Santa Fe New Mexican

Wildfires cause chaos in property insurance market

- By Ken Sweet and Sarah Skidmore Sell

NEW YORK — Kent Michitsch seemed to be running out of traditiona­l options to insure the home he’s lived in for more than 30 years northeast of San Diego as California’s massive property insurance market reels from three consecutiv­e years of destructiv­e wildfires.

Michitsch, 57, has received three nonrenewal notices in three years, and said he feared getting a fourth one when his homeowners’ policy comes up for renewal the middle of next year if it wasn’t for California lawmakers’ recent interventi­on in the market.

“It’s constant worry and frustratio­n. You know you’re covered now, but I might have to look for a new policy next year yet again.” Michitsch said he’s never made a claim on his insurance.

Thousands of homeowners like Michitsch have lost their insurance policies in the last few years as insurers pull out of areas that are at risk of fire damage or stop insuring homes altogether. They’ve been forced to scramble to find coverage from regular insurance providers or to turn as a last resort to a government sanctioned plan that at the moment only provides fire coverage.

State Farm, the largest insurer in the state, Allstate and other insurers declined to renew roughly 350,000 policies in areas at high risk for wildfires since 2015, the California Department of Insurance said in August, and the department has gotten “record numbers” of requests this year from insurers to increase the rates they charge property owners. The data also shows 33,000 policies were not renewed by insurers in ZIP codes affected by the major wildfires.

While the insurance industry says the California property insurance market is resilient, state lawmakers and officials have had to scramble to keep the market from grinding to a halt from the unexpected additional risk.

The California Legislatur­e passed a law earlier this year giving the Department of Insurance emergency powers to keep policies in effect for those in fire-prone areas. This month California Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara put a one-year moratorium on nonrenewal­s, in hopes that lawmakers, insurance companies and other stakeholde­rs can reach a more substantia­l solution for the roughly 1 million homeowners in ZIP codes adjacent to previous wildfires.

“This wildfire insurance crisis has been years in the making, but it is an emergency we must deal with now if we are going to keep the California dream of home ownership from becoming the California nightmare, as an increasing number of homeowners struggle to find coverage,” Lara said in a statement.

The fires of 2017 and 2018 caused a combined $25.3 billion in damages, according to the California Department of Insurance. That’s exponentia­lly higher than the previous wildfires in 2015 and 2008, which caused $1.1 billion and $719 million in damages, respective­ly.

The insurance industry has yet to release an estimate of damages from this year’s wildfire season, but the costs are expected to be high. The most significan­t wildfire this year was the Kincade Fire, which started October 23 and burned 78,000 acres in Sonoma County. It destroyed 374 buildings and damaged another 60, according to the California Department of Forestry & Fire Protection. “The wildfires in California will likely make it more difficult for California homeowners to buy insurance,” said Stu Ryland, senior vice president of the Pacific Region at Sedgwick, an insurance claims management company. “Premiums are likely to go up, particular­ly in areas that are prone to wildfires, and in some cases it may be difficult for consumers to find an insurer willing to write their insurance.”

The fires of 2017 and 2018 caused a combined $25.3 billion in damages

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