Mosquito Fire reprieve: Insurers can’t drop homeowners for a year, California regulator says [The Sacramento Bee]
Thousands of Northern Californians living in the vicinity of the Mosquito Fire won’t have to worry about losing their homeowners’ insurance — for a year, anyway.
Diving into an issue that’s been plaguing rural
The order affects 49,639 homeowners, split evenly between
A total of 40 zip codes are included in Lara’s order.
Homeowners coverage has become a serious problem for many rural Californians since 2017, when a wave of costly mega-fires chewed through the wine country north of
Dropped by their carriers, tens of thousands of Californians have had to buy fire coverage from the California FAIR Plan, the so-called “insurer of last resort” created by the Legislature in the 1960s. The plan has no state subsidies, and by the time customers purchased additional coverage to handle burglary and other insurance risks, their total cost of insurance had tripled in many cases. Homeowners who’d been paying, say,
There have been signs that the insurance crisis is easing, as some carriers have signaled their willingness to re-enter fire-prone areas, thanks to rate increases and better data about wildfire risks. Still, when big wildfires strike, companies will send homeowners in the area the dreaded non-renewal letters telling them their coverage will soon expire.
The insurance commissioner has the power to give vulnerable homeowners some stop-gap protection. Under SB 824, a law he wrote while he was a state senator, Lara is able to impose one-year moratoriums that prohibit insurers from dropping customers in areas hit with major wildfires.
“Wildfires are devastating even if you did not lose your home, so it is absolutely critical to give people breathing room after a disaster,” Lara said in a statement Thursday. “This is not the time to be having to search for insurance.”
The Mosquito Fire has burned 76,539 acres, and destroyed 78 homes and other buildings, since igniting
©2022 The Sacramento Bee. Visit sacbee.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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