Homeowners face higher insurance costs
An immediate target:
With 1.1 million customers now, pending legislation would bar people from renewing the cheaper coverage if a private insurer offered a policy within 20% of Citizens' premium.
New Citizens' customers in a flood zone also would for the first time be required to have flood insurance, beginning in April. Homeowners renewing Citizens' policies in flood-prone areas would need the added coverage by July.
"We take a hard look at where Citizens should be," said Senate Banking and Insurance Chair
Boyd said insurance data shows Citizens' policies are about 30% cheaper than the common market rate now. But it's important, he said, that Citizens again become "the insurer of last resort, which it's supposed to be."
The Republican-led Legislature is expected to wrap up the special session, possibly by Wednesday night.
With
Among the steps poised to be finalized: Steering another
But seeming to acknowledge that insurance customers will take a hit under the legislation,
A tax relief package for homeowners who lose property in a hurricane and a toll credit program pushed by Gov.
But insurance is the main focus.
"We cannot leave the consumers behind while we try to stabilize the market," said Sen.
"I believe that this will get at the root problem of our cost increases," said Boyd, who cited frequently mentioned industry numbers that show
Estimates point to whatever level Ian's claims eventually reach as an enormous threat to the finances of insurers and, in turn, Floridians.
Most burdens added to homeowners
Other changes advancing Monday eliminate so-called one-way attorney fees, which will make homeowners shoulder more of the costs of suing in court. Critics warned that homeowners will be put in a tough spot, even if they win a lawsuit, since a large share of their settlement would now go to paying their own attorneys' fees.
In another step aimed at discouraging lawsuits, the legislation allows insurers to offer policies that require property owners to enter binding arbitration, barring them from suing. These policyholders would be assured of some discount on their premiums.
Also banned would be the use of Assignment of Benefits (AOB), which many homeowners rely on to hire a contractor who will battle directly with their insurers who have long opposed it.
Homeowners would have to file an insurance claim within one year, not two, as current law allows. Any supplemental claim would have to be filed within 18 months of damage, instead of three years.
In a rare swipe at insurance companies, the legislation would force insurers to pay or deny a claim within 60 days, instead of the current 90-day window. State insurance officials, though, could extend that limit another 30 days, during a state of emergency, typical following a hurricane.
A sign of the magnitude of
These premiums also are climbing at a rate of about 33% annually, compared to 9% boosts across the rest of the nation.
But as long as the industry is troubled in
Also teed-up is a bill that would offer tax relief to those who had homes damaged by Hurricane Ian or
Senate Bill 4-A allows the measure to be retroactive, letting homeowners apply for property tax refunds if their home was "rendered uninhabitable" for at least 30 days.
Local governments are expected to lose
Sen.
But
"Everything in here is good, but that is a missing link," Doolin said. "I just wanted to raise the issue, not to be dealt with today or during the special session, but as we go into the regular session."
DeSantis already delayed property tax payments in the 26 counties affected by Ian until next June. The bill also pulls
Heavy Sunpass, other transponder users to see refunds
The measure (SB 6A) would provide a 50% refund in the form of an account credit for
Sen.
"With the inflationary pressures that we're all experiencing, I believe it's good public policy to help folks who are traveling, paying higher gas prices," he said.
The deadline to enroll for health insurance in Idaho is Dec. 15 [The Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho]
Florida homeowners, not insurers, the real insurance-crisis victims. But do lawmakers care? | Opinion [Miami Herald]
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