CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILDFIRE INSURANCE CRISIS HITS EVER HARDER”
Californians
have heard plenty about the wildfire crisis that’s afflicted this state for the
last few years, highlighted by a rash of huge blazes and evacuations of more
than 1 million area residents.
But as
the height of the annual fire season approaches, there has been little
attention paid to the ever-increasing expenses inflicted on property owners and
renters in or near wildlands, who may not ever be burned out, but are certainly
getting burned.
For a
fire insurance crisis of ever increasing magnitude is now upon California and
the state has done nothing to prevent or mitigate it.
While
thousands of owners and occupants of properties fully or partially destroyed in
fires from Redding to Paradise to Napa to Ventura and Malibu still wrestle with
lawyers and insurance companies as they try for damage compensation, other
thousands are getting hit now via their mailboxes.
Increasing
numbers of potential fire area residents from the Sierra Nevada Mountain
foothills to plush residential areas in suburban San Diego County and the hills
of the East Bay are receiving cancellation notices from their property
insurance firms, forcing them to seek new policies just when most insurers want
to rid themselves of potential liabilities in or near California’s forests and
brushlands.
Others
are seeing their policy premiums doubled and tripled.
One
typical homeowner in Oakhurst near the southern approach road to Yosemite
National Park saw his rate raised this spring from just over $2,000 a year to
more than $6,000. But at least he can still buy insurance on the general market.
Thousands
more are being forced onto the open market, trying to obtain coverage from
reluctant insurers.
It’s a
situation reminiscent of the mid-1990s, when every large insurance company in
America boycotted the California homeowners insurance market. They cancelled or
declined to renew virtually every homeowners insurance policy in the state
after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and 1994’s Northridge temblor combined to
inflict billions of dollars of expenses on them.
Rather
than insisting that insurance companies continue to offer quake insurance or be
banned from selling other lucrative coverage – like car and truck policies – in
California, then-Insurance Commissioner Chuck Quackenbush allowed the boycott
to continue and proposed creation of a state-run system that evolved into the
California Earthquake Authority (CEA). Insurance companies resumed selling
homeowner policies, but are off the hook now in California quakes, and would
love the same to apply in wildfires.
But so
far, state lawmakers – like their predecessors who were cowed during the 1990s
– refuse to do much of anything. Among the biggest unresolved issues that
legislators won’t directly confront this year is whether to limit liability of
insurance companies with burned-out customers.
All of
which means that what former Gov. Jerry Brown said last year about wildfires
and climate change – “All hell is breaking loose” – applies now to more than
actual fires.
Former
Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones foresaw some of this two years ago, observing
that insurers must renew policies for a time in actual fire disaster areas, but
they don’t have to renew policies in non-disaster areas when they expire.
That’s
the root of the current crisis. The insurance companies understand many
so-far-unburned parts of California will inevitably become disaster areas and
don’t want their own finances impacted when those disasters hit.
There
is a safety net of sorts for homeowners when their policies aren’t renewed.
It’s called the Fair Plan, roughly equivalent to the CEA in that it must insure
anyone who applies. But Fair Plan rates are much higher than other fire
policies, even at their increased rates. Yes, by law they cannot be excessive,
but no one is sure what that means.
Before
last year’s fires, the number of Fair Plan policies was rising by about 1,000
per year. That will likely climb substantially over the coming months and
years, eventually making the fire insurance crisis less about scarce policies
than it is about money.
The
bottom line: Even if their houses don’t ignite in any of the next few fire
seasons, plenty of homeowners will see their wallets get seriously burned, with
state government unable or unwilling to protect them.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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