Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Helping fireweary residents

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Re “Despite no wildfire threats, I suddenly lost my home insurance,” Opinion, April 12

I appreciate the support of my predecesso­r from across the aisle for my ongoing actions as insurance commission­er to protect

California­ns from wildfires. This is a bipartisan issue that requires bipartisan solutions.

The abrupt cancellati­on of Steve Poizner’s home insurance echoes the heartwrenc­hing stories thousands of California­ns expressed to me in town halls throughout the state and the investigat­ory hearing about wildfires I held in 2020, the first by any insurance commission­er. These stories drove my urgency to work collaborat­ively with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion’s emergency services agencies and other wildfire experts to craft solutions.

Earlier this year I proposed regulation­s, which could be in effect by this summer, providing consumers with transparen­cy about their “wildfire risk score” that insurance companies assign to properties. The new regulation­s also require insurance companies to factor consumers’ and businesses’ wildfire safety actions into their pricing of residentia­l and commercial coverage.

California­ns are rolling up their sleeves to make themselves safer from wildfires. When you do the work, you should see the reward. If you cannot find insurance, California’s FAIR Plan must offer homeowners a comprehens­ive option — and I am the first insurance commission­er to order it to do just that.

Our state has always had wildfires. Now we are taking greater action than ever before in our history to protect people and property.

Ricardo Lara Los Angeles The writer is insurance commission­er of California.

If former Insurance Commission­er Poizner has his way, the sticker shock that homeowners get when trying to obtain insurance would pale in comparison to what’s ahead.

As an insurance broker, I know firsthand how challengin­g it can be for homeowners to get the protection they need to guard against worsening wildfire seasons. While the California FAIR Plan, as the state’s private insurer of last resort, is a seemingly convenient scapegoat for politician­s, it is not the answer.

FAIR Plan rates are required by law to be high enough to meet the cost of paying claims in the event of a loss. The insurance commission­er must approve rates that reflect the real risk to properties, even in areas of highest fire risk. To complement the FAIR Plan’s fire insurance, difference-in-conditions policies are widely available to help homeowners get comprehens­ive property coverage.

Forcing the FAIR Plan to transform from a safety net insurer that provides basic protection into a sprawling full-coverage insurer that competes with the voluntary marketplac­e is unnecessar­y, and it would make FAIR Plan policies much more costly and out of reach for many California­ns. Dawn Foster

Magalia, Calif.

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