Beleaguered homeowners shouldn't expect quick relief on insurance rates, lawmakers say [Miami Herald]
Floridians shouldn't expect any immediate relief from their rising homeowners insurance premiums even if state lawmakers pass wide-ranging legislation this week to address the crisis.
That was the frank acknowledgment of the state's Republican leaders, who admitted that years of failure to take meaningful action has created an emergency for the state.
"I know homeowners are feeling the pain right now," said Sen.
Instead, he said it could be 18 months before homeowners' rates begin to fall, when the various changes lawmakers are proposing begin to stop the tide of litigation and fraud that insurance companies and lawmakers say is causing double-digit rate increases and the failure of numerous companies.
That news underscored lawmakers' lukewarm reception on Monday to the legislation proposed by Republican legislative leaders and Gov.
"This whole 18-month thing is unacceptable," said Sen.
What legislation would do
Boyd conceded it was a "tough bill," but the goal is to stabilize the insurance market. The legislation, Senate Bill 2-B, passed a
Protect homeowners from losing, or being denied, coverage solely for having an older roof.
Place limits on attorneys' fees on lawsuits against insurance companies.
Create a new
Allow Floridians to receive up to
The most immediate relief could come for homeowners grappling with the fallout from the insurance crisis. As insurers refuse to renew or sign policies on homes with older roofs, it has left homeowners in a lurch, unable to find insurance without spending tens of thousands of dollars on a new roof.
Under the bill, companies would be blocked from denying coverage solely because of a roof's age if the roof is less than 15 years old. For roofs 15 years and older, insurers would have to allow homeowners to have an inspection of the roof's condition before refusing coverage. If the inspection shows the roof has five or more years of useful life left, the insurance company could not reject coverage simply because of age.
Not all legislators are in favor
That idea didn't have unanimous support, though. Sen.
"You are making them walk into the lion's den," Brandes said of private insurers. "At least send a government official into the lion's den first and get chewed up."
The issues facing
Lawmakers expressed frustration that the state has no more substantive data on the crisis. They passed a law last year requiring the
Much of Monday's public testimony consisted of finger-pointing between the insurance industry (and allied business groups) and the trial lawyers (and their allies) who sue them -- powerful interest groups whose sway in
"Every year the boogeyman has changed," he said. "And there's never been any legislation that has forced those rates either to freeze or go down, until today."
(C)2022 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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