California home insurance exodus pushes state’s last-resort backup plan toward insolvency [Bay Area News Group]
As home insurers flee
The number of homes and commercial properties in high-risk wildfire areas covered by the California FAIR Plan has more than doubled, from 154,000 in 2019 to 375,000, and liability exposure has ballooned from
“These are huge numbers,” California FAIR Plan President
Roach added that one bad wildfire or even a series of smaller fires could overwhelm the plan’s resources, forcing it to bill all the state’s insurers for liabilities it cannot cover, which they in turn would pass on to all their insured home and business customers as higher premiums.
“It’s a gamble,” Roach said. “We are one event away from a large assessment, there’s no other way to say it, because we don’t have a lot of money on hand, and we have a lot of exposure out there.”
The FAIR Plan’s financial instability has emerged as collateral damage from the state’s insurance market meltdown. Major carriers have discontinued or restricted coverage in recent years following a series of costly wildfires — 14 of California’s 20 most destructive wildfires burned the state in the last 10 years. That’s forced property owners who’ve lost coverage onto the FAIR Plan in rapidly growing numbers — with 1,000 applications now every work day.
Elected Insurance Commissioner
But it isn’t coming fast enough for both consumers and insurers.
The state created the California FAIR Plan in the 1960s in response to insurers refusing to cover inner-city businesses following riots in Los Angeles’ Watts neighborhood. It’s a nonprofit association of all the state’s authorized property insurance providers, chartered to provide temporary basic insurance for properties deemed so high risk that companies refused coverage.
The FAIR plan isn’t tax supported, and its bare-bones coverage — just fire and smoke damage — is paid from policy premiums that can be much more expensive than regular insurance because the risk pool is much higher.
The plan also isn’t subject to the insurance regulation under Proposition 103, the check on rates voters approved in 1988. But it is regulated by the state legislature and its rates approved by the elected insurance commissioner, though not under the review of consumer groups, which can intervene on regular policies.
Roach said that the FAIR Plan has encountered the same problems as regular insurance providers in getting policy rate increases approved to provide enough revenue to cover its risk exposure. Approvals take too long and don’t allow the plan to include the cost of reinsurance — which helps insurers absorb losses — or to factor in catastrophe risk models.
“Our rates are never actuarially sound because not all of our expenses are included in that ratemaking,” Roach told lawmakers. The plan must file for rate adjustments every two years, and she said its last increase requested in 2021 should have been “around 70%” but the plan asked for 48.8%. The insurance department approved only a 15.7% increase, she testified.
At the same time, the huge increase in properties needing last-resort coverage has greatly inflated the plan’s risk liability.
Much of the growth in Fair Plan policies has been in inland areas, such as at
Roach said the FAIR Plan has cash on hand “somewhere in the neighborhood of
Michael D’Arelli, executive director of the
“It’s a ticking time bomb,” D’Arelli said. “It’s worse than I think you know. You’re going to hear from a lot of angry consumers and insurance agents.”
But Stone said the answer to the insurance industry’s coverage withdrawals shouldn’t be to force other policy holders to pay more, too. She suggested the state require insurers to provide coverage to homeowners who meet “home hardening” guidelines to make their properties more wildfire resistant.
“Renters and lower- and middle-income home owners with comparatively low fire risk should not be on the hook for (the costs of) rebuilding more expensive homes or even second homes in high fire-risk areas like
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