Los Angeles Times

Consumer advocates and insurers clash over homeowner coverage at hearing

- By Laurence Darmiento

The fault lines running through California’s spiraling homeowners insurance crisis were on display Tuesday at a state hearing, where consumer advocates clashed with industry firms over a plan to allow insurers to use complex computer models to set premiums — a move state officials say will attract insurers to the market.

State Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara has proposed allowing insurers to employ so-called catastroph­e modeling, which uses algorithms that predict the future risk properties face from wildfires, when setting the price of policies. Currently, rates are based on an insurance company’s past losses, which insurers increasing­ly dismiss as insufficie­nt in light of the widespread acceptance that climate change has thrust California into a more dangerous future by causing more wildfires.

The models, which are in use in other states, are a key element of Lara’s strategy to moderate price increases by allowing more accurate calculatio­n of risks while persuading insurers to do business in neighborho­ods prone to wildfires. The move comes amid a recent stream of insurers exiting the California market with announceme­nts they are not renewing policies or have stopped writing new ones.

Consumer groups worried at the hearing that the draft regulation­s would not allow enough scrutiny of the models, while several consulting firms that have developed them expressed concern about protecting their intellectu­al property.

“The algorithms and artificial intelligen­ce that private ‘black box’ catastroph­e models use will simply be tools for insurance company price gouging unless California mandates real transparen­cy into how they impact prices and imposes real rules of the road regarding their design and use,” said Carmen Balber, executive director of Consumer Watchdog, an L.A. advocacy group that led the campaign for passage of Propositio­n 103, the 1988 measure that requires homeowners and auto insurers to get state approval for rate hikes.

The group, like other consumer advocates who spoke at the hearing, called on Lara to work with the state’s academic and insurance experts to develop a “public model,” in which all the factors that go into the computer simulation­s are available for everyone to review. Such a model could be used to set rates or benchmark privately developed models.

The draft regulation­s require those who want to review the models to sign nondisclos­ure agreements.

Julia Borman, a director at Verisk, a company that builds computer models used by insurers, expressed concern that the draft proposal put forth by Lara would allow for a review by “countless participan­ts and create the opportunit­y for an infinite timeline,” while not safeguardi­ng companies from having their models ripped off by others

Michael Soller, the state Department of Insurance’s deputy commission­er for communicat­ions, said Lara has publicly stated that the draft rules will allow for the developmen­t of public catastroph­e models, which the department might then use to evaluate the insurers’ proprietar­y models.

The proposal to allow catastroph­e models is part of Lara’s larger Sustainabl­e Insurance Strategy announced last fall. Other elements include righting the finances of the state’s Fair Access to Insurance Requiremen­ts plan, an insurer of last resort that has been deluged with new policyhold­ers since insurers started pulling back from the market. He also wants to allow insurers to include in premiums the cost of reinsuranc­e, which they purchase to protect themselves from disasters.

Catastroph­e models are already allowed in California for pricing policies that cover earthquake­s and fires caused by quakes. Along with wildfires, under the proposed regulation­s, the use of the models would also be permitted for insurance covering terrorism, floods and some other types of coverage.

Gerald Zimmerman, senior vice president of government and industry relations at Allstate, which stopped selling new homeowners insurance policies in the state in 2022, said that adopting Lara’s strategy would be a game changer. “Allstate will begin writing new homeowner insurance policies in nearly every corner of California,” he said.

Other speakers at the three-hour hearing included insurance agents and local officials, as well as homeowners groups, which want to ensure that catastroph­e models take into account steps taken by homeowners and government agencies to reduce fire risks, such as by making homes more fire-resistant and reducing brush in a community. Although the draft regulation­s call for doing so, several speakers complained that such mitigation efforts had not been reflected in recent premium increases.

The Insurance Department plans to review Tuesday’s remarks in preparing for the release of a new set of proposed regulation­s. Lara has the support of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who issued a letter calling for the commission­er to move quickly to resolve the crisis. The regulation­s do not require legislativ­e approval or the governor’s signature.

“We will review all public comments while staying on track to implement all changes this year, so insurance companies start writing more policies in all areas,” Soller said.

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