Disaster insurance drove billions in revenue for companies
More than 160 insurance companies have paid out
"And remember that while they make these giant profits they don't send refunds back to the people when there aren't incidents, they invest in the stock market or pay their CEO
On Friday the state joined a motion in
Cahill had barred the insurance companies from obtaining damages in their lawsuit against the utility in order to reach a proposed
On Friday, Cahill ruled against the state and attorneys representing fire victims.
Instead, the insurance companies can try to recover some of what they paid to their policyholders if their customers end up receiving proceeds from a combination of the settlement and insurance that makes them more than "whole."• • •
Between 2004 and 2023, insurance customers in
The policies covered customers against "damages incurred from fire, water, hurricane, wind, and natural disasters - with the exception of flood and earthquake," DCCA spokesperson
During the same 20-year period, insurance companies paid out nearly
The data does not account for operating costs and expenses for each insurer to settle claims, which would affect their annual profit margins.
What happens next following the
Following Hurricane Iniki in 1992, insurance companies stopped issuing hurricane insurance policies in
More recently, following the 2018 eruption of Kilauea Volcano on
Taking into account for company overhead or expenses in paying out claims, Ruiz said, "If they pay out more than
Green continues to call the insurance companies "greedy" for insisting on their ability to sue, holding up the
"Remember, they take their upside/profit and invest it, every year, which should give them a buffer so that when a tragedy occurs they can manage costs," Green said. "And annually they assess risk and have increased rates. They should be able to handle this disaster without trying to get their money back to show another large profit."
He expects the official cause of the fires to be released by Attorney General
"Let me be blunt with you," Green told the Star-Advertiser's editorial board last week. "The report is going to say what everybody knows: Wires came down, a fire started. A fire got put out and then they (
Asked about the response of governmental agencies, the governor said the
"Everybody involved here has responsibility to some extent," Green said.
Attorneys representing the insurance companies previously told the Star-Advertiser that their investigation found the wildfires were sparked when an aging, wooden utility pole overloaded with telecommunications equipment snapped in high winds in
The attorneys said the fire later reignited and shot embers into the sky and triggered a path of flames all the way to
A filing by the insurance companies' lawyers in
After the fire, an inspection of the
Green brokered the proposed settlement and said he had to work hard to convince the parties not to sue one another in order to prevent catastrophic lawsuit judgments that the governor said would likely bankrupt
The state likely would have to bail out
"I pushed us right to the breaking point of each of the institutions," Green said.
Under the proposed settlement,
Amounts to be paid by



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