FAIR Plan Asks Court to Stop Insurance Commissioner’s Order that Would Increase Insurance Costs for Homeowners
The Order directed the FAIR Plan to offer comprehensive homeowners insurance, known as an HO-3 policy, which is outside of the FAIR Plan's statutory mandate to provide basic property insurance and would increase insurance costs for all of the FAIR Plan's policyholders. The Order also directed the FAIR Plan to take actions that were already underway by the FAIR Plan but, if implemented as directed by the Order, could compromise the privacy and security protections of policyholders' financial data.
The FAIR Plan filed the writ petition after attempting to work with the
"We have a responsibility to protect our policyholders and ensure their continuing access to affordable and reliable basic property coverage," said
The writ argues that the Commissioner's order violates the law, and would force the FAIR Plan out of compliance with its statutory mandate to provide basic property insurance, serve as a stabilizing force in the insurance marketplace, and to maintain actuarially sound rates.
"Unfortunately, the Commissioner's Order would lead to unintended consequences that will harm consumers by increasing costs of property insurance and restricting options in the voluntary insurance market," Jivan added.
Offering an HO-3 policy as directed by the Order would adversely impact homeowners and is contrary to the FAIR Plan's mission and role in the insurance marketplace. FAIR Plan rates are required to be actuarially sound, and a FAIR Plan HO-3 policy, as directed by the Order, would be more expensive than those that homeowners can purchase through the voluntary market or through a combination of a FAIR Plan policy and Difference-in-Condition coverage. The Order would ultimately limit choice and flexibility for consumers.
Further, attempting to comply with the HO-3 provision would divert the FAIR Plan's scarce resources from its core mission and lead to significant new costs absorbed by FAIR Plan policyholders. FAIR Plan resources are currently dedicated to scaling existing infrastructure to support a growing number of customers and brokers seeking FAIR Plan coverage and to streamlining the claims processing system in preparation for the next catastrophe. Taking resources away from these mission-critical projects would hinder the FAIR Plan from providing the service that its policyholders deserve.
The FAIR Plan remains fully supportive of three provisions of the Order: increasing the dwelling policy coverage limits from
Furthermore, the FAIR Plan asks the Court to vacate the provision of the Order that would prevent the FAIR Plan from passing along credit card charge fees to customers that choose that option to pay for their insurance. Without the ability to charge these fees to the select policyholders exercising this option, the FAIR Plan would be forced to pass them along to all policyholders to share. Passing along credit card fees to customers is standard practice among state agencies and many businesses. The FAIR Plan notes in the writ that it will continue to work diligently to implement a credit card payment option in a careful manner and timeline that protects policyholders' financial privacy and security.
Last week, the FAIR Plan sent a letter to Commissioner Lara and the Legislature outlining its concerns and the risks the Order presents to consumers. FAIR Plan leadership had hoped to work in collaboration with the
The FAIR Plan remains committed to working with the Commissioner, the insurance industry and policymakers to solve
About the FAIR Plan
The California Fair Access to Insurance Requirements (FAIR) Plan is an insurance pool established by law to assure the availability of basic property insurance to people who own insurable property in the
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