There's a potential solution to Florida's insurance mess. Here's why it hasn't happened
In response, a group of
Armed with data and political connections, group members flew private planes to
Instead of being welcomed, they found their idea was "a political hot potato," one member said.
Although the dozens of small insurance companies that dominated
Roughly 15 years later, Floridians are again faced with rapidly rising premiums and a slew of insurance companies going insolvent, this time after hurricanes Ian, Michael and Irma. And the idea those
An unstable market
In storm-free years, the small
In the 2010s, CEOs for
In 2015, for example, the CEO of
But when storms hit, the companies may not have the capability to pay out claims, leading to a wave of insolvencies.
When those companies fail, Floridians are often on the hook. To pay the companies' outstanding claims, the state can levy up to a 4% surcharge on all homeowners' insurance policies.
That's what happened after
An idea to benefit Floridians
Former state Rep.
After being dropped by his own insurance carrier in 2006, he decided it was time to do something.
One of his first calls was to
The idea they settled on was this: Combine Citizens and the
READ THEIR PLAN HERE
Instead of Floridians' windstorm premiums going to profits, they would be pooled into a common fund.
"Bill and I kind of figured that if you added up all the years Floridians were paying for hurricane insurance, it was a ton of money," Crane, 89, said recently.
Barring any major storms, the fund was projected to be self-sustaining in its 10th year, with a surplus of
That would have been more than enough to cover the estimated
In short, the plan would give
'Surprisingly persuasive'
Crane's plan was realistic on paper, experts found.
READ THE
The former head of Citizens,
But the plan was not without caveats.
For one, it projected premiums going up for the short term, although rates would eventually go down.
Some were concerned about the state shouldering such high risk, feeling it should be spread out among private companies.
And it would have required an agreement with the federal government to loan the fund money if it couldn't pay out in a catastrophic storm -- the type of storm the state has not yet seen.
Resistance from insurers
Crane and his volunteers knew the idea violated the free-market beliefs of the Republican-controlled Legislature, even though
A Crist spokesperson said in 2009 that Crist was against it because he "believes the insurance industry, rather than the government, should assume the financial risk for hurricanes."
Ballard said their proposal was also "toxic" for a different reason.
Large insurers, including
But domestic insurers were adamantly against it.
If the state offered only hurricane insurance, domestic insurers stood to make much less money, Ballard realized. And they were a powerful constituency in
"To commit to essentially stripping out this much from the premium dollar and putting it into a state-run fund crossed ideological lines and financial interest lines, everywhere," Ballard said. "Everywhere you put your foot down, you were stepping on one."
Even though Crane and his volunteers had the clout to get meetings with then-
"It was that much of a political hot potato," Ballard said. "In my opinion, the money from the insurance industry was big money."
In 2011, after five years of work and countless trips to
Idea revived
Still, the idea has not gone away.
A December op-ed in the
The author was
"In the quiet years, we would see on [insurers'] financial statements what was happening, and then when a storm hits, some go insolvent," Cook said recently. "It's not a good business plan. It's just a limitation with the private insurance model."
Cook said that he wasn't aware that Crane and others had proposed a similar idea years ago.
"When you have a group of rational people looking at the same problem, it's not unusual for them to coalesce around similar solutions," Cook said.
State lawmakers' solution to the current crisis has been to give insurers what they want: limiting lawsuits, which is what they blame for recent company insolvencies and for charging record premiums.
But the dynamics of
When you go to
"Sometimes, that's more powerful than the idea itself."
(C)2023 Miami Herald. Visit miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


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