On the record: Why Tim Temple is bullish on Louisiana's property insurance market
Republican
Grace: Let's start with a big-picture question. What is your diagnosis of the problem of companies being reluctant to insure homes here?
Temple: As I travel and engage with stakeholders, I'm trying to reinforce the concept that insurance companies do not have to do business in the state of
If a company or reinsurance company does not like the regulatory and the legal environment of a state, then they've got the whole country to pick from. And if a company specifically wants to write hurricane-exposed business in the
That means that they're comfortable covering property that's going to be exposed, so then they have to shift down to the next series of questions. Like, what's the regulatory framework? Is there a
And
Grace: So where does that lead you in terms of approaching the job?
Temple: My philosophy is that as commissioner of insurance, I work for the people of
Looking to the future
Grace: Let's get right to one of the policies you find concerning,
Temple: I'm not going to ask the Legislature to remove it, because I think that would only create an even worse insurance crisis than we're currently facing. We can't just rip that Band-Aid off; we've got to create what I'm calling a glide slope, a mechanism to allow companies to write the policies that they want to write, not that they're forced to write by law.
I mean, insurance companies aren't state entities. So I just disagree with the fact that you tell them they have to write something. We're the only state in America that has that law. If it was the end-all-be-all consumer protection law that it's been touted as for the last 17 years, then you would have seen a lot of other states adopt it.
Grace: It does have a lot of fans here, including outgoing Insurance Commissioner
Temple: Well, right now we're being told that it's great consumer protection, but I'm also hearing everybody say they can't afford the quotes that these companies feel that they have to offer. The companies are handcuffed to the customers, and the customers feel that they have to stay with them. ... I will maintain that the best consumer protection that you and I can have is choice.
Grace: But what if companies aren't interested in providing that choice in a state that's so exposed to catastrophic events?
Temple: So on the homeowner side, you've got the big national insurance companies, and then you've got the independent agent market. Those independent agents right now only have four, maybe five companies that are quoting, and that's not like doors are wide open, send me all your business. They're very selective.
Prior to the 2020 hurricanes, there were about 25-26 companies writing that independent agent line of business. Some of those companies went insolvent, but most left the state. So that's what we've got to get back.
The other side of that argument is always, "Oh, well, you know,
Risks to manage
Grace: But isn't this a broader trend? We're hearing about companies not wanting to do business in Western states because of wildfires.
Temple: I want to challenge that statement, OK? They are pulling out of
Grace: So I guess the flip side of being able to charge the rates they need is very high prices for customers — perhaps unaffordable.
Temple: It certainly can be. There seems to be an underlying current of well, it's got to be fair: If I, as a consumer, want to go and build a home in the middle of a forest that's 26 miles away from the nearest fire hydrant, or if I want to build my home on the
I mean, we don't want it to be a government-funded, socialized type of product. What it needs to be is if you want to exercise your right to build where you are legally allowed to build, then you have to know upfront it may cost you more to build that house on the
Grace: When you're talking about the
Temple:
But then also, going through the legislative side of it, I think we can promote mitigation of risk, so if you do want to build a camp down in
Grace: New construction is one thing, but what about existing housing stock?
Temple: And so that's where, as people replace or repair existing roofs, we need to make sure that we do everything we can to help promote fortified roofs, windows, doors — all the things that make your property more attractive, so that when these companies come back in, they're going to want to write Stephanie's house because she put a new fortified roof on, but Tim, who lives across the street, I didn't. I'm still probably going to get some insurance somewhere, but I shouldn't expect to get the same rate base that you do. And that's a hard message to tell people. Risk isn't equal.
Grace: Do state subsidies like those passed on a limited basis this year make sense to help people get there? Or is that something where if you make the investment, you get the reward as an individual?
Temple: I understand subsidies were needed to jump-start and get this in people's minds that, hey, there's something that I can do. But you know, there's also the state of
I want to see what other states are doing. There's no reason to think that
Next steps
Grace: So legislatively, what would be your first order of business?
Temple: The current prior approval process for changing policy rates. Looking at other states that have a lot of market participation and where rates are competitive and affordable, they tend to have either a file and use or use and file. It does not reduce the regulatory authority that the department has over an insurance company, it just changes the order. Prior approval is exactly what it says, an insurance company has to come to the department, they have to submit their paperwork and demonstrate why they need to change or want to change. And then the department has a timeline that they have to follow.
File and use, or use and file, are exactly what they say, you file it and use it or you use it and you file it, and then it's still up to the department, and there's a certain timeframe to make sure that what was filed or is being used meets all the requirements. It's a speed-to-market issue.
Grace: What else can we expect from a special session on insurance? Anything where customers would see relatively immediate results?
Temple: I don't want to say immediate, because insurance tends to be slow. But property writers don't come and write any substantial amount of new policies in hurricane season. They don't do it in
If we can do some things that the industry has indicated are red flags for them, it sends a signal to the marketplace out there.
I know people are saying I'm anti-consumer because of some of the things I want to suggest. But at the end of the day, this office is for the consumers, it is consumer protection. It's just my version of consumer protection is you having choice and ability to go to another carrier, if you don't like the pricing, or the policy, or the way you're treated. I believe that's the best consumer protection.
Room for improvement
Grace: Is there anything you would you favor that you think the insurance companies might not like?
Temple: Well, I haven't even started talking about the claims handling experience. I think that the industry could lean forward in a different way of handling catastrophe claims, in terms of getting money to people more quickly.
Grace: It's not like they never do wrong, they never screw consumers.
Temple: That certainly happens. And again, it's the department's job to be the gatekeeper. If bad actors come in here, then that's a problem and you need to figure out how they got in. And I think there are some things that we could promote on handling claims that I'm certainly sure they'd want to push back on a little bit, but we're going to be focused on trying to create a better climate. And so to the consumer, that's good.
Grace: My last question is kind of Economics 101. If more companies come in because they can make the money they want or need to make, does that mean prices stay high, or even go up, before competition forces them down?
Temple: Well, look, we're still in an inflationary period right now. So a home that would once cost
I think what you'll see, though, is that when companies start coming back in, they have capital behind them, they have investors, they have shareholders, and they don't make money just by letting it sit in a bank account. They have to go and deploy it.
And if their product is a little too expensive, guess what? They're going to have to lower their price. And that's where that Economics 101 comes in. You've got to move your product, or else you lose money.
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