The Cairns Post

Better protection for homeowners ‘a must’

- Samuel Davis

Finding ways to reduce the risk extreme weather events pose to Far North Queensland­ers must be identified as homeowners pick up the pieces following a disastrous wet season, a major insurance group says.

Almost six months on from Tropical Cyclone Jasper and subsequent flooding, Suncorp has processed more than half of the 2600 claims made, with the dual disasters expected to cost around $100m in payouts.

But Suncorp chief executive Steve Johnston said a key learning from the recent parliament­ary inquiry into insurers’ responses to major flood claims in 2022 showed investment in disaster prevention must significan­tly increase.

“For every dollar that’s spent on disasters broadly speaking, 97 cents goes to mopping up and three cents is spent on mitigation,” Mr Johnston said.

“It’s a complete imbalance. We should be looking at incentives that allow people to improve the quality of their own home.

“It’s unusual that you can get a subsidy for a solar panel on your roof but you can’t get a subsidy in North Queensland to batten down your roof against a category 4 cyclone.”

Mr Johnston said “pinch points” had emerged following the cyclone, with low rental vacancy rates leaving many customers in disaster-affected communitie­s struggling to find a place to live.

“Temporary accommodat­ion is a very big pinch point,” he said.

“There are pinch points around plasterers, painters. There will be pinch points around tilers.

“Rental vacancies are at their lowest point ever, there’s a lot of inflation in rental costs.

“Some landlords – not all – have taken the opportunit­y to profit from these events by lifting the costs of rentals.”

Caravans and mobile granny flats will likely be used increasing­ly in years to come to counter the region’s housing crisis.

“We’ve deployed mobile granny flats across the east coast of Australia,” Mr Johnston said. “It’s not a great solution but it allows people to stay on their property and supervise the recovery.

“But if you’re a husband and wife with two kids at school and you’re sitting in a caravan sitting behind your home (after 12 months) waiting for your claim to progress, it’s pretty distressin­g.

“They are last-gasp solutions.”

During his brief visit to the Far North, Mr Johnston met with Cairns Mayor Amy Eden and Leichhardt MP Warren Entsch.

Mr Entsch said he was working with about two dozen claimants with Sure Insurance who had experience­d difficulti­es with the provider.

“Quite a number of those are now in the process of being resolved,” he said.

“But I think they had so many claimants and they’re a relatively new company. Their back-of-house procedures need to be refined and I believe they are doing that.”

Mr Johnston said the sector also needed to identify new ways to better protect homeowners.

“Insurers have to modernise,” he said.

“Create new products that allow people to get an appropriat­e level of cover, even if they can’t get the bells and whistles.”

“For every dollar that’s spent on disasters broadly speaking, 97 cents goes to mopping up and three cents is spent on mitigation

Steve Johnston Suncorp chief executive

 ?? Picture: Brendan Radke ?? Brisbane-based Suncorp Group chief executive and managing director Steve Johnston was in Cairns on Thursday to speak with council and his employees about the insurance work completed in Far North Queensland since Cyclone Jasper and the floods.
Picture: Brendan Radke Brisbane-based Suncorp Group chief executive and managing director Steve Johnston was in Cairns on Thursday to speak with council and his employees about the insurance work completed in Far North Queensland since Cyclone Jasper and the floods.

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