California cuts insurance deal forcing home coverage in fire zones — but it could raise prices [The Sacramento Bee]
After years of insurance woes for
Insurance Commissioner
Lara’s announcement came after Newsom issued an executive order asking for “prompt regulatory action” to shore up the state’s insurance framework, which is collapsing under the strain of increasingly intense wildfires.
By
The expensive state plan has become the only option for some homeowners looking to insure their property from fire damage after being dropped from their conventional plans or being denied coverage.
In exchange for underwriting riskier policies, companies will be permitted to use catastrophic modeling to set insurance rates, a practice Lara’s office did not previously allow. The companies will also gain the ability to pass reinsurance costs on to consumers.
Consumer Watchdog blasted the deal, saying Lara has “given into the industry’s demands,” and insurance companies will use the new modeling tools with “secret algorithms” to drive up consumer costs.
“The use of catastrophic modeling and adding of reinsurance costs to premiums has pushed
Newsom’s order and Lara’s announcement come just weeks after the governor and the commissioner failed to secure an eleventh-hour deal with lawmakers to stop
California’s insurance crisis exploded after a wave of devastating wildfires in 2017 and 2018 caused billions of dollars in damages. Insurance companies dropped tens of thousands of policyholders living in wildland-urban interfaces. Those homeowners were then required to pay two to three times as much for alternate coverage.
Since then, two of California’s largest insurance providers,
In some rural parts of the state, homeowners can get insurance only through the state’s FAIR plan. This drives up costs significantly because homeowners then need to acquire separate policies for burglary and other typical risks.
When asked whether this agreement would push companies to come back to
“We’re going to wait to make sure that these regulations get done,” he said. “This is why I want to make sure we get it done within the year — so that then they could submit the rate filings now and move quickly on writing again, or continuing to write new business in California.”
Lara previously opposed allowing companies to use catastrophic modeling. He told
He said on Thursday he changed his mind because “we can no longer rely on historical data” due to the effects of climate change.
“Doing that, we’re actually putting consumers and communities in danger,” Lara said. “We need to be able to follow the science, we need to be able to use technology. But we also need to verify that.
“And that’s what we guarantee in this process.”
When asked whether the regulation shifts would increase costs for consumers, Lara was vague. He emphasized the new tools would allow companies to take into account fire-safe renovations or “home-hardening” that owners have done to mitigate risk.
“We’re going to be able to home in on those properties that have done the mitigation and make sure that our rate analysts look at that and appropriately price the risk for that individual, especially if they’ve done the hardening,” he said.
Insurance exodus affects Californians
“It seems insurance companies have drawn an arbitrary line at about 2,000 feet of elevation in the foothills and
The city of
“All of us in urban interface areas that bump up against
After the legislative deal imploded, Assembly Speaker
“Our mission has always been to ensure homeowners and businesses across
©2023 The Sacramento Bee. Visit sacbee.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Consumer Watchdog Says Lara's Undisclosed Deal Will Allow Insurance Companies to Use Algorithms And Reinsurance Costs to Hike Home Insurance Rates, Potentially Turning California Into Florida
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