Two years after Hurricane Ida, a slow trickle of insurance and federal money for repairs
Two years after Hurricane Ida made landfall, just before noon on
Though Ida didn't result in the kind of cataclysmic levee failures and flooding that made Hurricane Katrina such an historic disaster, its timing, a year after hurricanes Laura, Delta and Zeta, meant the combined effect on the insurance market was almost as great. Ida by itself was one of the most expensive storms in
The hardest hit areas were in Terrebone and
"I don't think there was a home in Terrebone that didn't have some kind of damage," said
The
When Ida's costs are added to the
A wave of claims
As the wave of Ida claims came flooding in, 11 insurance companies declared insolvency. A dozen more pulled out of the
As a result, insurance premiums soared where home and business owners could even find coverage.
In an effort to shore up the market and bring down premiums, Louisiana Insurance Commissioner
"Donelon acknowledged that the approved grants are only the first step toward potentially bringing down homeowners' insurance rates," said Leonard, adding that more structural changes will be needed. Among them: letting insurers derive premiums from what they expect in a climate change-driven world, rather than only from past events.
"To the best of our knowledge, we have not yet heard of any state that has moved from backward-looking to forward-looking rate setting," Leonard said.
Bailout fund swamped
Meanwhile, for people trying to get their homes and businesses repaired, the insurance turmoil has meant delay and uncertainty.
Pulaski, the Terrebone planning chief, said that while many thousands of his fellow residents have suffered much worse damage, his own struggle to claim insurance for repairs to his house in
Hurricane Ida landed two trees on his house, which meant the roof had to be replaced at a cost of
"So, now I have Citizens. But that's a new policy and they won't pay out on an old claim, so I had to go to LIGA," Pulaski said, referring to the
The bailout fund, which normally has a staff of just a dozen employees, was overwhelmed by the insurance crisis and struggled to keep up. They have also been pushing back on claims such as Pulaski's, arguing that they won't necessarily approve higher payouts just because labor and materials costs have risen 30% since a claim was approved.
The hardest hit
Then there were property owners with insufficient insurance or none at all. They now largely rely on government programs to help them recover.
That money is divided among 14 programs that target homeowners, small businesses, local governments and others. Claiming that money is a notoriously lengthy and laborious process, and only a fraction of it has been spent so far.
There is also about
"We try not to make it slow," Forbes said, but he added that there is an unavoidable process that can mean years before grant money translates into new housing, particularly affordable rental housing where the need is most acute.
A long wait
"It has to go through a competitive procurement process. Then there's all the environmental reviews" for the federal government, Forbes said. "Then, developers have to go and pay architects and engineers to design the things and then build them. That can take 18 months, two years, more."
There is a similarly lengthy process for economic development grants for parish governments to spend on things such as repairing schools and replacing community centers lost to the storm.
She said
Letters: Lawsuits drive up Louisiana's car insurance rates, not parts and labor
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