Home insurer exodus: Are California lawmakers weighing a secret deal to keep Big Insurance from bailing on homeowners? [Bay Area News Group]
In a state scorched by a series of devastating wildfires, Californians have seen the costs of insuring their homes soar and coverage options evaporate — if they can find a company to issue a policy at all.
Now, consumer advocates say lawmakers and the state’s insurance commissioner are secretly working on a deal to free up more coverage in the Golden State — but at the cost of caving to insurers’ demands to loosen regulations and let them charge higher rates.
“This would constitute the biggest insurance industry bailout in modern history, rushed through without the public deliberation that placing a burden of this magnitude on policyholders demands,” said Consumer Watchdog founder
In a state with the country’s strongest consumer rate protections, big insurers like Allstate,
The companies say that among other issues, pricing models — based on actual past losses and not on projections of future climate-driven disasters — are not keeping pace as costs to repair or replace homes mount.
But Rosenfield said lawmakers are trying to cram a backroom deal favorable to insurers through the Legislature with minimal public review as it wraps up its term over the next couple weeks, and even caught a longtime industry lobbyist bragging about it to a flight attendant on a plane to the
Insurance industry representatives have been tight-lipped about the rumored dealings, reported in an
Insurance Commissioner
“There is no quick fix,” said
The commissioner’s office wouldn’t comment on any potential legislative deal in the works, but Soller said that “if needed,” Lara “will pursue legislative action.”
Rosenfield, author of the 1988 Proposition 103 voter revolt that rolled insurance rates back 20% and requires the elected insurance commissioner to approve rate increases, smells a rat. He says insurers, who’ve been gunning for Prop 103 for decades, are limiting new coverage to pressure consumers and lawmakers into loosening regulations, which he said will spur higher rates while making it harder to assess their need.
Rosenfield said it wouldn’t be the first time. He points to a 1991 antitrust investigation by then-Attorney General
“The insurance industries put a gun to the people of
Insurers have been upfront about what they see as California’s problem. According to the
But the institute says
“Addressing these
Reportedly, the rumored deal being discussed in the
Rosenfield says
Caught in the middle are folks like
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“I understand they can’t pay out more than they take in,” Stoddart added. “But something’s got to be done, because people have to have homes, and you have to have insurance if you have a mortgage. I don’t know what the solution is.”
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