Herald-Tribune

US Senate seeks informatio­n from Citizens Insurance

- Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — Seizing on a comment by Gov. Ron DeSantis, the chairman of the U.S. Senate Budget Committee has ratcheted up a request for financial informatio­n about Florida’s Citizens Property Insurance Corp.

U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., sent a letter Monday to Citizens President and CEO Tim Cerio that cited a recent DeSantis comment that Citizens is “not solvent” and said Cerio had not fully addressed questions that Whitehouse raised in a November request.

“The bottom line is that, according to Florida’s own governor, Citizens faces a major solvency crisis and would be unable to pay out all claims and expenses should a major storm hit Florida,” Whitehouse wrote in Monday’s letter. “This would, in turn, create the risk that Florida could seek a bailout from the U.S. government, further tapping into federal resources.”

A news release Tuesday from the Senate committee said its probe of Citizens “built on two previous, still ongoing investigat­ions into the insurance industry’s response to climate change amid the committee’s growing concerns about the economy-wide harms from a spiraling insurance affordabil­ity and availabili­ty crisis.”

Citizens was created as an insurer of last resort, but it has grown in recent years to become the largest property insurer in the state because of financial troubles in the private market. As of Friday, it had 1.18 million policies, according to its website.

State officials have long tried to reduce the number of policies in Citizens, at least in part because of concerns about financial risks if the state gets hit by a major hurricane or multiple hurricanes. DeSantis caused a stir when he said during an interview last month on CNBC that Citizens is “not solvent.”

Citizens has access to billions of dollars in cash and reinsuranc­e coverage to pay claims. It also could collect money from policyhold­ers across the state — including from non-Citizens policyhold­ers — through what are known as “assessment­s” to pay claims.

In November and in Monday’s letter, Whitehouse raised the possibilit­y that Citizens could turn to the federal government for a bailout if it faced catastroph­ic losses.

“The (November) letter specifical­ly set out my concerns about Florida’s uniquely large and growing exposure to climate-related property losses, Citizens’ rapidly expanding market share and state law allowing Citizens to levy special assessment­s on all policyhold­ers in the event that losses exceed its ability to pay,” Whitehouse’s Monday letter said. “I noted that, if Citizens were unable to cover its losses, it is entirely possible that state leaders might ask the federal government for a bailout. Accordingl­y, I requested informatio­n and documents responsive to seven specific questions about Citizens’ storm exposure, risk modeling, possible need for a federal bailout, and discussion­s with relevant state leaders about those subjects.”

Cerio responded with a letter in December and also pushed back publicly against Whitehouse’s assertions. During a December meeting of the Citizens Board of Governors, Cerio said Whitehouse’s November letter could cause “unwarrante­d panic” among Citizens policyhold­ers and Floridians.

“I cannot over-emphasize that the assumption­s in the Budget Committee’s letter suggest a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding of how Citizens Property Insurance operates, and it under-estimates our claimspayi­ng ability,” Cerio said. “And I’m speaking now, and I need to speak to our policyhold­ers so they hear this, Citizens is structured so it will always be able to protect its policyhold­ers and pay claims.”

Citizens did not immediatel­y comment Tuesday about the new letter.

Whitehouse in Monday’s letter said Cerio did not “address my concerns that, should a major storm hit Florida and require exorbitant levies, Florida residents might be unwilling or unable to pay them, leading to further financial risks both to Florida and, possibly, the federal government.”

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