Insurance head setting up consumer burden?
While writing up his biography on the website of the
He has certainly done that, but not quite in the manner he claimed elsewhere on his department's site website, where he declared he would "protect Californians' futures."
In fact, Democrat Lara has made a difference in the lives of most Californians, not by protecting them, but rather by enabling the insurance companies he regulates to take advantage of almost everyone in this state.
That's all happened via his going along with vastly increased insurance rates for both vehicle and property insurance, even for Californians who live nowhere near areas endangered by wildfires.
Those fires are the excuse insurance companies from the largest, like
Under deals that Lara sanctioned, insurance companies will soon be able to use "black box" secret formulae to predict where risks will be highest, with no one looking over their collective shoulder. If they did not get this privilege, the companies threatened, they would stop writing new policies in
To stymie this blackmail, all Lara had to do was revive the concept of linkage: If you want to write one type of insurance in
That was the rule about earthquake insurance here until the 1990s, when the later-disgraced Republican Commissioner
Like Quackenbush, Lara could have played hardball with the industry, but also like Quackenbush, he was cowed. For example, he is offering little or no resistance to
Now Lara has quietly announced a plan that could make customers everywhere in
Currently, if that should happen, the insurance industry would have to make up whatever funds the Fair Plan lacks. But Lara would shift that risk to consumers. The Fair Plan, whose policies are more expensive and offer less coverage than most others, now insures about 420, 000 homes, many in wildfire areas where private companies routinely refuse coverage. Many of these are luxury properties in scenic areas.
Essentially, Lara and the industry he serves ("regulates") want to put all other Californian (even renters, whose payments could rise if their landlords must pay higher insurance costs) at risk in order to subsidize those who build or buy in beautiful locations they know are dangerous. But it's insurance companies, not consumers, whose business has long entailed taking risks in order to make profits.
That's not exactly living up to the promise of protecting Californians' futures, but it may be a way to "make a difference" in people's lives.
The question now is whether consumer advocates or anyone else can go to court and drag out this process until 2027, when Lara's term in office will end. If not, get set to write even higher checks for insurance coverage. Email



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