Florida Senate OKs insurance bail-out with no promises for policyholders [Orlando Sentinel]
“I don’t love it. Plenty of people here don’t like it, but it’s a necessary bill,” Stewart said toward the end of a long day of debate and wrangling over amendments by
Garcia wondered where the protections are for the consumers. “I keep hearing of the consequences of lack of profitability for these companies, but what about the person faced with the inevitable sale of their home because they can’t afford it?” she asked.
The vote on the insurance bill, along with bills to provide property tax refunds for homes damaged by hurricanes and a one-year discount on tolls for heavy commuters, wraps up the Senate’s work for the special session.
The full
Dressed in pink with her long hair done up in a braid,
She was 12 when the storm struck, celebrated her 13th birthday with a maple-glazed doughnut and commuted four hours a day to a private Christian school in
“I and my siblings are without a home because a bunch of adults don’t want to honor their contract with my parents,” Albaugh told members of the
“Mexico Beach is often called the
Her father,
“It feels like you’re blaming me, the consumer,” Albaugh said, adding that he didn’t want to be in a legal battle, but the insurance company forced him to it, likening his ordeal to David and Goliath.
“This effectively gives Goliath a better helmet,” he said.
The committee approved the bill 12-7 along party lines.
The bills before the Legislature would do away with a law that requires insurance companies to pay the homeowner’s legal fees regardless of the outcome of a claims dispute and another that allows policyholders to assign benefits directly to their contractors.
The insurance industry, which pumped more than
“You’re making it easier for them,” Sen.
Republican sponsors of the bill say those measures, along with increasing the rates for the
“This bill does nothing to help stabilize the market,” said Rep.
The measures also pumped another
The special session was called at the urging of Gov.
It also comes after a seventh insurer went out of business in the last two years and Demotech, the state’s insurance rating agency of last resort, announced it would not rate any newcomers to
OIR Commissioner
“The provisions in this bill are going to go a long way in stabilizing the marketplace, and that, in the long run, will mitigate rate increases consumers have been seeing,” he said.
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