Editorial: Citizens insurance too big for its britches
OUR POSITION:
That is up from 1.1 million last year and 447,000 policyholders in 2019, according to budget documents from the nonprofit insurance group created by the state in 2002.
The public insurance outfit is on track to hit 2 million policies statewide.
Citizens, whose board approved a 14.2% premium hike for 2023, is the state's largest homeowner insurance provider and continues to grow as private insurance firms continue to flee (or avoid) the
The problem might only get worse with warmer gulf and ocean waters and rising sea levels creating bigger, slower moving and more intense hurricanes and tropical storms.
That means more property damage, more claims and likely more private insurance carriers fleeing the state after storms and surges of claims.
The
The
The aim — according to the insurance industry, DeSantis and his
But many Floridians are rightfully skeptical of the situation, the insurance industry and lawmakers who seem all too willing to carry their water in
For many Floridians, insurance companies have broken social contracts — repeatedly.
We have the old-fashioned notion that customers (policyholders) pay insurance premiums and then when a tree falls on their house — or in the case of Hurricane Ian thousands of trees fall and there are biblical winds and storm surges — then that insurance carrier reasonably covers that damage.
That's very old fashion for many insurance firms.
Plenty of the big insurance firms — you know some of the ones with endless commercials during NFL and NBA games — pulled up stakes and left
Some of those insurance companies still offer car insurance policies. (You know the ones mandated by state laws across the country — which makes for a pretty good business model.)
Their exit has resulted in some less reputable and less financially resilient insurance firms coming into the
They ignore or lowball customers' claims and then go belly up or sell off their
The local aftermath of Hurricane Ian saw many of our neighbors as well as small businesses and nonprofits greeted by a repeat of past storms.
Ignored calls, denied or lowball claims, policy cancellations and high insurance premium increases are still too often the norm.
That leaves Citizens — which was the successor to two similar publicly backed insurers of last resort the state had to create after Hurricane Andrew back in 1992. That storm sent 11 insurance firms into bankruptcy and many others fled the state.
The public backstop continues to be the last resort for many
We hope the changes approved by the Legislature and DeSantis help the problem and bring more and new honest insurance players into the
But, please excuse our skepticism.



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