Citizens CEO says hurricane-insurance-for-all bill would be too expensive for state [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
The CEO of state-owned
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
But during a workshop held by the state
“We don’t even know if there’s enough capacity in the reinsurance market” to provide needed coverage, Cerio said.
Roach and Cassel argued that expanding Citizens’ ability to write wind coverage from 29 counties to the entire state will be necessary to prevent a collapse of Florida’s insurance market after a series of catastrophic storms.
The idea, they said, would be to take the premiums that insurers pocket during years without hurricanes and place them into a state-run pool where they would accrue and be available when hurricanes strike.
Insurance premiums in
Insurers have provided a long list of reasons for the increases, beginning with larger-than-expected costs of settling claims from 2017’s Hurricane Irma. Subsequent years saw Hurricane Michael, which struck the
Other reasons cited by insurers include high rates of litigation and increasing frequency of hail and other severe, non-hurricane storms.
Eight insurers went insolvent between 2021 and 2023, according to the
Cassel said similar insolvencies follow every time
Allowing premiums to accrue in a state-run pool will reduce, not increase, the amount of reinsurance that leaves
The saved money would be available to spend on Floridians, she said, “instead of having those profits siphoned off to either another corporate (insurance) entity or management company and then those collateral reserves are not there when the claims need to be paid out.”
Roach called Cerio’s prediction of massive reinsurance cost increases “a little overblown.”
During the current insurance crisis, the number of policies held by Citizens increased from 420,000 in 2019 to about 1.4 million last year.
Cerio said that making Citizens the wind insurance provider for all Floridians would mark “a very different change in direction” for the company, which is currently focused on reducing its policy count by encouraging rate hikes and making it easier for private companies to take over Citizens policies.
If the bill is enacted, he said, the value of properties Citizens would have to cover would increase from
Rates that Citizens pays for reinsurance — coverage that all insurers buy to ensure they can pay all claims after major storms — would likely increase, Cerio said.
That’s because wind damage claims, although backed by Citizens, would be settled by private-industry companies that would sell wind coverage along with insurance for all other claims, according to the bill.
Currently, reinsurers give Citizens a discounted rate because they understand the company’s claim-paying process, Cerio said.
Reinsurers would be concerned if suddenly they were forced to analyze how 60 private companies pay claims, he said, adding that having so many companies selling Citizens coverage would make it difficult to control fraud.
Asked by Rep.
Roach said the concept was studied two decades ago by a former state representative who concluded it would produce an
Several insurance experts, including Citizens’ CEO and chief risk officer, concluded that the idea was viable, Roach said. But then Gov.
And beyond the discussion during Tuesday’s workshop, there’s no indication that Roach’s and Cassel’s bill will go anywhere this year. The bill has not been scheduled for any committee votes and is unlikely to get serious consideration during the current session.
Still, Rep.
But Cassel said the Legislature is forestalling an inevitable reckoning if it decides to kick the can down the road.
“In 20 years, our successors are going to be looking at the same crisis and asking why we haven’t done more,” she said.
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Citizens CEO says hurricane-insurance-for-all bill would be too expensive
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