CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEW INSURANCE LAW WILL WORK – FOR THE COMPANIES”
The newspaper headline
asked the proper question, but the story that followed missed the point. It
read, “California’s plan to stabilize its home insurance market is now law.
Will it work?”
The headline writer clearly wondered whether this new law, promulgated by
Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara and not by the usual set of state
legislators, would work for homeowners, many of whom have seen their insurance
policies cancelled over the threat of fires, both wild brush and forest fires
and blazes within neighborhoods made up of decades-old wood homes.
The insurance industry’s
version of the answer was given pretty quickly. The companies believe it will
work just fine for them. The new law contains elements they’ve sought for
decades, but were consistently denied by California’s 1988 Proposition 103, which
specifically forbade basing rates on industry risk forecasting formulae, but
rather only on past events in the many locales where California’s homes have
been built.
Under those rules, the
more fires an area has experienced, the higher rates could go in that place and
others nearby.
Lara intended his new
rules to stabilize the state’s property insurance market, affecting not only
homes but also other types of structures, from barns to body shops.
From now on, the industry
will be able to base rates on secret “black box” alogorithms drawing on a wide
range of information, including weather patterns, topography and other data,
rather than relying mostly on historical losses in particular areas.
In exchange, the companies
committed to cover more homeowners in wildfire areas. But this commitment is
not compulsory in the actual new rules. In short, the companies got the rule
change they have wanted since the early 1990s, while making only paper promises
in return.
The stated commitment from
the insurance industry is that companies will cover 85 percent of homes in
known wildfire areas. Seeming to demonstrate they mean to keep this commitment,
Farmers Insurance quickly announced it plans to write 9,500 new property
policies per month here for the foreseeable future, up from the 7,000 it
accepted in 2023.
But this move is purely
voluntary, unforced by any law or regulation and Farmers or any other companies
making similar commitments can change their minds anytime.
So consumers lose the
protection of knowing their rates are based on real events, while getting
unenforceable promises in return. That’s basically because Lara gave in to
industry blackmail, as the companies virtually ceased writing new policies in
California until they got rules they liked.
Instead, Lara could have
stood up to them by saying something like, “You will sell property insurance in
California, or you won’t sell any other type of coverage, including auto or
life.” Under that scenario, the companies pretty soon would have had to choose
between losing their largest American market or selling new property policies
under the old rules.
It's almost Biblical, but
California’s insurance boss gave away new and much higher rates but didn’t even
get a mess of pottage like Esau did when trading his birthright for lentil soup
(pottage).
Here’s the new insurance
reality, as outlined by analysts for the Consumer Watchdog customer-interest
group: Insurance companies won’t have to sell anything more than a bare bones
policy similar to those consumers get today if they’re on the state-run FAIR
Plan. Rate increases are already starting, but insurance companies won’t have
to report on improvements they’ve made to the overall market for two years, at
the beginning of 2027. And after those two years, any insurer may put off
indefinitely its supposed commitment to sell more policies in high-risk areas,
so long as it claims to be making a “reasonable effort.”
At the same time,
companies are allowed to violate Proposition 103’s requirement for public
disclosure of mathematical price-making formulae. Nor must wildfire models used
in rate-making be proven reliable and unbiased.
It’s essentially a license
for the insurance industry to take more money from every property owner in
California, and it now appears those insurance consumers will have no legal
defense against it, even though the new regulations were never approved by the
state’s Office of Administrative Law, which usually reviews all rule changes.
Lara calls this a victory,
but it’s actually abject surrender.
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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