Florida knew the insurance crisis was coming. Lawmakers waged culture wars instead. | Commentary [Orlando Sentinel]
Thanks to Hurricane Ian,
There’s nothing mankind could do to stop Ian. But there was plenty
In fact, this crisis was totally predicted. Watchdogs urged Gov.
You know this. Think about how many stories you read about
This is what happens when you elect people more interested in politicking than governing.
Experts are predicting everything from rising insurance costs — in a state where rates are already more than double the national average — to massive bills for taxpayers. The Sentinel detailed the expected fallout in a recent piece: “Hurricane Ian: Damage will drive insurance rates even higher, cripple industry.”
The default defense by the politicians who let these problems fester seems to be: Now isn’t the time for Monday-morning quarterbacking.
But that’s not what this is. These alarms weren’t set off the Monday after the game. They were sounded months ago. Years ago.
The national
But lawmakers did next to nothing ... and are now acting surprised.
State Sen.
So either they lacked the competence and courage to fix the problem. Or they simply didn’t care about the problem — at least as much as they cared about culture-warring. Neither option instills confidence.
Insurance reform is an admittedly complex problem.
Many politicians blame rampant insurance fraud for jacking up rates and driving insurers away. So then so crack down on fraud!
If
Well, then if insurance fraud is really a statewide problem, why hasn’t
Instead, DeSantis created a voting-fraud force … despite a lack of evidence of problems in that arena. That was a choice.
DeSantis and legislators also made a choice when they ignored scores of insurance warnings during their legislative session last year so they could instead froth about
Only later, in a much shorter special session on insurance, did they pay token attention to the obvious crisis. Then, they took some meaningful-but-small steps, including adding
There was much more that could’ve been done. Aside from seriously cracking down on fraud, experts have pushed for arbitration between homeowners and insurers before lawsuits are filed. Lawmakers could’ve supported Brandes’ plan to reduce the average homeowner’s bill by
But all those things would’ve taken guts and energy. It was easier to kick the can down the road — a popular tactic for a state whose unofficial motto has always been: Build now, deal with consequences later.
Flooding is another example. The potential for devastating flooding has long been known. But homeowners aren’t required to have flood insurance. Nor are basic homeowner’s policies required to cover flood damage.
So is it surprising that now, in the hardest-hit counties of
That means most homeowners are out of luck — or taxpayers will bail them out. (We’ll soon see if the politicians like DeSantis — who said people who decided to take out college loans shouldn’t get taxpayer bailouts — feel the same way about
The bottom line: Everyone knew these messes were coming. The politicians in charge were negligent. And you’re going to pay the price.
The question now is: What are you going to do about it?
What would you do in any other part of your life? If your financial advisor, for instance, ignored one warning after another to safeguard your portfolio and then lost the bulk of your retirement account, would you simply shrug?
And what if he had the audacity to tell you that Now isn’t the time for Monday-morning quarterbacking — even though you’d warned him time and again to safeguard your investments?
Only a fool would keep that advisor around.
Well, politics and partisanship sometimes do foolish things to people’s brains. But any clear-thinking person knows the time for excuses on Florida’s insurance crisis isn’t just over; it ended long ago.
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