TOP

Citizens changes produce sharp rise in complaints

New Channel 5 WPTV.com
By Paul Owers
March 4, 2012

Citizens Property Insurance Corp., which covers nearly one of every four Floridians, has been making some of them very unhappy.

Last year, the state Division of Consumer Services fielded 2,025 complaints mentioning state-run Citizens, a 27 percent increase from the year before. Complaints that name any other home insurer in Florida declined by 11 percent over the same period.

Robin Westcott, the state’s insurance consumer advocate, said she’s noticed escalating tension between Citizens and its customers. When told their premiums are increasing because of new priorities from Gov. Rick Scott and Florida lawmakers, policyholders get particularly upset.

“It’s surprise and complete frustration,” Westcott said.

Lane Wright, Scott’s press secretary, said in an email that the governor is making the tough decision to return Citizens to a smaller insurer of last resort.

He said critics of a downsized Citizens shouldn’t be angry at the governor.

“No one likes to pay higher rates. I get that,” Wright wrote. “But if people have angst towards Gov. Scott over the matter … those feelings are misdirected. … They should be upset at those who kicked the can down the road and refused to begin addressing a problem that will be financially devastating to this state if a major hurricane does hit.”

Citizens has been lowering coverage and raising premiums after Scott called its power to levy post-storm assessments a threat to Florida’s economy.

All policyholders in the state may be charged up to 6 percent of their annual premiums if Citizens lacks money to pay claims after a storm. Citizens’ 1.5 million policyholders would pay first and could pay the most — up to 45 percent of their premiums.

The assessments could cost Citizens policyholders an extra $1,100 each in a worst-case scenario.

In a policy address last November, Scott asked the Citizens board to come up with a goal to reduce Floridians’ exposure.

Complaints about Citizens started before that meeting, but frustrations have mounted since then.

Westcott said policyholders worry Citizens is inflating the replacement cost of their homes, which raises premiums.

Also drawing their ire is a program that tightens eligibility for discounts that Citizens grants for windstorm protection measures, such as shutters.

In February, those two concerns led Florida homeowners, including a Pembroke Pines man, to file separate lawsuits seeking to ban Citizens from continuing the practices.

Beyond those issues, Citizens has cut its maximum coverage limit to $1 million from $2 million for homes and condominiums. The insurer also is raising rates for many high-rise condos in South Florida by 21 percent. Also, Citizens no longer offers coverage for such things as awnings, most carports and screened-in pool enclosures.

The reduction in coverage prompted Kevin Roth, an Oakland Park homeowner and folk singer, to write a song last month blasting Citizens and post the video on YouTube. The song says the insurer is a “rip-off of the poor” and should change its name to “Citi Sin.”

“There will be a major outrage after the next storm,” Roth, 54, said last week. “I’m afraid of growing old and not being able to afford it.”

A spokeswoman for Citizens could not be reached for comment, despite attempts by phone and email. The Office of Insurance Regulation said Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty was not available for an interview.
In a statement, Florida Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater declined to address the rising number of complaints against Citizens. He said the state must create the conditions that allow the private sector to compete for insurance policies.

Sen. Mike Fasano, who’s active in insurance issues, said the recent outrage shows the governor is moving too fast for most homeowners.

Scott’s demand that Citizens shrink is unreasonable because private insurers are still gun-shy about doing business in Florida, said Fasano, R-New Port Richey. He added that many private carriers feel Florida’s insurance rates are too low for the risks they have to assume.

“The private companies aren’t writing policies because they can’t charge what they want to charge,” Fasano said. “The governor needs to understand that you cannot all of a sudden change the rules in the middle of the game.”

http://www.wptv.com/dpp/money/consumer/citizens-changes-produce-sharp-rise-in-complaints

Read More
TOP

JD Alexander tacks CAT fund language onto Citizens assessments legislation

SaintPetersBlog.com
By Peter Schorsch
March 3, 2012

A proposal to shift the way the state-backed insurer pays claims is on its way to the Senate floor after being changed to lower the state’s overall risk following a major storm, reports Michael Peltier of the News Service of Florida.

By unanimous vote, the Senate Budget Committee on Saturday approved a measure (SB 1342) that reduces the immediate assessments to shore up Citizens Property Insurance Corp. and gives the state and insurers more time to raise the funds necessary to pay off claims. Backers say that and other changes may make it more attractive for other private insurers to come into Florida and reduce the number of Citizens’ policies, which now stand near 1.5 million.

“This bill does not change Citizens liability to pay claims after a storm,” said Senate sponsor Steve Oelrich, R-Cross Creek. “It only addresses how Citizens collects to pay those liabilities.”

The bill reduces Citizens regular assessment from 6 percent per account to 2 percent for coastal property owners and eliminates it altogether for Citizens’ personal lines account and commercial policyholders.

To make up the loss, the bill imposes greater levies using emergency assessments, which are charged on most lines of property and casualty policies in the state, including Citizens’ own policies. (Workers’ compensation and medical malpractice policyholders are not assessed.)

The bill would also allow Citizens to levy assessments directly to policyholders. Under current law, insurance companies are required to write a check to Citizens within 30 days after initial assessments are sent out and then collect that back from policyholders after the fact.

The payout requirement keeps some companies away from Florida, said JD Alexander, R-Lake Wales.
“They would no longer be the middle man,” Alexander said.

The bill was amended to include another hurricane-related issue: The Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund. The state-backed fund is responsible for reimbursing insurance companies and their policyholders for up to $17 billion in losses following a major storm that leaves companies unable to pay claims.

The amendment would shrink the hurricane fund over a three year period from $17 billion to $15 billion, a move that would reduce the risk on Florida taxpayers. The move is expected to result in a small increase in premiums, maybe 2 percent, that Alexander said is justified by the improved stability of the fund.

The decrease could also mean additional business for the private reinsurance market.

Alexander said the change is needed because given the tight credit market, Citizens would already be unable to obtain up to $17 billion from the bond market, much less be able to reimburse policyholders if a second storm hit.

The amendment and the bill have the support of the Office of Insurance Regulation, Citizens board members, the governor’s office and the state’s leading business groups. It is also supported by the Florida Insurance Consumer Advocate.

“It would be irresponsible not to adjust Citizens insurance the best we can to attract other companies,” Oelrich said. “It is also going to put some money away -literally – for a rainy day.”

The House companion (HB 1127) does not contain the CAT fund language. That bill was approved by the House and is now in messages.

http://saintpetersblog.com/2012/03/jd-alexander-tacks-cat-fund-language-onto-citizens-assessments-legislation/

Read More
TOP

Citizens Pay Now or Every one Pays Later

WJHG.com
Editorial
February 27, 2012

Everyone with a property insurance policy in Florida is paying for hurricane damage from 2004 and 2005. The reason, Citizens Property Insurance didn’t have the cash on hand to pay all its claims. The state run insurer of last resort has now grown to 1.4 million policies. State lawmakers are trying to lower the risk, but disagree on how it should be done.

If you insure a house, a car or even a boat in Florida, you may be shocked to know that your policy includes charges for hurricanes that hit in 2004 and 2005.

Stephanie Wilson’s car insurance policy includes a 10 dollar assessment for those storms. “I don’t think it’s fair.” The average homeowner pays 30 bucks a year. Those payments will continue through 2017.

Citizens Property Insurance has more risk than reserves, and since the state runs Citizens, when it can’t pay its claims, the costs are passed on to every policyholder in Florida through emergency assessments.

State Senator Garrett Richter is sponsoring legislation to lower the risk by allowing out-of-state insurance companies to take Citizens policies. “Citizens of Florida are on the hook for 500 billion dollars in exposure if hurricanes come and I think everyone can agree that we need to shrink Citizens and take it back to insurer of last resort.”

State Senator Mike Fasano agrees that Citizens is taking on too much risk, but opposes the bill because the companies that would write the new policies are out of reach of Florida regulators. “They have no recourse if the insurance company, the out-of-state, unregulated surplus-lines company, were to all of a sudden, which they will, raise rates because they don’t have to get approval from the Office of Insurance Regulation.”

If nothing is done and a major storm hits a large Florida city, emergency assessment could jump from 30 dollars a year, to more than 400.

The bill has already passed the House. If it passes the Senate and is signed in to law, out-of-state companies could begin taking customers from Citizens. The customers they pick would receive a notice in the mail. If a policyholder didn’t want to leave Citizens, they would have to respond to the letter.

http://www.wjhg.com/news/headlines/Citizens_Pay_Now_or_Every_one_Pays_Later_140625183.html

Read More
TOP

Reform CAT Fund

Orlando Sentinel
By Tom Feeney
February 26, 2012

With only two weeks left of the legislative session and 15 weeks until hurricane season starts, Floridians need leadership from our Legislature to ensure we’re not relying on luck to protect us from the state’s mammoth unfunded insurance risks.

Florida TaxWatch’s independent research, expert reports, legislative hearings and testimony before the Cabinet have sounded alarming wake-up calls about the overexposed financial position of the state-run Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund. As in three of the past four years, the CAT Fund faces a shortfall, which could be $3.2 billion or more, posing an unacceptable risk to the state. Reform is needed now.

Senate Bill 1372 and House Bill 833 are thoughtful legislation based on a proposal by the CAT Fund’s chief operating officer, Jack Nicholson. These bills, which aim to right-size the fund, are necessary legislation supported by business, consumer and environmental groups as well as Floridians throughout the state, including the Florida Chamber of Commerce, Florida Consumer Action Network, Florida Wildlife Federation, Florida TaxWatch and The Heartland Institute.

Sen. J.D. Alexandersaid this month: “If we allow this state to put ourselves in devastating financial condition because we have obligated beyond our ability to pay, shame on us.” With leadership from Alexander and committee Chair Garrett Richter, the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee wisely voted in favor of SB 1372.

Rep. Bill Hager has championed identical legislation in the House. We urge the rest of the Legislature to make reform of the CAT Fund a top priority now.

Tom Feeney President and CEO, Associated Industries of Florida

Read More
TOP

Quick action needed to bolster insurance

The Daytona Beach News-Journal
By Christian Camara
February 22, 2012

Our state Legislature ends its 2012 session in just a few weeks. Unless our leaders act in these remaining days, they may leave Florida at enormous risk by failing to act on a broadly supported, necessary reform: right-sizing the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, known by most as the “Cat Fund.” As a result, a single bad hurricane could send the state’s finances for a tailspin and result in thousands, potentially millions, of legitimate insurance claims going unpaid. That would be catastrophic for everyone who lives in Florida.

Some background can explain the situation: The catastrophic fund offers reinsurance coverage for all of the state’s property insurance companies, including Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state-run company that sells more insurance in Florida than any private company. (Reinsurance is insurance for insurance companies.) Unlike private reinsurance, which companies negotiate for in private transactions, every insurer in the state must buy catastrophic fund coverage. Also unlike private reinsurers, which are legally required to have resources sufficient to pay the claims they reasonably expect to receive, the catastrophic fund simply can’t pay what it promises to. The fund’s own managers, indeed, say that a single bad hurricane season could leave it almost $3.25 billion dollars in the hole. If this happens, state Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty says that almost half of the state’s 50 largest insurers would not have enough resources to pay claims, forcing them into an administrative supervision process with many similarities to bankruptcy restructuring.

And it gets worse. Citizens, which buys almost all of its reinsurance from the catastrophic fund, would also run into trouble if the fund falters. And this could seriously impair rebuilding everywhere: If almost half of the state’s property insurers and Citizens simultaneously encountered problems, more than half of all Florida residents could end up not getting paid for valid insurance claims, leaving them unable to rebuild their homes, businesses and lives after a catastrophic hurricane season. This would have a major ripple effect on the entire state’s economy.

This situation has led almost everyone — insurance groups, the governor, consumer advocates, free market organizations, the state’s insurance commissioner, environmentalists, and others from the left and the right — to support a set of modest reforms proposed by the catastrophic fund’s chief operating officer that would gradually reduce the catastrophic fund’s capacity enough that it could reasonably expect to pay its claims. At one time, it looked like the bill would sail through easily, but somehow this broadly supported reform has hit a roadblock. If the bill is not saved, Florida will have been dealt a simple failure with huge implications.

The problem is pretty simple: Florida’s long run of storm-free weather is going to end eventually. The state has gone six years without being hit by a major hurricane, and most forecasters believe that the chances of this happening in any six-year period are less than 1 out of 100. The luck can’t continue forever and, eventually, a major storm will strike the state.

If this happens, Florida could be in enormous trouble and many legitimate insurance claims could end up going unpaid. The Legislature’s failure to act will deserve a huge share of the blame. Luck is not leadership. There is still time to act.

Camara is director of the Florida Insurance Project for The Heartland Institute. The Senate version of the catastrophic fund bill could be heard as early as today.

http://www.news-journalonline.com/opinion/editorials/guest-columns/2012/02/22/quick-action-needed-to-bolster-insurance.html

Read More
TOP

A Measure of ‘Last Resort’

PropertyCasualty360.com
By Chad Hemenway
February 24, 2012

Desperate to shrink its dangerously overexposed state-run insurer, Florida is floating legislation to allow eligible surplus-lines insurers to take policies from Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state’s ostensible last-resort underwriter.

As last-resort options go, “it’s sort of an out-of-the-box approach,” says Don Brown, an insurance agent and former state legislator, about the proposal being debated by state lawmakers. “But something has to be done.”

Surplus-lines insurers could provide “one more option homeowners don’t currently have,” Brown adds. “And this state needs as many options as possible.”

“We have a mess here, and it’s essential that we fix what has been going on,” agrees Samuel Miller, executive vice president of trade association Florida Insurance Council, which supports the measure. “The state needs to pursue this.”

In truth, Citizens isn’t the state’s insurer of “last resort” by any real definition of that term. Florida’s property-insurance market is backward—with the residual market often the first option, competing with a private market when it shouldn’t, because its prices are lower.

As a result, Citizens has become what last-resort providers are not meant to be: the state’s largest insurer of property. It has more than 1.4 million policies extending more than $508 billion of coverage.

And Citizens is heavily backed by the state-created reinsurance provider, the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, which itself has some well-documented financial issues.

Under the terms of the bill being considered, a surplus-lines provider looking to take policies from the last-resort insurer would have to offer coverage similar to that provided by Citizens and would have to notify the policyholder of any and all differences.

Policyholders selected by a surplus carrier would have the option to remain with Citizens if they choose.

POLICYHOLDERS INCREASINGLY AWARE OF LAST-RESORT RISKS

Like any last-resort carrier, Citizens was established to provide insurance for those unable to secure it in the admitted market—and admitted-market takers became a lot harder to find when insurers in the hurricane-prone state began pulling out or pulling back coverage in Florida to reduce their risk exposure.

Homeowners must first look to the private market and can only go to Citizens if rates found in the private, or admitted, market are 15 percent higher.

Meeting that rate-differential threshold became much easier when, after an outcry from consumers, state mandates froze the last-resort insurer’s rates—allowing more residents to tap coverage and to get cheaper premiums than those found in the private market. Citizens’ policy count has ballooned since then.

While, on the surface, this may seem like a great deal for consumers, more and more policyholders are becoming aware of the risks.

One is that insureds might have to wait a long time after a disaster to receive payment of a claim.

The other is that should Citizens face a deficit after a storm, it can charge up to a 45 percent surcharge on its own policyholders. If that still doesn’t fill the gap, it can then levy assessments on nearly every policyholder in the state in order to pay claims.

This increasing realization among Citizens’ policyholders of the potential impact on their wallets is nurturing hope among the insurance industry that the surplus-lines bill will get to the governor’s desk (Gov. Rick Scott has indicated he wants Citizens to be smaller).

Thus far, the House bill, sponsored by Rep. Jim Boyd, R-Bradenton (an insurance agent), was passed 66-48. The Senate version, sponsored by Sen. Garrett Richter, R-Naples, has yet to have a hearing.

ONLY THE SOLVENT NEED APPLY

“The way the bill is written, consumers are protected,” Miller says. “Only good, strong [surplus] companies are allowed to play.”

Amy Bogner, spokeswoman for the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation, says, “It is important to understand that the surplus-lines companies would have to be highly rated by a reputable rate organization” (maintaining an “A-minus” or better financial-strength rating from A.M. Best Co.), “and have the financial capacity and/or reinsurance to pay for two 1-in-100-year storms.”

Surplus carriers looking to depopulate Citizens also must maintain $50 million in surplus.

“This is a very high threshold,” adds Bogner. Current law requires insurers maintain $15 million in surplus.

But that’s not all. Even after surplus-lines carriers meet these requirements, they would have to deposit 50 percent of unearned premium with the Department of Financial Services in case of insolvency, since surplus-lines carriers aren’t covered by the Florida Insurance Guaranty Association (FIGA) because they aren’t licensed in the state.

Unearned premium amounts would depend on at what point in the policy term a policy is removed from Citizens, says Bogner.

BEST SOLUTION OR BAIT-AND-SWITCH?

The bill has its opponents. Former Florida Insurance Consumer Advocate Sean Shaw, now an attorney with the Merlin Law Group, tells NU he believes the surplus-lines bill is “shortsighted” and potentially dangerous for consumers.

“People are hearing all these bad things about Citizens, and I believe they will just go with the flow if one of these companies comes and offers them a policy,” says Shaw. “But I believe there will be a big problem if one of these companies goes insolvent. This isn’t the solution.”

Shaw isn’t comfortable with the fact that surplus carriers are not covered by FIGA, and he doesn’t trust the freedom of rate and form they enjoy.

http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2012/02/24/a-measure-of-last-resort?t=regulation-legislation

Read More
TOP

Delay of Citizens assessments for private insurers passes House

TheFloridaCurrent.com
By Gray Rohrer
February 23, 2012

Legislation to all but eliminate regular assessments on property insurance premiums after a catastrophic storm by instead increasing emergency assessments passed through the Florida House on Thursday by an 89-25 vote.

Under HB 1127 regular assessments, which are placed on customers of private companies after 15 percent assessments on customers of state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp. are exhausted after a storm, would be eliminated for commercial and personal lines accounts, which now stand at 6 percent. Assessments on coastal lines accounts would be reduced from 6 percent to 2 percent. The money to be recouped from policy holders would be moved to emergency assessments, which are applied to the premiums of both Citizens and non-Citizens customers.

Rep. Ben Albritton, R-Bartow, noted that private insurance companies are now required to pay the regular assessments to Citizens within one month, while emergency assessments can be recovered over a longer period of time. In discussion of the bill Wednesday, he stressed the legislation wouldn’t affect Citizens’ surplus or ability to pay claims quickly.

“This bill does not in any way limit Citizens Property Insurance Corp.’s ability to pay their claims on time,” Albritton said.

Although Democrats asked a few questions of Albritton about the bill Wednesday, there was no debate Thursday as the bill passed largely along party lines.

The Senate version of the bill, SB 1346, passed through two committees last month, but with a little more than two weeks left in the legislative session it has not come up for a vote in the Budget Committee, its last stop before heading to the floor.

Reporter Gray Rohrer can be reached at grohrer@thefloridacurrent.com.

http://www.thefloridacurrent.com/article.cfm?id=26704600

Read More
TOP

Fla. wind insurance overhaul unlikely to pass

The Tampa Tribune
By Brent Kallestad
February 19, 2012

TALLAHASSEE — State lawmakers have gambled with their constituents’ money for years when it comes to dealing with Florida’s property insurance issues.

But now, many top industry analysts suggest, the odds may be turning against them after six years without a hurricane hitting Florida. Insurance experts say the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund needs more money and an overhaul before a major storm or series of them strikes the state. If not, consumers could be paying massive surcharges on their insurance coverage and the state government left in financial straits for decades, they say.

Despite these warnings, it doesn’t appear the Legislature will act before the end of its annual session March 9 because any fix will cause higher insurance rates — not a popular decision, particularly in an election year. But any increase would be minuscule compared to those that will be required if a disaster strikes before a fix is made.

Officials have already abandoned a special $12 billion expansion of the fund when it became apparent they wouldn’t be able to fund it and are worried about their ability to meet the present $11.7 billion obligation.

“I’m dumfounded that our approach to risk management is to pray that we don’t have a storm,” said first-term state Rep. Bill Hager, a Boca Raton Republican and former insurance commissioner in Iowa. “Only luck has saved us from a financial disaster.”

The fund was created in late 1993, 15 months after Hurricane Andrew, a Category 5 storm with 150 mph winds, nearly destroyed the town of Homestead, south of Miami. It caused widespread damage resulting in $57 billion in losses for property insurance companies, adjusted for inflation. That had many companies leaving the state, fearing a repeat.

To stop the exodus, the state-owned and -operated fund offers insurance companies lower-cost reinsurance — basically policies that help protect the companies from catastrophic losses. Currently, the fund would be liable for about $18 billion and has about $7 billion in cash reserves. That means the state would have to borrow $11 billion by selling bonds, probably at high interest rates in an uncertain market, to cover those losses. To pay those back, the state would impose a surcharge on every property and auto insurance policy, costing the average consumer hundreds of dollars annually.

“Our luck is eventually going to run out,” longtime fund head Jack Nicholson testified at a House Insurance and Banking subcommittee meeting recently. “You can’t continue to roll the dice and be lucky every time.”

Nicholson isn’t sure they would be able to bond more than $8.5 billion, leaving a $3.2 billion shortfall.

He gets plenty of agreement in high places, albeit apparently not enough in the Legislature.

Gov. Rick Scott and others have been pushing legislators to reduce the state’s exposure by forcing the insurance companies to buy more of their reinsurance from private companies. They argue that while that will raise rates, the increase will be much smaller than the post-catastrophe surcharge will be.

“Don’t create a state organization that says they’re selling a product that they’re really not selling. To believe that you can go borrow money after a significant disaster is not realistic. We’ve got to live in reality,” Scott said.

Scott also worries about the state’s ability to meet its current obligation. The state-backed insurer of last resort, Citizen’s Property Insurance Corp., would also be borrowing billions of dollars, driving up interest rates and, ultimately, consumers’ costs in the wake of a catastrophic storm.

Hager’s bill (HB 833) would have reduced the state’s liability to $12 billion within four years but the House insurance subcommittee pulled it last month, effectively killing it without a vote, even though it was supported by consumer and business groups.

A similar bill (SB 1372) was approved by the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee on Thursday, but has a long way to go in a short time to win passage. Sponsor JD Alexander, a central Florida Republican, says it’s a priority.

Robin Westcott, the consumer advocate in the Department of Financial Services, thinks Hager’s bill was too aggressive. She thinks a drop to $15 billion in exposure is more palatable — it would reduce the state’s long-term risk but lessen the immediate blow to property insurance rates.

“Consumers feel right now that they pay enough for homeowners insurance,” Westcott said. “Anytime you do something this aggressive in one place it will cause a ripple in another.”

Hager is blunt about his colleagues’ inaction.

“A recipe for disaster,” Hager said. “We need to change the CAT fund structure to reflect reality.”

http://www2.tbo.com/news/breaking-news/2012/feb/19/1/florida-wind-insurance-overhaul-unlikely-to-pass-ar-360511/

Read More
TOP

Little political will in Tallahassee to reform state-run Citizens Property

The Miami Herald
By Toluse Olorunnipa
February 18, 2012

TALLAHASSEE — For six years, Mother Nature has granted Florida uncommon tranquility along its 1,200-mile coastline, where the state’s peninsular mass dangles precariously in the world’s most hurricane-prone waters.

During that probability-defying streak of hurricane-free autumns, Florida’s largest insurer of homes — state-run Citizens Property Insurance Corp.— has seen its exposure to risk skyrocket and its financial outlook deteriorate.

As state lawmakers began their legislative session last month, they heard a crescendo of cautionary cries from a growing chorus of fiscal hawks. Their message: A major hurricane could wreak unprecedented havoc on Florida’s fragile economy.

Six weeks later, there has been little political will to pass large-scale reforms and prepare Citizens for another Andrew, or a Katrina.

With redistricting at the forefront and elections looming, the lack of legislative fervor for insurance reform is understandable: The changes deemed necessary by the insurance industry would almost certainly lead to higher premiums for homeowners and attach additional costs to the state’s troubled real estate market.

For its part, Citizens has taken on a growing share of the risk-reduction effort, with a series of controversial moves that have sparked consumer outcry and lawsuits.

Joining the majority of lawmakers hesitant to increase premiums in a tough economy are several legislators who believe there is no need to fundamentally remake Citizens at this time. They say the profit-chasing insurance industry is pushing for premium increases, using apocalyptic language to exaggerate how much taxpayers might have to pay in assessments after a storm.

Joining the majority of lawmakers hesitant to increase premiums in a tough economy are several legislators who believe there is no need to fundamentally remake Citizens at this time. They say the profit-chasing insurance industry is pushing for premium increases, using apocalyptic language to exaggerate how much taxpayers might have to pay in assessments after a storm.

“If a Hurricane Andrew were to hit today in Miami-Dade County, there’s enough [insurance] money to pay for it, and the assessment is going to be about $40 to $100,” said Rep. Frank Artiles, a Miami Republican. Miami-Dade County, with its miles of coastal condominium towers, has the state’s highest hurricane damage risk.

Proponents of major reform say a massive “one-in-100-year” storm could lead to thousands of dollars in assessments for each affected homeowner.

Artiles has been critical of some of the property insurance measures advanced by the Legislature, including a plan to allow unregulated out-of-state surplus lines insurers to take over policies from Citizens. That measure, HB 245, passed the House on a 66-48 vote this month, but it would only affect about 40,000 of Citizens’ 1.5 million policyholders.

Six weeks into the nine-week session, only a handful of other property insurance proposals have even reached the House floor, and most offer relatively minor changes.

Last year, lawmakers passed a sweeping package of controversial reforms that allowed Citizens to raise rates on sinkhole coverage and increase prices to cover rising costs. Though Citizens has greater exposure to risk and more financial problems this year, leading lawmakers have not shown interest in passing broad reforms, or rubberstamping the rate increases that come along with them.

Fundamental to the debate is whether or not Citizens’ financial troubles warrant major reforms and premium hikes.

Six hurricane-free years have allowed the insurer to build up a cash surplus of about $6 billion. But its level of exposure has more than doubled since 2005, and it now is exposed to a maximum $511 billion in potential claims.

In addition to cash on hand, Citizens has backup insurance commonly known as reinsurance. But most of its reinsurance comes from a sister-entity, the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, which also has major money problems. A direct hit by a large hurricane — or a series of back-to-back storms — could max out both Citizens and the Catastrophe Fund, leaving consumers to pick up the tab. Industry estimates say that tab could reach several billion dollars, and would impact auto insurance premiums as well.

Looking to fix the problem — and not running for reelection due to term limits — Sen. JD Alexander, R-Lake Wales, filed a bill that would shore up the finances of the overleveraged Catastrophe Fund by reducing its size and liability. The bill, which would raise premiums by an average of 10 percent over three years, had not gained much traction in the Legislature before this week.

“Win or lose elections, or whatever it comes, I’m not going to live my life in fear,” Alexander told fellow senators during a late-session first-hearing of his bill on Thursday. “If we allow this state to put ourselves in devastating financial conditions, because we’ve obligated beyond our ability to pay, shame on us.”

The committee voted 9-1 to advance the measure, but similar legislation has not moved in the House, so the proposal is not likely to become law this year.

The lone dissenting vote came from Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, an outspoken critic of Citizens and any attempts to increase its rates.

“I have great concerns about the piece of legislation because it’s going to raise rates on the backs of policyholders throughout the state of Florida, no ifs, ands or buts,” he said. “This is not the time that, when people are struggling and homeowners are struggling…to add on to what they’re already paying in premiums.”

Other proposals for large-scale reform have run up against similar criticism, keeping them from moving forward in a year dominated by redrawing the political maps and drafting the state’s budget.

In the absence of major statutory reform, Citizens has launched a controversial risk-reduction crusade of its own.

Bound by state law that limits most premium increases to 10 percent annually, and a mandate to insure those who cannot find affordable coverage in the shrinking private sector, Citizens’ size and risk have ballooned in recent years.

Looking to reverse that trend, the insurer has made several coverage and policy changes, drawing criticism from homeowners who have seen their coverage dropped or their premiums jump.

In December, the company informed homeowners that it would no longer insure their car ports, screened porches and pool enclosures, dropping policyholders en masse.

Kevin Roth, of Broward County’s Oakland Park, was one of thousands homeowners who recently learned part of their coverage would soon be terminated.

“I was told by my agent that my coverage would go down and my premiums would go up,” said Roth, a folk singer who recorded a protest song about the insurer. “Why am I paying more money for less coverage?”

Citizens told agents last November that it would no longer acknowledge independent appraisals in determining the replacement values of homes, opting instead to rely on a software program called 360Value.

Earlier this month, two New Port Richey homeowners filed a lawsuit against the state-run insurer, claiming the company used its software system to overvalue their homes and raise their premiums.

Ruth Lauro, of New Port Richey, said her insurance costs more than doubled last year after Citizens gave her aged two-bedroom home a replacement value of $124,000. Lauro, 82, said an appraiser found contractors willing to rebuild the home for less than half that amount.

“They really did me in,” she said. “They increased my flood insurance from $400 to $800. I’ve never had a puddle near my house.”

The company has denied the allegations, and has since reversed course on its decision to rely exclusively on the 360Value system.

“Our motivation in establishing an accurate replacement cost valuation is to protect our policyholders and make sure they can restore their home after a catastrophic loss,” said spokeswoman Christine Ashburn, in a statement. “Any assertion to the contrary is simply wrong.”

Citizens risk-reduction effort also includes last year’s premium increase for sinkhole coverage, a roof-inspection requirement for old homes and a statewide re-inspection program for homes receiving wind-mitigation discounts. Last month, the company scrapped wind coverage for homes worth more than $1 million.

In addition to reducing risk, the policy changes are aimed at luring more private insurers to Florida. Dozens of insurers have failed or fled the state in the wake of the active 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons.

Last July, Citizens’ Board of Directors discussed selling all or part of the company to a private entity.

But no buyer has materialized, and Florida’s precarious position between the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico make it a hard sell.

The state has more than $2.5 trillion worth of coastal real estate, and all of Florida’s 67 counties are vulnerable to a direct hurricane hit. There are very few private companies that have the financial resources to take Citizens’ place, and even fewer willing to risk those resources in one of the world’s most hazard-prone insurance markets.

“The reality is this: Citizens is going to be here and it’s not going to go anywhere,” said Artiles, a public adjuster and licensed general contractor. “The private insurance market is not going to come to Florida because of risk versus reward.”

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/02/18/2649062/little-political-will-in-tallahassee.html

Read More
TOP

Florida’s Storm Shutters

The Wall Street Journal
Editorial
February 17, 2012

Governor Rick Scott’s push to reform Florida’s taxpayer-backed catastrophic insurance funds is starting to get some wind at its back. The hurricane-prone state’s taxpayers and what’s left of its private insurers are on the hook if a big wind blows, and storm season rolls in again in June. Time to erect the fiscal shutters.

The most tangible progress is at Citizens Property Insurance Corp., a taxpayer-backed insurer of last resort that has become the state’s largest property underwriter since the prior Charlie Crist administration deemed it so in 2007. In November, Governor Scott told Citizens chief Scott Wallace to reduce risk, and last month he delivered good news. Policies have stabilized at 1.5 million and the company is instituting reforms to reduce its $512 billion exposure.

As of February 1, Citizens stopped writing new coastal policies valued at more than $1 million, a reform that will mostly affect Florida’s mansion owners and cut exposure by $17 billion over the next 12 to 16 months. In May, the insurer will introduce a mandatory 10% deductible for sinkholes when the ground collapses ($6.7 billion) and reduce personal liability coverage to $100,000 from $300,000 ($161 billion). Policy holders won’t like the higher premiums, but Citizens has to price risk accurately in a state hit by seven of the 10 costliest storms in recorded history.

Citizens is also backing several GOP bills now moving through the legislature. Senator Garrett Richter and Representative Jim Boyd want to allow surplus-line insurers, niche players that aren’t heavily regulated, to buy policies from Citizens, although policy holders would retain the right of veto. Senator Steve Oelrich and Representative Ben Albritton have bills pending that would change how and when Citizens could levy taxes to cover deficits, easing immediate burdens on private insurers and encouraging more to enter the state.

Not a moment too soon. Citizens’s policies are limited to Florida, making it nearly impossible to spread the risk of a big storm, which could inflict $20 billion or more in damage. With its limited assets, Citizens would face a huge deficit if a big hurricane or a series of smaller storms make landfall, and insurers would be billed to make up the difference. Those costs would be passed along to taxpayers in Florida and, if the disaster were big enough, around the country.

Florida’s public reinsurance fund, known as the Catastrophe Fund, also has problems, and here too Republicans have stepped up with good ideas. Senator J.D. Alexander and Representative Bill Hager want to shrink its size, bolster its capital base and reduce its ability to levy taxes to cover deficits. The main obstacle is Port Orange GOP Representative Dorothy Hukill, who chairs the Economic Affairs Committee and pulled the Hager bill from consideration last month, claiming the text “wasn’t ready.”

Much of the credit for the progress so far belongs to Governor Scott, who is risking short-term unpopularity to protect taxpayers from a future disaster. This is what political leaders are elected to do.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203718504577178874259526882.html#articleTabs%3Darticle

Read More