third busiest on record, but no storms struck the U.S. coastline. And a below-average year produced Hurricane Andrew in 1992.

Today’s forecast comes as emergency managers, government leaders, researchers and meteorologists meet this week in Fort Lauderdale at the Florida Governor’s Hurricane Conference.

With Florida having gone five full seasons without a landfalling hurricane, Gov. Rick Scott warned at Wednesday’s opening session, “we must always remember that every storm has the potential to be deadly.”

As have other forecasters, NOAA today cited three main factors for its forecast:

*Since 1995, the region has been in a decades-long cycle of high hurricane activity.

*The ocean’s surface is about two degrees warmer than average.

*La Niña, the cool-water event that tends to increase storm development, is expected to be gone in June, but still have some influence this year, such as reduced wind shear, which tends to kneecap tropical cyclones.

In early April, the Colorado State University team forecast 16, 9 and 5, slightly dropping down from their December 2010 prediction. In the 2010 season, the team’s June prediction was 18, 10 and 5, close to what occurred.

The season runs June 1 through Nov. 30.

http://blogs.palmbeachpost.com/eyeonthestorm/2011/05/19/noaa-forecasters-predict-up-to-18-named-storms-during-hurricane-season/

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WSJ: Weak Insurance ‘Reform’ Exposes Floridians to Fiscal Disaster

Sunshine State News
by Kenric Ward
May 21, 2011

Declaring “Republican Hurricane Season,” the Wall Street Journal on Saturday blasted Florida’s GOP lawmakers for failing to substantively reform the state’s casualty insurance system.

Extending its umbrage to Rick Scott, the bible of business said the governor “risked hyperbole” when his office claimed that new insurance legislation was “a significant step toward making Florida more competitive and attracting new companies into the state.”

The problem, as the Journal sees it, is that Florida lawmakers maintained the state-backed Citizens Insurance and the Hurricane Catastrophe Fund essentially as is. Naturally, this was a bipartisan cock-up, with Democrats and Republicans joined together.

“Private insurers continue to shrink their business in Florida because they can’t compete with [the] two taxpayer-backed behemoths,” the Journal observed. Three more private insurers halted underwriting in the state this week.

Chiding the governor for settling for what it characterized as a weak political compromise by the 2011 Legislature, WSJ recommended true market-based reforms:

“If Mr. Scott is serious about restoring competition to Florida’s hurricane insurance market, he’ll work to revive bills that would set Citizens’ rates nearer to private-market rates and roll back the Cat Fund.”

Acknowledging that true reform won’t be an easy sell, the Journal editors warned that the status-quo is unacceptable — exposing Florida taxpayers to untold billions of dollars in liability if and when The Big One strikes.

http://www.sunshinestatenews.com/blog/wsj-weak-insurance-reform-exposes-floridians-fiscal-disaster

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Republican Hurricane Season

The Wall Street Journal
Editorial
May 21, 2011

The Atlantic hurricane season starts in less than two weeks, and Floridians might want to keep an even closer eye on the skies than usual. Not only has the state been spared a big storm for five consecutive years, but the politicians in Tallahassee just gambled that their socialized insurance industry can cover any potential losses if a Category 5 does make landfall. Floridians better hope their Sunshine State lives up to its name.

Governor Rick Scott achieved a small reform when he signed a law Tuesday that raises insurers’ solvency requirements and works to curb abuses of sinkhole claims, among other things. That’s all to the good, despite the catcalls from Florida’s media. Insurance fraud raises costs for all consumers. But the Republican risks hyperbole when his office calls the law “a significant step forward to making Florida more competitive and attracting new companies into the state.”

If anything, private insurers continue to shrink their business in Florida because they can’t compete with two taxpayer-backed behemoths: Citizens Property Insurance Corp., an insurer, and the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, a reinsurer known as the Cat Fund. Citizens’s rates are set below private-market peers and insurers in the state are mandated to buy Cat Fund reinsurance—a kind of insurance for insurers.

As a result, Citizens writes far more new policies than any other private-market peer and the Cat Fund is the main reinsurance game in town. The latest data from Florida’s Office of Insurance Regulation shows Citizens’s market share in homeowner insurance in hurricane prone Hernando County is now 60%; in Pasco, 45%; and in Miami-Dade, 45%. Three private insurers this week halted new underwriting in the state. That’s no coincidence.

Meanwhile, both companies present ever-bigger risks to taxpayers. In the event of a catastrophic storm, Citizens has the legal right to impose a tax on both its policyholders and other Floridians, regardless of where they live and what type of insurance they have. The Cat Fund said Tuesday that it can afford to pay between $18.3 billion and $20.3 billion to policy holders in an emergency. But that assumes the fund can sell some $11 billion of bonds in the storm’s aftermath. Goldman Sachs puts that number closer to $4 billion.

If Mr. Scott is serious about restoring competition to Florida’s hurricane insurance market, he’ll work to revive bills that would set Citizens’s rates nearer to private-market rates and roll back the Cat Fund. This won’t be an easy political sell. The most vocal opponent of the law signed Tuesday was Republican Senator Mike Fasano, from New Port Richey, who demonized that reform with populist rhetoric about higher rates. Republicans from the southern part of Florida are antireform for the same short-sighted political reason.

All of this speaks to the tough battle Governor Scott, a former businessman, has in front of him. No insurance market will be viable in the long term unless companies are allowed to estimate rates and price policies at market clearing levels. In the short term, that means Florida insurance rates have to rise. But better to fix the market now than to face a disaster when the big storm hits.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703421204576331092167856386.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

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Taking hurricane lessons from the past

Sarasota Herald Trubine
by Kate Spinner
May 21, 2011

If a storm similar to the 1935 Labor Day hurricane struck the Florida Keys again, meteorologists fear the same mistakes might play out. The same storm now would be a nightmare. Forecasters then knew the hurricane was coming, but it surprised people by growing from a Category 1 to a Category 5 in less than two days — a rapid intensification that forecasters still have difficulty predicting.

An evacuation train arrived six hours too late, leaving citizens and veterans trapped to ride out the disaster. The storm struck with 185 mph winds, the strongest storm ever to make a U.S. landfall. Rising seas ripped the railroad and caused a 30-mile stretch of destruction. 400 people died — more than half of them veterans — prompting a congressional investigation.

“There was miscommunication between the decision-makers of when they were going to send the evacuation train,” said Fred Johnson, meteorologist in charge at the National Weather Service office in Key West.

Much of this year’s hurricane conference focused on improving communication among meteorologists, emergency responders and the public to avoid preventable death, such as the thousands who perished during Katrina and the dozens from Ike.

Part of the new strategy this year is to use social media to reach more of the public. National Weather Service offices and the National Hurricane Center have Facebook pages and Twitter accounts. The National Hurricane Center also has posted a number of informational videos about hurricanes on YouTube.

Surveys of the public for Florida’s new evacuation plan revealed that despite this information age, 60 percent of people in Florida either overestimate or underestimate their risk for hurricanes, said National Hurricane Director Bill Read during a workshop aimed at getting planners and emergency workers better informed.

In 1933, 21 tropical storms and hurricanes swept though the western Atlantic, the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. It was the busiest hurricane season on record until 2005. But back then there were no satellites, radar or airplanes that flew into hurricanes with high-tech weather equipment. Meteorologists relied on ship captains to report weather observations, such as pressure and wind speed, to warn of brewing storms. Forecasters knew little about how the storms were behaving until they approached land.

Similar to today, newspapers in 1933 wrote about the huge number of storms the Atlantic was spitting out and told of the destruction after they crossed land. At the end of August that year, two major hurricanes — with dangerous 111 mph or stronger winds — threatened the coast of Florida and Texas at the same time, a scenario that would create havoc today.

The first storm hit Florida, between Martin and St. Lucie county with 125 mph to 130 mph winds. About 5,000 people lived in the area and two were killed. The storm dashed across the central part of the state and dragged northward along the west coast. By then it had become a tropical storm. The storm ruined the state’s citrus industry and caused $4 million in damage by 1933 standards, said Scott Spratt, warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service’s Melbourne office.

Today, the same hurricane would directly threaten 375,000 people on the East Coast and billions of dollars worth of property statewide.

Satellites would pinpoint the storm before it even became a hurricane.

Meteorologists would track it for days. Three days before landfall, the nation would watch the whole state of Florida become engulfed in the “cone of uncertainty” that forecasters use to predict where a storm will travel. Nobody in Martin or St. Lucie county would be startled to see a hurricane at their doorstep.

Yet, meteorologists wondered if they would evacuate when told. Based on experience with Ike and Katrina, the forecasters were not so sure.

If a storm similar to the 1935 Labor Day hurricane struck the Florida Keys again, meteorologists fear the same mistakes might play out. The same storm now would be a nightmare. Forecasters then knew the hurricane was coming, but it surprised people by growing from a Category 1 to a Category 5 in less than two days — a rapid intensification that forecasters still have difficulty predicting.

An evacuation train arrived six hours too late, leaving citizens and veterans trapped to ride out the disaster. The storm struck with 185 mph winds, the strongest storm ever to make a U.S. landfall. Rising seas ripped the railroad and caused a 30-mile stretch of destruction. 400 people died — more than half of them veterans — prompting a congressional investigation.

“There was miscommunication between the decision-makers of when they were going to send the evacuation train,” said Fred Johnson, meteorologist in charge at the National Weather Service office in Key West.

Much of this year’s hurricane conference focused on improving communication among meteorologists, emergency responders and the public to avoid preventable death, such as the thousands who perished during Katrina and the dozens from Ike.

Part of the new strategy this year is to use social media to reach more of the public. National Weather Service offices and the National Hurricane Center have Facebook pages and Twitter accounts. The National Hurricane Center also has posted a number of informational videos about hurricanes on YouTube.

Surveys of the public for Florida’s new evacuation plan revealed that despite this information age, 60 percent of people in Florida either overestimate or underestimate their risk for hurricanes, said National Hurricane Director Bill Read during a workshop aimed at getting planners and emergency workers better informed.

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20110521/ARTICLE/110529873/?p=1&tc=pg

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Lawmakers hope new bill fixes hurricane insurance

The Examiner
by Brent Kallestad
May 19, 2011

Florida hasn’t been hit by a hurricane since the disastrous years of 2004 and 2005 — but the state’s property insurance companies say they are still losing money despite collecting billions in premiums.

That has industry leaders, Gov. Rick Scott and Republican lawmakers hoping that a recently signed bill will make them profitable and spur competition. Proponents say that would drive down rates in the long-run and allow private insurers to compete better for some of the 1.3 million customers of the state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp. in hopes decreasing the exposure to taxpayers.

The legislation, among other things, allows private companies to pass on 15 percent of their reinsurance costs to their customers along with whatever increases state regulators approve. Reinsurance is basically policies the insurance companies buy themselves as protection against catastrophic losses if a major storm hits.

The new law also tightens restrictions on sinkhole claims, which the insurance companies say are costing them $500 million annually, and allows insurers to hold back part of a claims settlement until repairs are completed. Former Gov. Charlie Crist last year vetoed a bill that was similar except for the sinkhole provisions.

But some consumer advocates think lawmakers gave away too much.

“If a hurricane comes and the industry is not ready to deal with it, they’re not going to have an excuse,” said Sean Shaw, founder of the policyholders of Florida coalition. “They ought to be pretty happy.”

The Office of Insurance Regulation reported that Florida property owners paid just over $7 billion in premiums in 2009 compared to $5.6 billion five years earlier after the first four of the eight storms that hit the state in two years had made landfall. Despite the 25 percent increase in premiums during the intervening quiet years, the insurance industry says it is losing millions of dollars each year in Florida. Several companies also became insolvent and disappeared.

OIR, meanwhile, has approved rate increases of about 30 percent for the top 20 property insurance companies in the past two years. Still, the industry says it has been unable to stockpile sufficient reserves it could tap after a major storm. The industry says it was stockpiling between $7 billion and $9 billion in surplus annually for several years before the 2004-05 storms hit.

“We needed every penny of that surplus we had in 2004 and 2005 and it still wasn’t enough,” said Sam Miller, vice president of the Florida Insurance Council, an industry group. “It’s a very foreboding situation when you don’t accumulate billions of dollars when you don’t have a hurricane. No company is building the surplus it should be building during non-hurricane years, no company, That’s the crisis.”

But many homeowners dispute the industry’s claims.

“If they thought they passed something they thought was going to work, they’re in for a rude awakening,” said John Thompson, a 45-year-old small businessman from Spring Hill. “Nothing we’re doing here makes common sense.”

Thompson’s $2,200 annual homeowners premium has roughly tripled in the last decade. He is covered by Citizens after being canceled by four different commercial companies.

Florida’s property insurance system has been an almost annual legislative headache since shortly after Hurricane Andrew struck South Florida in 1992 — the Category 5 storm killed caused about $16 billion in insured damage.

Legislators in 2007 tried to protect consumers from crippling rate increases, thinking that was the best way to go. But most of that backfired, accomplishing none of their goals.

“They did a number of things they thought were pro-consumer that seemed like a good idea at the time, but it turned out there was potential for abuses that we did not anticipate,” said Kevin McCarty, the state’s chief insurance regulator.

“Unfortunately the abuses and costs of other cost drivers, particularly sinkholes, has been a real drag on the surplus of our companies even without hurricane season,” McCarty said.

Many private carriers, including giant State Farm, began to cut back on the number of policies they were willing to write in such a risky climate, both politically and from storms.

“Insurance companies operating in Florida generate billions of dollars in jobs, payroll, tax revenues, and economic impact,” said former state Rep. Don Brown of DeFuniak Springs, a longtime insurance executive. “Yet, the political attitude has been mostly punitive toward insurance companies and the industry.”

But backers believe that the new bill will solve the problem.

In addition to shoring up regulations on sinkhole claims and activity but public adjusters suspected in having a hand in many of the suspicious claims, McCarty believes the new legislation is better than what Crist rejected a year ago.

“It really attempts to get around some of the fraud and abuse in the sinkhole process,” McCarty said.

They also say that by allowing insurers to pass along part of the cost of reinsurance, that will help shore up private insurers and make others want to sell here. The provision is expected to cost the average homeowner more in the short run, although no company or regulator could say yet how much that might be.

“Clearly total premiums will be less with this bill than without it,” Miller said, predicting that “someday premiums could be less than they are now.”

Jim Massie, Florida counsel for the Reinsurance Association of America, said the state “is on the edge of a financial catastrophe, all in the name of keeping homeowners’ insurance premiums lower than the risk they’re supposed to cover.”

“Businesses, automobile policyholders, charities, environmental groups, are beginning to push back,” he said.

The ultimate goal is to reduce the exposure and shore up the finances of Citizens, which would be hard pressed to pay off after a major storm without an additional assessment on Floridians who buy auto or property insurance. And while a separate proposal to substantially shrink Citizens failed in the recently completed legislative session, many of the provisions in the comprehensive bill will benefit the publicly backed company.

And that remains a problem.

“We should not be subsidizing million dollar beach homes on Florida’s coast and we should not be going into every hurricane season hoping for a miracle,” said Jose Gonzalez, vice president of Associated Industries of Florida.

http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/2011/05/lawmakers-hope-new-bill-fixes-hurricane-insurance

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‘Premium’ facts on home insurance market

South Florida Sun Sentinel
by Brian Nelson
May 19, 2011

In response to “Insurance premiums could double,” I would like to give your readers the rest of the story.

Senate Bill 408 did not raise insurance rates; it simply gave insurance companies the ability to recoup increasing costs of reinsurance more quickly. The Office of Insurance Regulation still has to approve the expedited rate filing, and if found unwarranted, the insurance company would be required to return the excess premium to the policy holders.

The average rate increase in the past two years by the top 20 private insurance companies in Florida was 15 percent. By comparison, Citizens averaged only a 7 percent rate increase over the same time period. One Florida carrier had the need for a 40 percent rate increase last year but only requested a 3 percent increase because Citizens was their main competition. How do you compete with a carrier that doesn’t buy reinsurance and depends on business owners, nonprofits and home and auto policyholders to bail them out when a storm hits?

The object of SB 408 was to reduce the cost factors and to entice major carriers to start writing polices in Florida again. As my good friend Rep. Bill Proctor said, “if you move to Pittsburgh, expect to shovel snow in the winter, and if you live on the coast of Florida, expect to pay more for your insurance.”

State Rep. Bryan Nelson, chairman of the Subcommittee of Insurance and Banking

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/opinion/letters/fl-lede-letter-insurance-rate-hike-0520110519,0,4368743.story

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Florida’s Cat Fund Eyes $12B

The Bond Buyer
by Shelly Sigo
May 18, 2011

BRADENTON, Fla. — The Florida Hurricane ­Catastrophe Fund could issue up to $12 billion of bonds if needed to pay claims during this year’s hurricane season, according to estimates prepared by senior ­managers.

The so-called Cat Fund’s advisory board Tuesday certified that the bonding capacity is expected to be available during this year’s hurricane season, which runs June 1 though Nov. 30.

In addition to the bonding capacity, the state-run, nonprofit reinsurer also has $7.25 billion of liquid resources on hand to pay claims.

The bond capacity and cash on hand are expected to be enough to support its potential exposure to claims, which totals $18.5 ­billion.

Twice a year the board must ­affirm how much in claims it could legally be required to pay and how much of that could be raised through the sale of bonds to support the payment of claims.

The $12 billion is an average of available capacity in the bond market provided by the Cat Fund’s senior managers — Citi, Goldman, Sachs & Co., JPMorgan, and Barclays Capital Inc.

How much debt could actually be issued given volatility in the market and restrained investor demand depends on what the market will bear at the time, according to John Forney, managing director of public finance for Raymond James & Associates Inc., the fund’s financial adviser.

“We believe a reasonable estimate for the Cat Fund’s borrowing this year is about that $12 billion,” he said.

Forney said the agency’s liquidity does not include $3.5 billion of taxable floating-rate notes sold in 2007 that have a bullet maturity on Oct. 15, 2012. He recommended setting the proceeds aside to be used in the early part of next year’s storm season if necessary.

The Cat Fund also has $1.88 billion of tax-exempt bonds outstanding. They are rated AA-minus by Fitch Ratings, Aa3 by Moody’s Investors Service, and AA by Standard & Poor’s.

In related matters Tuesday, Cat Fund director Jack Nicholson told the board that it may be necessary to issue additional bonds to pay for claims from damages caused by four hurricanes that battered Florida in 2005.

Nicholson said the statute of limitations on filing claims related to the 2005 storms does not run out until June 1 and the Cat Fund has received new claims this year that currently exceed available bond proceeds by about $30 million.

An estimate on how much in additional bonding might be necessary to settle the claims is not yet available, he said.

So far, the fund has sold three tranches of tax-exempt bonds for 2005 claims: $676 million in May 2010, $1.35 billion in 2006, and $625 million in 2008.

It was hoped that the tranche sold last year would cover the final 2005 claims but the Cat Fund has experienced problems with the long statute of limitations and a large number of claims that have been reopened in recent years. The Florida Legislature passed a bill earlier this month shortening the statute of limitation for filing claims to three years.

The possibility of changing the name of the Cat Fund in order to attract more investors was discussed by the advisory board and underwriters’ representatives.

They also talked about implementing an annual financing program to provide liquidity in advance of a hurricane and to increase the name recognition of the agency.

The Cat Fund provides low-cost catastrophic reinsurance to Florida’s private property insurers and the state-run Citizens Property Insurance Corp.

The fund was created to help stabilize the property insurance market after Hurricane Andrew slammed South Florida in 1992 after which some private insurers became insolvent or stopped writing policies because of the risk.

http://www.bondbuyer.com/issues/120_95/florida_citizens_hurricane_insurance-1026801-1.html

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Florida Property Insurance Bill SB 408 Becomes Law

PropertyCasualty360.com
by Joan Collier
May 17, 2011

When Florida Gov. Rick Scott signed SB 408 today, he said, “A healthy, stable and competitive private insurance market is critical to the success of Florida, given the hazards we face. I commend the Florida Legislature, especially Sen. Richter and Rep. Wood, for bringing this important legislation forward.”

The bill, which addresses cost drivers in an attempt to reform Florida’s unsteady property insurance market, became effective upon the governor’s signature. As it made it way through the legislative process it faced strong opposition from various quarters, most notably from Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey. Fasano fought many of the bill’s provisions and as recently as this week was urging Scott to veto it.

A synopsis by Thomas J. Maida and Paul Lowell of Foley & Lardner LLC details a number of the significant reforms in the legislation, including:

* Expanding exclusions from losses covered by the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund to include losses caused by perils other than a covered event, such as fire, theft, flood or rising water, as well as amounts paid for waivers of deductibles and bad faith awards.

* Limiting public adjuster compensation for reopened or supplemental claims to 20 percent of the claim payment (10 percent for Citizens Property Insurance Corp. claims) and requiring additional disclosure statements and notices to certain parties.

* Requiring insurers to provide two replacement cost coverage options for payment of personal property insurance claims. The first option pays the full replacement cost without reservation. The second option pays the depreciated value and holds back the remainder of coverage until the policyholder provides receipts.

* Requiring a policyholder to file windstorm and hurricane claims within three years.

Rates were addressed in several portions of the legislation. SB 408 reinstates the requirement that carriers submit rate change requests using the file-and-use process until May 1, 2012. In file-and-use, an insurer must receive approval from the Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR) before changing its rates. The bill allows carriers to seek rate increases up to 15 percent to adjust for reinsurance costs; the OIR has 45 days to approve or disallow the request.

Follow the Progression of SB 408 Through the Florida Legislature

The bill increases the minimum surplus requirements for new residential property insurers (those approved on or after July 1, 2011) from $5 million to $15 million. For insurers that hold a certificate of authority prior to July 1, 2011, the surplus requirement gradually increases to $15 million over the next decade.

SB 408 also addresses sinkhole claims, which have proliferated in Florida in recent years. Carriers sought to have the mandatory coverage language deleted but settled for language specifically defining “structural damage” to narrow the definition of a sinkhole loss. Additionally, the new bill requires a policyholder to pay 50 percent of sinkhole testing costs up to $2,500 if the policyholder requests testing after an insurer denies the sinkhole claim; sinkhole claims must be filed within 2 years of the covered loss.

The governor’s approval, which was universally expected, brought kudos from major insurance groups and others:

Florida Association of Insurance Agents Senior Vice President of Public Affairs Kyle Ulrich: “By signing Senate Bill 408, Governor Rick Scott has taken necessary and long overdue actions to stabilize Florida’s property insurance market and increase competition in the marketplace. We applaud Governor Scott for taking this step to provide necessary relief to Floridians looking for more affordable options to insure their property.

“State Sen. Garrett Richter, State Rep. John Wood and legislative leadership deserve high praise for tackling this complex issue. We sincerely appreciate their hard work to craft this comprehensive and critically needed reform plan to spur recovery in our insurance market.

“After enduring years of misguided policies that have wrecked our homeowners’ insurance market, this new law will go a long way in repairing the serious damage that has been done and sends a strong signal to the world that Florida is open for business. That is good news for consumers who will benefit from Governor Scott and the Legislature’s action to promote the needed stability and predictability in the marketplace.”

Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty: “I commend Governor Scott for his leadership during the legislative session and for signing SB 408 relating to property and casualty insurance. This bill focuses on addressing cost drivers in the system and will yield long-term benefits for Florida by stabilizing the property insurance market and attracting new capital investment to our state.”

National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors- Florida spokesman Bob Lotane: “We applaud the Florida lawmakers who seriously weighed the issues to address the challenges that confront our property insurance markets rather than those who cast an eye toward the next political office and look to score cheap political points.

“Florida faces an array of unique natural risks and this legislation will help us continue to protect Floridians property while also attracting badly needed competition and capital to our state.”

The American Consumer Institute Center for Citizen Research President Steve Pociask: “It is my strong view that SB 408 represents meaningful and pro-consumer reforms that will encourage competition, increase policyholder surplus and protect consumers from insurer insolvencies.”

Property Casualty Insurers Association of America Assistant Vice President and Regional Manager William Stander: “PCI thanks Gov. Scott for signing SB 408, which is a major step forward toward restoring private, market-based solutions in Florida. This new law will address the concerns of consumers and policyholders about the cost of property insurance in Florida and help stabilize the state’s insurance marketplace.

“We also commend the legislative leaders who led the charge for reform, Sen. Garrett Richter (R-Naples) and Rep. John Wood (R-Haines City), and the overwhelming majority of Florida’s legislators who voted for this important legislation. The fact that the House supported the bill 85-33, and the Senate passed it 26-11, demonstrated broad support for moving Florida’s insurance market forward.

“SB 408 will protect insurance consumers by addressing many of the cost drivers that push rates higher. The bill will make it an unfair and deceptive trade practice for public adjusters to mislead people at a time when they need help the most. It also will cap public adjuster fees, meaning more settlement money in the hands of consumers, while taking measures to ensure that properties are properly repaired, meaning safer homes and better resale values.

“This law will help restore a healthy, stable and competitive insurance market that provides economic security and peace of mind to policyholders. It is an excellent example of how government, industry and the people of Florida can work together to stabilize and improve the state’s insurance market. It is a common-sense, long-term solution that utilizes market-based solutions and means stronger homes and safer families.”

http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2011/05/17/florida-property-insurance-bill-sb-408-becomes-law

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