Oregon bill would require home insurers to consider wildfire prevention efforts
Sen.
Growing wildfire risk and the costs of rebuilding have driven premiums up in
Under current state law, insurers must provide policy holders with information about whether and how they consider property-level wildfire prevention efforts, such as installing fire-resistant siding and roofing, in underwriting and rating decisions. But they're not required to offer policy holders any incentives for those efforts.
The bill would require insurers who use catastrophic event and wildfire risk modeling formulas and scenarios to calculate what insurance premiums customers pay, to demonstrate that their models and formulas take policy holders' wildfire prevention investments into account.
"Despite homeowners investment in home hardening and defensible space, and despite public investments in community-level mitigation, many, if not all, insurers are not taking these mitigation measures into account in the computer models they use to price and to decide whether to write or renew insurance, what's called underwriting,"
Golden's bill would require insurance companies to reward home-hardening and defensible landscaping efforts that meet standards approved by the
"So the bill is grounded in an empirically based standard developed by the insurance industry," Jones said.
Incentives required
Under Golden's bill, insurers would need to file their rate-setting models and other explanatory information with the
The bill doesn't require insurers use catastrophic planning models, but if they don't use such models, the bill requires the insurer to give the policyholder some discount on their premium, or another incentive, when the policyholder demonstrates that they've undertaken property-specific wildfire mitigation to reduce the risk of loss.
Golden previously championed a much-maligned and since-repealed wildfire risk map by state fire experts and experts at
Those include requiring insurers cover longer rebuilding times, cover more living expenses in the aftermath of a fire and that insurers provide policy holders with information about whether and how they consider wildfire prevention in ratesetting.
But, he said the proposal has "some bugs to be worked out," such as more precise language about the scope and scale of premium discounts and incentives insurers will be expected to offer and for what specific wildfire prevention actions.
"While there are still challenges for homeowners in portions of
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