Times Colonist

Insurance costs, builder shortages mean a long road for California­ns

- SARAH SKIDMORE SELL

California­ns who lost a home to the state’s wildfires could face a nightmaris­h recovery as they try to rebuild.

It’s always a challenge to recuperate after any disaster, but California residents face a unique problem. Experts say the seemingly endless series of devastatin­g wildfires in recent years has increased costs and limited the available pool of workers needed to rebuild.

Homeowners can also find themselves confused by the insurance system and even underinsur­ed, leaving them to bear more of the costs of rebuilding than they might have expected.

Blazes have been so frequent that the state government recently passed a spate of laws intended to help victims of wildfires, but experts say it can still sometimes take years for a home to be rebuilt.

California is fighting three fires — the Camp Fire in the northern part of the state and the Woolsey and Hill fires just outside of Los Angeles in the south. Statewide, thousands of people have been evacuated, more than 225,000 acres have burned and 44 people have died.

The Camp Fire is now deemed the most deadly in the state’s history — killing at least 42 people and burning more than 125,000 acres. That follows this summer’s Mendocino Complex fire, which burned more than 459,000 acres and led to more than $56 million in insured losses, and a particular­ly brutal fire season in 2017.

Credit rating agency Moody’s estimated insured losses for the three current fires will be between $3 billion and $6 billion. The staggering price tag is due in part to the size of the fires but also the costs of rebuilding — both materials and labour.

Dan Dunmoyer, president and CEO of the California Building Industry Associatio­n, said builders were having trouble finding enough workers prior to the fires because of high demand for housing in the state.

The spate of fires has only worsened the problem and that adds to the delay for consumers. “If your home burns down by itself, you have no problem rebuilding, but if it burns down with 2,000 others, you have to wait,” Dunmoyer said.

Homeowners also sometimes find themselves struggling to navigate the insurance system.

United Policyhold­ers, a nonprofit that aims to help consumers with insurance issues, said that it regularly hears from policyhold­ers struggling with their insurer following a disaster. Policies may not have been updated in some time or estimates of rebuilding costs were too low, so homeowners find themselves on the hook for large expenses.

The group estimates, based on polls of communitie­s affected by disasters, that two-thirds of insured households are underinsur­ed. Or, they simply are struggling to jump through the hoops.

“The insurance piece really gets people because they felt like it was the rug getting pulled out from under them,” said Amy Bach, executive director of United Policyhold­ers.

“OK, I lost everything, but at least I have insurance. But then insurance is a fight.”

While it can be a smooth process for some, others feel like “mother nature just took my house, now insurance took my sanity,” she said.

 ?? NOAH BERGER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chris and Nancy Brown embrace while searching through the remains of their home, levelled by the Camp Fire, in Paradise, California. As the fire approached, Nancy Brown escaped from the home with her two-year-old and three dogs.
NOAH BERGER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chris and Nancy Brown embrace while searching through the remains of their home, levelled by the Camp Fire, in Paradise, California. As the fire approached, Nancy Brown escaped from the home with her two-year-old and three dogs.

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