California Wildfire insurance crisis is now hitting even harder
If Californians didn't already know about the wildfire crisis that's been burning through the state for the last few years, pictures of low-hanging smoke from the Caldor fire blocking views of
But for many homeowners who live in unburned areas nevertheless deemed possibilities for future blazes, another crisis is hitting ever harder.
That's the availability of homeowners' insurance and the fire coverage it provides, which has become increasingly scarce with each passing year.
It's high time to get creative and solve this thorny problem.
Yes, some owners of intact houses not yet torched are still OK. That's thanks to an edict from state Insurance Commissioner
But that's a stopgap measure lasting only one year. Most affected property owners know their policies will be canceled the moment their insurance companies can dump them.
No insurance firm wants to be bankrupted by
What's developed is a situation akin to the boycott the insurance industry inflicted on
Every significant insurance company canceled almost all
Legislators and then-Insurance Commissioner
In an era when many tens of thousands of homeowner policies have been canceled in and near past or prospective fire areas, maybe something like the CEA is needed to make sure property owners can get insurance at fairly reasonable rates.
Where policies are canceled today, some homeowners go bare, but many wind up buying coverage from the state's last-chance Fair Plan, whose rates are astronomically higher than what insurance companies charge in non-fire areas. Fair Plan enrollment jumped from 140,000 to more than 200,00 in the last two years, even though a few companies returned to writing new policies when they were allowed astronomical rate increases.
So it may be time for the Legislature to at least partially separate other property coverages like liability from fire insurance in wildfire circumstances.
That way, homeowners could decide how much fire coverage to buy, rather than being forced to insure the entire value of their properties against fast-moving flames. They could be required to substantially fireproof their homes in order to qualify for such an arrangement, making one-time investments rather than large payments every year.
One thing for sure: So far, no one has thought creatively enough about how to manage the wildfire insurance crisis in an era when it seems several highly damaging blazes will afflict this state every year.
Simply ordering companies to leave policies in place for a year kicks the can down the road a short distance, but ultimately solves little, for homeowners in wildfire areas will eventually need new policies.
Californians have found creative solutions to every major problem that's ever confronted this state, from transporting water hundreds of miles to putting Covid vaccines in tens of millions of arms. Why not approach this major problem with the same style of resolute, outside-the-box thinking?
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