State plans pricey fixes to California’s broken insurance market. Are homeowners on board? [Bay Area News Group]
As Insurance Commissioner
“We’re kind of caught between the devil and the deep blue sea,” Finnie said. “We either pay outrageous amounts money for substandard insurance, or outrageous amounts of money for actual insurance from insurance companies. I don’t see an alternative.”
Companies such as
Californians, who approved some of the country’s toughest insurance regulations in 1988, have enjoyed a bit of a break on home policies, according to the
But the institute reports that the 10 costliest
The bill is now coming due. Consumer participation in the FAIR plan — established under state law in 1968 to require insurers to provide basic coverage in high-risk areas where it’s otherwise unavailable — has more than doubled since 2018 to about 3% of state policies.
The FAIR Plan, which doesn’t provide additional coverage for personal belongings, isn’t cheap. Finnie, 73, who’s partly retired, saw her annual premium triple to nearly
“I’m trying to figure how to afford to live in Santa Cruz,” Jansen said. “It’s tough. The whole insurance thing is a total bummer.”
Insurers have laid out a host of demands they say are needed to stabilize a
Insurers now must base rates only on historic losses, not projected risks, and approval for requested increases takes more than a year — twice as long as in
Consumer advocates — chiefly Los Angeles’ Consumer Watchdog, whose founder wrote the state’s 1988 insurance regulation initiative — have been vigorously opposed to the reforms, arguing they will bring higher premiums without transparency or guarantees insurers will offer new policies.
Lara in September announced plans to deliver by
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In December’s Property Insurance Report, the editors argued the industry’s requested relief is reasonable and Lara’s 85% rule likely unworkable and should be replaced with separate deals with individual insurers. They added that Lara has the authority he needs to enact changes now, and that “there is one undeniable fact for homeowners in
Among residents in the state’s fire-scorched regions like the
“It’ll be business as usual and the insurance companies win,” said
But Finnie, who has spent time studying and writing about the situation for local publications, feels like home insurance is going to cost more one way or another.
“I’ve seen massive changes in the risk profile in the state,” Finnie said. “There’s going to have to be some change and it’s going to cost us more. But it’s already costing us more.”
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State plans pricey fixes to California’s broken insurance market
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