Author of Insurance Reform Prop 103 Says Its Protections Critical to Stopping Insurance Industry's Unjustified Rate Increases and Nonrenewals for Residential Coverage
Consumer Watchdog Proposes Actions to Address Climate Change and Industry Abuses
Rosenfield will reject the insurance industry's campaign to blame Proposition 103, and climate change, for companies' misconduct in the marketplace. Lobbyists for the industry, which spent a then-record
Read the analysis Consumer Watchdog submitted to state legislators here.
Consumer Watchdog's recommendations to the legislature include:
- Speed up implementation of actions to reduce wildfire risk across the state by allocating new funding sources to assist individual homeowners and communities, such as directing cap and trade dollars to fund home-hardening and defensible space projects, particularly for low- and middle-income Californians.
- Require insurance companies to sell insurance to all residential property owners in
California who meet state fire-mitigation guidelines. - Impose an annual surcharge on premiums collected by insurance companies when they sell insurance policies to companies that explore for or produce fossil fuels.
Connecticut lawmakers are presently considering similar legislation. - Make the FAIR Plan,
California's "insurance company of last resort," more accountable to the public by creating a public majority on the FAIR Plan's governing board, which is now controlled by insurance companies.
Recommendations to the Insurance Commissioner include:
- Continue the Department's longstanding protection of Californians against industry proposals to: pass on to consumers the cost of reinsurance, which would cause insurance rates to go up by an estimated 40%, and to replace verifiable data with secret, biased algorithmic models when requesting future insurance rate increases.
- Address redlining and market withdrawal. Set clear and uniform rules for analyzing whether withdrawals are consistent and supported by data. The insurance industry should not decide housing policy in
California ; that responsibility belongs to state and local officials accountable to the voters. - Mandate disclosure of each insurance company's contributions to climate change through direct and indirect emissions, underwriting and investing in fossil fuel projects, and examine whether each company's underwriting of fossil fuels is consistent with state law and
California's 2045 Net Zero climate goals. - Require insurance companies to consider the actions taken by homeowners and communities to limit wildfire risk when they decide whether to sell an insurance policy, not just when insurers set premiums as required under the Commissioner's new rules.
- Initiate a public investigation of whether the insurance industry is evading Proposition 103 when it sells insurance to condo associations.
- Many policyholders who experienced losses in past years' wildfires have yet to receive all the coverage they paid for. Conduct a public investigation of claims abuses and issue regulations strengthening protections against improper claims handling practices.
- Recruit and deploy more agency staff to ensure that rate applications and insurance companies' practices are closely reviewed as required by Proposition 103.
Consumer Watchdog's testimony also exposes how profitable the insurance industry is in
California homeowners' insurance companies were more profitable than the national average over the last 20 years. They earned an average 8.8% return on net worth inCalifornia , compared to 6.2% nationally, according to data reported to theNational Association of Insurance Commissioners .- PG&E and Edison, the utilities that caused the biggest fires in
California , were forced to reimburse insurance companies$12.1 billion for the damage from the 2017-18 wildfires.
This year marks the 35th anniversary of voters' passage of Proposition 103 in 1988. The law requires insurance companies to open their books, justify their rates in a public process, and get approval from the Insurance Commissioner before a rate change takes effect. All documentation an insurer submits to justify a rate increase must be open to public review, and the public may challenge a rate that is excessive, unjustified or unfairly discriminatory.
In a 2019 study of the nation's insurance laws, the
Read more about Proposition 103 here.
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SOURCE Consumer Watchdog
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