Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Citizens’ tries to justify new rate hike

Hearing attendees aim to foil increase

- By Ron Hurtibise Staff writer

Factions in a long-running debate over increased litigation that’s driving up costs of Citizens Property Insurance Corp. policies reprised familiar arguments in a public hearing over the company’s proposed 2018 rates in North Miami on Wednesday.

Citizens is proposing to increase premiums for multiperil singlefami­ly homeowners in Broward County by an average 10.4 percent. Miami-Dade customers would pay an additional 10.5 percent while Palm Beach County policyhold­ers would pay 9.3 percent more.

This year, rates rose 8.9 percent to 10 percent in most of the region.

Citizens CEO Barry Gilway again blamed claims abuses by water damage contractor­s and their attorneys who use “loss consultant­s” to “mine” South Florida neighborho­ods for potential water damage victims, then perform costly work after persuading policyhold­ers to sign an “assignment of benefits.”

Gilway said the goal is to find plaintiffs to sue Citizens so attorneys can collect legal fees. Although the number of water claims has decreased as Citizens’ policy count has decreased by two-thirds since 2012, the average cost per water claim in the tricounty region has increased from $10,279 in 2012 to $19,800 in 2016, Gilway said.

Policy changes approved last week by the Office of Insurance Regulation, including capping nonweather water damage payouts at $10,000 for customers who do not use Citizens’ new managed repair contractor network beginning Feb. 1, are “the only way we can get our arms around these lawsuits,” he said.

But several speakers pushed back at Citizens’ efforts to lay the blame totally on contractor­s and attorneys.

State Sen. Anitere Flores, chair of the Senate Committee on Banking and Insurance, said consumers are tired of paying higher rates for lower levels of coverage.

Perhaps more suits are occurring, Flores said, because “sometimes the insurance industry’s plan is to deny claims on the front end, and that’s why we’re forced into litigation.”

But Dulce Suarez-Resnick, an insurance agent in Miami-Dade County representi­ng the pro-reform Consumer Protection Coalition, said insurance costs are becoming unaffordab­le for her policyhold­ers — when companies are willing to write coverage there.

“South Florida cannot stand another year of [assignment of benefits] abuses,” she said. “We need reform. We need it now.”

State insurance regulators are expected to make final decisions on Citizens rates in early September.

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