After insurance ‘reform,’ Floridians still face high bills, 100% rate hikes, go ‘naked’ | Commentary [Orlando Sentinel]
A year ago, everyone in
The insurance industry’s own trade group said homeowners’ rates in
Most Floridians were feeling the pinch. A disturbing number were opting to “go naked,” meaning they simply wouldn’t have insurance if a storm or fire wiped out their home. Some decided they couldn’t afford to live here anymore.
So, after years of ignoring the mounting crisis to wage culture wars with
And they provided some … to the insurance companies anyway, passing laws that make it harder for you to sue your insurance company if the company denies you a claim.
The theory: Shielding insurers from costly litigation would make rates drop. Now let’s talk about what’s really happened.
The
How’s that for “relief”?
We’ll talk more about the efforts to shrink Citizens. But first, let’s get real: Insurance in
The harsh reality is that
I trust insurance companies as little as the next guy. But obviously, we’d have have more of them here if they thought
So the state can do one of three things:
1) Massively invest in and expand Citizens so that it becomes like Medicare for property insurance, state-run insurance most everyone can access
2) Subsidize the market in other ways, like using taxpayer money to underwrite the cost of reinsurance for private companies
3) Just allow rates to continue to skyrocket. And if Floridians can’t afford it, so be it.
Here’s the problem: Nos. 1 and 2 involve serious investment and hard work — neither of which GOP lawmakers have been willing to make or do. So we’re heading toward No. 3.
The last time I wrote about this issue, I huddled with a former GOP lawmaker,
Florida’s insurance crisis: 2 special sessions, little help | Commentary
This time, I consulted Democratic State Rep.
Cassel describes the GOP-led Legislature’s “reform” so far as little more than “a
Cassel says
If you want proof that things in
That’s a disaster waiting to happen. People talk of “self-insuring” by putting money aside in case something happens to a house where the mortgage is already paid. Well, let’s say you put aside
Self-insurance is not a solution. It’s a desperate last resort that could end up wrecking lives – and taxpayer wallets if the government steps in to clean up the mess, as it usually does after big storms.
The latest nibbling-around-the-edges solution involves Florida’s efforts to reduce the number of people relying on the state-run Citizens program. And the early news was troubling. Residents were getting snail-mail letters that told them they would automatically default to a private insurer charging 70 or 80% more if they didn’t take action, which seemed like an opportunity to gouge. As it turned out, some companies wanted to offer price hikes with as much as 300% premium increases.
The state said many of the higher offers came from Slide, an insurance company run by CEO
Slide has also been funneling massive amounts of campaign cash to
Fortunately, the state stepped in and got Slide to agree not to make any offers that represented more than a 100% increase — which is still massive. And insurance officials have ordered companies to cap future Citizen “depopulation” offers at 40%.
Ultimately, the state moved about 100,000 customers off Citizens to private insurers with most paying less than 20% more. That seems reasonable. And those who defaulted into higher rates will get another chance to stay with Citizens when their first bills arrive.
But again, this is still mainly nibbling around the edges. A few more companies are coming in. Citizens is shedding a fraction of its 1.3 million policies. But prices are still rising. That’s why we need the big stuff.
Either big solution — investing more in Citizens or market subsidies — should be accompanied by serious restrictions and protections. Subsidies, whether provided through reinsurance or any other way, should be coupled with demands for transparency and lower rates. And any additional Citizens policies should include coverage caps and not go to houses being built in known, high-risk areas.
Still, the solutions are there in a state where the budget has been flush. But only if lawmakers start doing the real, hard work.
©2023 Orlando Sentinel. Visit orlandosentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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After insurance ‘reform,’ Floridians still face high bills, 100% rate hikes, go ‘naked’
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