Gov. signs insurance overhaul
The Republican-controlled Legislature approved the package earlier in the week during a three-day special session called to try to stabilize the insurance industry in
More than a dozen companies have stopped writing policies in the past two years, including seven that have gone out of business. Floridians are paying triple the average national costs for insurance.
DeSantis went to
"It's not a question about 'helping' the insurance companies," DeSantis said. "What it's about is creating a market where people are going to want to do business in
He added, "So the question is, how does that help the consumer? Well, if we do get more people to come and offer policies, you are finally going to have, potentially, choices. And that will allow you, I think, to make the best decisions for you."
Also signed Friday was legislation providing property-tax refunds for homes across 16
Homeowners whose properties were uninhabitable for at least 30 days after the storms would qualify for the break.
Insurance, though, was the prime focus of the special session.
No guarantee costs come down
The legislation signed Friday includes no requirements that rates or premiums go down. Instead, the 1.1. million policyholders in cheaper, state-backed
Costly new flood coverage also would be required. First-time Citizens' customers in a flood zone would be required to have flood insurance, beginning in April. Homeowners' renewing Citizens' policies in flood-prone areas would need the added coverage by July.
Even residents of high-rise condominiums covered by Citizens will face the flood requirement. And everyone in Citizens, flood-zone or not, will be forced to have flood insurance, within five years.
The move comes after the number of Citizens' policies has doubled in the past two years. Citizens' policies now are about 30% cheaper statewide than private insurance — even 40% cheaper in
But pushing more homeowners into the private market — paying higher rates — is expected to make
Do
lose again?
"Floridians are losing yet again," said House Democratic Leader
Driskell pointed out that amendments pushed by
Lawmakers also set aside another
Another area
Banned by the law are what is known as one-way attorney fees, where insurers pay the legal costs of policyholders who successfully sue in a claims dispute. But critics argued that it furthers the imbalance many called David v. Goliath fights between a homeowner and their insurance company.
Governor
defends limiting lawsuits
DeSantis, though, defended the provision.
"When you look at so much of the expenses going to litigation, this is going to make a huge, huge difference," the Republican governor said. "You're going to stop a lot of the frivolous litigation, a lot of the scams that happened. We've had a lot of that in this state, for decades."
In another change, the measure bans assignment of benefits, or AOB, where policyholders sign over claims to contractors who then deal directly with insurers.
AOB helps homeowners who need damage repaired and don't want to deal with their insurance companies. But opponents point to abuses of the system that have driven-up costs for insurers.
Chief Financial Officer
"AOBs are supposed to let policyholders handoff their claims to contractors, so that they can get their cash easier," Patronis told a House committee. "Unfortunately, this tool generates more cost and enriches others, not the homeowner."



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