In Northern California, property insurance costs are causing business owners to ask: What’s next? [The Sacramento Bee]
In early January, just a couple weeks before his winery’s insurance was set to end,
Hays would be able to renew the winery’s insurance, the email said. That is not a given for properties in the
Yet there was a catch: The cost of his property coverage, including for fire, was going to double to about
It felt like a gut punch. Hays had assumed his insurance for the business was already expensive enough. Never did he think it was going to rise so quickly in one year.
“What am I going to do?” he thought as he stared at his phone.
So much attention is put on the challenges
That is particularly true in
There’s the bed and breakfast that’s paying roughly
“It’s kind of driving me nuts,” said
It’s also driving businesses in the region into financial hardship, said
“They’re doing everything they can not just to thrive, but to survive.”
And that’s what Hays fixated on when he saw the new insurance quote: the survival of his winery.
“Everything I have,” he said, “is invested in it.”
A family business
Hays, 51, worked as a restaurant and club manager before moving back to the area to be closer to his parents. He became an assistant winemaker at a local winery before opening Chateau Davell, about 15 years ago.
The business in
Davell is his mother’s name. Relatives are the inspiration behind the winery’s Zander Zinfandel, and Charlotte’s Cuvee. And bottles feature paintings from Hays, who said he has an art degree from Sacramento State.
His mother helps in the tasting room and with events and his wife leads the winery’s social media accounts, cooks and handles other tasks.
Although it is less known than
They also put Chateau Davell at risk.
In 2021, the Caldor Fire torched more than 340 square miles of land in
Hays was not forced to evacuate but the fire still hurt the business. Smoky, toxic air damages grapes and puts a damper on outdoor events and visits to its tasting room. He said the majority of his business comes from selling directly to customers.
Insurance companies were already skittish about issuing policies to properties in the region. But that has only worsened since the fire, leaving people with fewer options and rising prices.
Higher insurance costs
In 2022, Hays said he paid roughly
After the email from his broker, Hays said he looked for other options. He wanted to just insure his mortgage, but his bank wouldn’t let him. He wanted to see what fire insurance would cost from the California FAIR Plan, a private insurance association established by the state. But he wasn’t eligible, because he had at least one offer. The FAIR Plan is supposed to be the insurer of last resort.
So, Hays decided to pay for the property policy offered by
“I think companies are starting to reflect that greater risk in their pricing.”
Hays’ total cost for insurance policies this year came out to
What happens next?
“My overarching concern is the cost and the viability of continuing to farm,” Ranalli said. “And we need the state and the insurance providers to come together with a solution. And soon.”
In an email,
Insurance Commissioner
Any price reductions that come from those changes may not occur soon enough for Chateau Davell. The stakes are high: The business is the only source of income for Hays and his family.
In the short term, he is considering raising prices and holding more events to cover the increased cost. At the same time, his mind has wandered to what could happen next year: What will he do if the insurance price doubles again?
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In Northern California, property insurance costs are causing business owners to ask: What’s next? [The Sacramento Bee]
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