Albuquerque Journal

This year’s winter storm could become the costliest in history

Hurricane Harvey’s $19B in insurance claims will be surpassed, agents say

- BY KYLE ARNOLD

DALLAS — The deep freeze and snowfall that paralyzed Texas this week could be the costliest weather event in state history as home and auto claims start to pour in, insurance industry officials warn.

Ice, snow and some of the coldest temperatur­es in decades will likely result in large insurance claims from customers in every part of the state after the winter storm prompted a precedent-setting weather warning in all 254 counties.

“We are used to our storms here in Texas with tornadoes, hurricanes and hail,” said Camille Garcia, communicat­ions director with the Insurance Council of Texas, a trade group for the state’s home, auto, renters and business insurance agents. “But those are regional. We are talking about an event that reached every part of Texas.”

This storm, which isn’t over as many parts of the state are still experienci­ng snow and sub-freezing conditions, will probably be costlier than Hurricane Harvey, which amounted to $19 billion in insurance claims or about $20.1 billion adjusted for inflation, Garcia said.

And that only includes losses from the home, auto, renters and business insurance market and wouldn’t cover costs from public infrastruc­ture, energy pipelines and power plants that are under extreme pressure from high demand and debilitati­ng weather.

Hurricane Harvey tortured the Gulf Coast for days in 2017 after making landfall in Rockport and stalling over Houston, dumping record-setting rainfall that flooded neighborho­ods and damaged refineries.

North Texas’ most expensive weather events have come in the form of hailstorms in 1992 and 1995 that each resulted in less than $3 billion in damage. The October 2019 tornadoes that ripped through Dallas and Richardson created about $1.5 billion in claims.

In fact, the storm that froze Texas and surroundin­g states could be the most expensive in U.S. history, dwarfing a 1993 winter storm that paralyzed the southern U.S., including Texas, and cost about $5 billion total and $2 billion in insured damages, according to the Insurance Informatio­n Institute.

In Texas, the costliest weather events have come from hurricanes and tropical storms battering Houston, Galveston and the rest of the Gulf Coast. At least that was the case until 2021, when temperatur­es dipped to -2 degrees at DFW Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday.

“This is probably going to be the single-largest claim count for any one event,” Garcia said.

San Antonio-based USAA, the state’s fifth-largest homeowners insurance provider, has already received 20,000 claims for property insurance damage, often from power failures, food spoilage and electronic­s damage, said company spokeswoma­n Rebekah Nelson.

The worst of the claims are likely still ahead, she said. “People won’t even know that their pipes are damaged until they start to thaw and water starts running again.”

Insurance companies are urging homeowners to locate water shutoff valves, often located near the street, the garage or in the front of a home, to be ready just in case leaks start.

Fortunatel­y for homeowners, most standard insurance policies cover burst pipes and most types of damage seen during the recent winter storm, Garcia said. That’s sometimes not the case with hurricanes and tropical storms unless customers have flood insurance or special wind coverage.

“When you talk about underwriti­ng, this kind of storm isn’t something that will likely be factored in,” she said. “This is such an unpreceden­ted event and Texas has so many other tornadoes and storms that this type of thing probably won’t be a factor going forward.”

Widespread damage across the state could also put a strain on contractor­s such as plumbers, roofers and carpenters needed to fix the damage from burst pipes, ice and snow. In the coming days, there will likely be an influx of contractor­s scouting neighborho­ods looking for damage or posting to social media.

Homeowners and renters should be wary of contractor­s wanting large amounts of cash up-front or without proper certificat­ions, said Carmen Balber, executive director of Los Angelesbas­ed Consumer Watchdog.

Hotel costs incurred during power outages and freezing temperatur­es may also be covered by insurance and customers should check with insurance agents, Balber said.

Dallas resident Van Moushegian, a licensed irrigation specialist, has found himself becoming the Sparkman neighborho­od’s resident expert, along with a handful of others with knowledge in turning off water or doing athome repairs.

“People started putting stuff up on the Facebook neighborho­od group about being worried about their pipes,” Moushegian said. Some have had pipes burst in ceilings that weren’t insulated or problems with copper piping on exterior walls of homes.

“When you hit zero or negative, houses here just weren’t built for that,” he said.

The average water damage claim in Texas will usually cost about $10,300 to repair, but the national average is about $15,500, said Chris Pilcic, a spokesman for State Farm, the state’s largest homeowners insurance provider.

 ?? SMILEY N. POOL/THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS ?? A second winter storm brought more snow and continued freezing temperatur­es to north Texas. The deep freeze could be the costliest weather event in Texas history, members of the insurance industry say.
SMILEY N. POOL/THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS A second winter storm brought more snow and continued freezing temperatur­es to north Texas. The deep freeze could be the costliest weather event in Texas history, members of the insurance industry say.

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