Los Angeles Times

Insurance is hard for drivers to find. What’s to blame?

Insurers say California regulation, inflation. It’s greed, consumer advocate counters.

- By Karen Garcia

As if high gas prices weren’t making life miserable enough, California drivers are being buffeted by higher auto insurance premiums — if they can find coverage at all.

Frustrated by state regulation­s, a number of insurers have limited the new policies their agents can sell in California. Barbara Caudana, a personal line account manager for Conrey Insurance Brokers & Risk Management in Orange, said she and other agents at Conrey are having to turn away at least three potential customers a day.

“We’re working really hard to not ever say to a person, ‘Jeez, I’m sorry there’s nothing we can do,’ ” she said.

Conrey is currently working with four insurers that limited coverage opportunit­ies for new clients, a common problem for drivers who are newly licensed or shopping for another insurer. Drivers can lose coverage even for seemingly small offenses, such as missing one payment — Caudana said there are no more grace periods.

If a driver is matched with a coverage plan, the second hurdle is waiting sometimes 15 days before coverage kicks in. Laine Caspi, an agent for Paratus Insurance Services in Granada Hills, said she worries that people are driving without coverage during these waiting periods.

For California drivers who already have policies, the challenge for many is the sharp increase in premiums when they renew. Caspi said she’s gotten calls from people who can’t afford the increase and are dropping their coverage.

How did we get here? It started when California Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara ordered insurers to make partial refunds to policyhold­ers who were overcharge­d for March and April in 2020, when the pandemic’s stay-at-home orders in effect decluttere­d California’s roadways and lowered the risk of being on the road, according to a study by UC Davis. The requiremen­t to lower premiums remained in effect as the pandemic continued.

“At this point we’re up to $2.6 billion in returns of premiums, so that’s money saved thanks to the strong actions we took and the protection­s that we have,” said Michael Soller, a spokesman for the Department of Insurance.

It was a priority for the commission­er to make sure drivers weren’t being overcharge­d, Soller added.

On top of the pandemicre­lated refunds, the commission­er also refused to approve any rate increases for automobile insurance providers for most of 2022.

Big-name insurers have been saying for months that they “can’t get the rates they need from the state Department of Insurance,” said Mike D’Arelli, executive director of American Agents Alliance, a national associatio­n of independen­t insurance agents and brokers.

The companies complained they were losing money despite being profitable as recently as 2022, according to Department of Insurance data.

At the tail end of 2022 and the beginning of 2023, Geico, Mercury Insurance, Allstate and several other insurers were approved for 6.9% increases, and some smaller insurers got larger hikes. Neverthele­ss, D’Arelli said, by the time the rate-approval process was completed, the increases did not keep up with the rise in costs in the current economy.

“That really brought things to this fever pitch,” he said.

According to S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce, private auto insurers across the U.S. are “racing to increase premium rates as they seek to offset historical­ly poor underwriti­ng results,” which reflect the difference between premiums collected and claims paid.

It reported that the average increase for private auto insurance was 11% in the U.S. through August 2023. The rate change process and the amount of premium increase approved differ in each state.

Companies then tapped the brakes and started limiting agents to no more than two to five new policyhold­ers a month, D’Arelli said, adding that some insurers were going as far as disciplini­ng agents for exceeding their quota.

To request rate increases, insurers have to present their case to the California Department of Insurance and undergo a review process establishe­d by Propositio­n 103, the premiumrol­lback initiative that voters approved in 1988.

Propositio­n 103 gave the insurance commission­er the power to review property and casualty insurance premiums before they go into effect, known as a “prior approval” system. It also sharply limited the factors insurers could consider when setting rates, requiring that they show data connecting each factor to their risk of loss. The goal was to prevent insurers from setting discrimina­tory premiums that didn’t reflect a driver’s potential for claims.

If a requested premium increase exceeds 7%, the commission typically replies with a counteroff­er based on its calculatio­ns of the insurer’s risks. Propositio­n 103 also allows consumer advocates and other third parties to intervene with their own analyses and arguments; one group that frequently does so is Consumer Watchdog, a nonprofit founded by attorney Harvey Rosenfield, the author of the ballot measure. If there’s no agreement, the insurer can continue to push for a higher increase through a hearing, although hearings are rare, Soller said.

This system has affected how insurance companies behave because “they want to be competitiv­e with other insurance companies,” Soller said.

There have been rumblings about insurers leaving California and taking their business to states with fewer regulation­s; two examples are Kemper Independen­ce Insurance and its subsidiary Unitrin Auto and Home Insurance, which will stop covering California drivers in January. If a company does take its business elsewhere, Rosenfield said, the insurance commission­er has emergency authority under Propositio­n 103 to bring it back.

“Lara has recently really pushed back on the interventi­on process because it contribute­s so dramatical­ly to the cost and time involved in getting rate filings approved,” D’Arelli said.

Soller and D’Arelli said inflation helped drive the larger premium increases, but Rosenfield chalked it up to greed.

Insurers have “been looking for a way to get either the insurance commission­er or the courts, the voters, the Legislatur­e or the governor on board to derail Propositio­n 103 and its protection­s for years,” he said. “And it’s not just because [they’ll be] able to rip us off like they used to in California, but because Propositio­n 103 has become a model for reform all over the country.”

 ?? Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times ?? DRIVERS are finding it more difficult to get auto insurance, and when they do, the price can be high.
Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times DRIVERS are finding it more difficult to get auto insurance, and when they do, the price can be high.

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