San Antonio Express-News

Insurance companies in La. fail after Ida

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BATON ROUGE, La. — Insurance companies operating in Louisiana will be charged at least $100 million to pay the claims of two failed property insurers who went belly up in Hurricane Ida’s aftermath. But the cost of dealing with the insolvent insurers ultimately will fall on the state after companies recoup the dollars through a series of tax credits.

The Advocate reports that the board of the Louisiana Insurance Guaranty Associatio­n — a statespons­ored safety net for policyhold­ers — voted for the first time since 2004 to charge insurers 1 percent of their net written premiums to help fill its coffers.

The guaranty fund, known as LIGA, covers claims for policyhold­ers whose insurers become insolvent.

Its work is being triggered after the state insurance department in mid-november took control of two regional insurers whose finances tanked following Hurricane Ida: Access Home Insurance Co. and State National Fire Insurance Co.

The two companies provided coverage for around 28,000 homeowners.

Now, when those policyhold­ers file a claim, they’ll deal with LIGA, or one of its contractor­s. At least 8,000 claims have already been filed so far.

“Our whole goal is to pay the people as timely and effectivel­y as possible, but we’re in a bit of a transition period,” said John Wells, LIGA’S executive director. “We’re talking days and weeks, not months and years, to get people paid.”

At a minimum, the guaranty fund will need $100 million to fill the gap between what’s owed to policyhold­ers and what the insurers have on-hand, Wells said.

Hurricanes Laura, Delta and Zeta in 2020 cost insurers $10.6 billion.

Ida, which struck in August, is projected to cost insurers between $20 billion and $40 billion.

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