South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Costs

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and reduce costs for homeowners.

Attorneys fees

Costs for consumers have been rising for years. Insurers blame skyrocketi­ng litigation by attorneys who know they can reap far more money for legal fees, they say, than what their clients ultimately get to repair their damages.

Increasing­ly frequent hurricanes and tropical storms also bear much of the blame, as those trigger claims and drive up prices for reinsuranc­e — insurance that insurers have to buy to ensure they can pay all claims after a catastroph­e. Insurers pass all of those increased costs to consumers.

Plaintiffs attorneys counter that most of the industry’s proposals would erode coverage for policyhold­ers.

Legislatio­n would be unnecessar­y if insurers would properly pay out claims, they say. Litigation would be unnecessar­y if insurers held up their end of insurance contracts instead of refusing to cover claims, low-balling customers on claims they agree to cover, or reflexivel­y fighting customers who enlist help from public adjusters or attorneys, said Amy Boggs, chair of the property insurance committee for the Florida Justice Associatio­n, a trade group for plaintiffs attorneys.

It’s insurers that drive up costs of legitimate claims by forcing them into the court system, Boggs said. “They think the cost driver is the attorney’s fee. We think it’s unnecessar­y litigation over claims that should be paid. When [insurers] underpay by $30,000, $40,000 or $50,000, where is the homeowner supposed to get that money from? When carriers have to pay exorbitant legal fees, it’s because they lost the case.”

While the justice associatio­n acknowledg­es the existence of crooked contractor­s and law firms operating as litigation mills, the state should avoid eroding consumers’ insurance coverage and instead enforce existing laws broken by fraudsters, Boggs said.

Exploding litigation

Regardless of which side bears the largest share of blame, it’s undeniable that litigation against insurers has exploded over the past several years. According to a state database, the number of lawsuits filed against insurers of every type in Florida — including auto, health and homeowners — more than doubled from 131,667 between Jan. 1 and Nov. 13 of 2015 to 336,029 over the same period this year.

Brandes, the state senator, expects insurance costs for consumers to double over the next two to three years if the legislatur­e fails to act. Even if lawmakers enact substantia­l reforms, he said, costs will likely rise another 30% next year before stabilizin­g. That’s because it typically takes 18 months for effects of new laws to be reflected in customers’ policies and, as a result, how much they pay for coverage.

Boggs argues that insurers should hold off on major new reforms until they get a clearer idea of the effects of 2019 legislatio­n that restricts what attorneys can earn when representi­ng contractor­s who persuaded homeowners to sign over benefits of their insurance claims.

Data complied so far indicates those reforms cut so-called “assignment of benefits” lawsuits roughly in half, but insurers contend that attorneys have simply switched their focus to representi­ng policyhold­ers directly.

Policy costs and roof repair

Some proposed changes outlined by Brandes would lower costs for customers while making their policies less attractive to plaintiffs attorneys. But those customers would also have to accept reduced coverage.

For instance, consumers could lower their costs by opting to be insured for the depreciate­d value of their roofs rather than the full replacemen­t value. Too many consumers have been able to get free roofs from their insurers by allowing their repair contractor to find damage and blame it on a recent hurricane or hail storm, when actually the roof is at the end of its life and should be replaced at the homeowner’s expense, he said.

“People have to recognize that insurance is there not for home maintenanc­e but for protection against catastroph­ic loss,” he said.

Boggs said the proposal would leave homeowners without substantia­l savings and unable to replace roofs destroyed by hurricanes. “They need to know if their roof is ripped off, they’re not going to be compensate­d for that.”

Another idea, Brandes said, would be to offer discounts to consumers who agree to pay any deductible upfront. Typically insurers send a check for what their adjusters estimate the damage will cost to fix — minus the deductible.

Claims deadlines

Brandes also proposes allowing homeowners to reduce policy costs by agreeing to shorter deadlines for filing claims after hurricanes or breaches, such as a pipe breaks or appliance ruptures, that caused the covered loss. One reason reinsuranc­e costs have increased so much is that claims stemming from 2017 s Hurricane Irma — mostly for roof repairs — continued to be filed at unexpected levels up to the three-year deadline in September, Brandes said.

Current laws allow non-weather water loss claims up to five years after the incident that caused the damage. “As the years go by, you get more fraudulent claims,” he said.

The Florida Chamber of Commerce, which has lobbied the legislatur­e for several years for reforms aimed at reducing costs driven by fraudulent contractor­s and greedy attorneys, favors reducing the deadline for filing claims after hurricanes or other catastroph­ic events from three years to one year.

“To say that you don’t know after a year that you have hurricane damage is a little crazy,” said Carolyn Johnson, the chamber’s director of business economic developmen­t and innovation policy.

Boggs, from Florida Justice Associatio­n, said that would hurt homeowners who don’t discover hidden hurricane damage for years after storms, or who ignore damage because they don’t think the claim would exceed their steep hurricane deductible.

“Sometimes people with a little bit of damage might not realize it’s significan­t,” she said. Roof damage, she said, is often hidden and unknown to homeowners until it creates problems.

Johnson said that Brandes’ ideas to allow homeowners to build their own policies à la carte style would need to be studied.

“Whenever there are options, it’s probably a good thing,” Johnson said. “Of course, we would also want homeowners to be protected and understand what they are paying for.”

Fee multiplier­s

A industry proposal that died in the Senate last year would limit the ability of plaintiffs attorneys to secure up to three times the legal fees they bill insurers for work on cases they win. Under current law, judges can multiply an attorney’s fee if convinced that the case was particular­ly challengin­g or that the plaintiff would have been unable to obtain competent counsel if the possibilit­y of multiplied legal fees didn’t exist.

Insurers say judges are too generous in awarding multiplied fees in cases that end in settlement­s. “I’ve seen policyhold­ers get $40,000 for their claim while their attorneys get $700,000,” Brandes said. Who ultimately pays the $700,000? Customers do, in the form of higher rates, he said.

Insurers want the law to allow multiplied fees only in “rare” and “exceptiona­l” cases “as it is in 49 other states,” Brandes said.

But arguing against the proposal in the 2020 session, opponents in the legislatur­e said multiplier­s aren’t awarded as often as insurers claim. Plus, the threat of a multiplier helps persuade insurers to continue working toward resolving claims disputes rather than endlessly delaying them, they said.

Brandes said he expects the proposal to succeed next year because several senators who helped kill it in 2020 are no longer in the Senate.

’Loss consultant­s’

Michael Carlson, of the Personal Insurance Federation of Florida, says his organizati­on would like to see Florida enact a reform modeled after a 2017 Texas law that addressed hailstorm abuse. That law requires notificati­on to insurers before lawsuits can be filed so insurers have an opportunit­y to address claims issues. Failure to provide notice could make homeowners’ attorneys ineligible to collect legal fees.

The federation also favors tightening restrictio­ns on public adjusters, who are independen­t agents hired by policyhold­ers to represent their interests in negotiatio­ns over damage costs. State law caps compensati­on for public adjusters at 10% of claims paid for hurricane damage and 20% of claims paid for non-catastroph­e damage. That creates an incentive for adjusters to overestima­te the value of damage, insurers say.

The federation favors paying public adjusters based on whatever additional money is secured beyond what insurers initially offer. For example, if an insurer offers $100 and a public adjuster persuades the insurer to pay $150, then the public adjuster should be paid a percentage of only the additional $50, Carlson said.

Both the federation and chamber say some public adjusters have found a way to circumvent restrictio­ns on their activities by calling themselves “loss consultant­s.” They sidestep laws barring kickbacks from contractor­s and preventing collusion with plaintiffs attorneys, Johnson said. The organizati­ons would like to see loss consultant­s regulated in the same manner as public adjusters.

Public adjusters are already among the most regulated profession­als in the state, says Nancy Dominguez, managing director of the Florida Associatio­n of Public Insurance Adjusters. They are also “a policyhold­er’s first line of defense against big insurance denials and underpayme­nts when they have a claim.”

 ?? SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Insurance coverage for homeowners is becoming prohibitiv­ely expensive in Florida, and the insurance industry has a list of proposals it hopes will bring down costs if Florida lawmakers enact them next spring.
SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Insurance coverage for homeowners is becoming prohibitiv­ely expensive in Florida, and the insurance industry has a list of proposals it hopes will bring down costs if Florida lawmakers enact them next spring.

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