Daily Press (Sunday)

Insurance commission­er meets with OBX residents

Proposed major rate hikes draw some pushback

- By Corinne Saunders Staff writer

MANTEO — A court date is set for Oct. 7, when North Carolina Insurance Commission­er Mike Causey said he will hear evidence supporting the North Carolina Rate Bureau’s request for an average homeowners increase of 42.2% that’s “up to 99.4%” in some coastal counties.

The proposal could mean over 60% jumps in rates for Dare County’s beach communitie­s, according to local resolution­s and letters against the increase.

The Rate Bureau is a non-government­al agency the state legislatur­e created in 1977, and it represents the insurance industry, said Causey, who was first elected in 2016 and won another term in ’20.

“It was the largest rate hike I’ve ever seen since I’ve been in this job,” Causey said of the January rate increase filing as he addressed 26 people last week at the Virginia S. Tillett Community Center in Manteo.

In response to questions about a percentage of increase he would find acceptable and agree to, he was noncommitt­al.

When the matter is brought to court, Causey said he’s “keeping an open mind. I want to see what sort of proof and evidence the insurance industry through the Rate Bureau brings forward.”

For the previous average 24.5% homeowners rate increase requested in 2020, Causey canceled the hearing and settled outside of court for an average 7.9% increase, according to a Nov. 23, 2021, Department of Insurance press release.

Causey said he’d capped that increase at 10%, and it went into effect in January 2022.

Many insurance companies say they’re paying out more in homeowners claims than they’re taking in on premiums, Causey said. For every dollar they receive

in premiums, they pay out $1.15, and “some estimates are higher.”

A man who identified himself as a Farm Bureau employee said that insurance companies are required to purchase reinsuranc­e, and its “cost has doubled in the past two years. Every insurance company lost money over the last two years.”

Local government­s, residents and organizati­ons across the state vehemently expressed opposition to the proposed rate hike, which the North Carolina Rate Bureau asked to go into effect Aug. 1.

Causey said his office received over 25,000 letters and emails mostly opposing the increase.

Locally, the towns of Duck, Kitty Hawk, Kill Devil Hills and Manteo each adopted resolution­s against the proposed rate increase during their January meetings. The Dare County Board of Commission­ers and the Town of Southern Shores each sent a letter of opposition to Causey, also in January.

The proposal would raise rates 45.1% for Dare and Currituck counties’ beach communitie­s and 33.9% for inland areas, according to the resolution­s and letters.

Homeowners with coverage through the N.C. Insurance Underwriti­ng Associatio­n — commonly called “the Beach Plan” — also would face the 15% surcharge imposed by state law, “ultimately resulting in an insurance rate increase of 60.1% for beach communitie­s

and 48.9% for inland areas,” the Kill Devil Hills, Kitty Hawk and Manteo resolution­s noted.

The Beach Plan insures about 70% of homes in the state’s 20 coastal counties, Causey said.

The Beach Plan insures the fourth-largest number of plans in the state, but it’s “not comparable” to other insurance companies, said Donna Creef, government affairs director of the Outer Banks Associatio­n of REALTORS (OBAR).

Creef has expressed frequent concerns in recent months about the state’s insurance market’s “narrowing” and more people being driven to the Beach Plan, which the legislatur­e set up as the market of last resort. She was one of many Outer Banks homeowners who recently lost their insurance with Nationwide, despite never filing a claim.

The Virginian-Pilot reported in September that Nationwide would not renew over 10,500 homeowners policies in North Carolina, with more than 1,000 of those on the Outer Banks.

OBAR and Dare County jointly hosted a property insurance forum on Nov. 2 to educate the local community about how insurance rates are set in North Carolina.

A man in attendance Monday said that the rate increases “always hit northeaste­rn North Carolina,” despite the area not having “heavy claims” in comparison with the rest of the state.

“I noticed that,” Causey acknowledg­ed. This year’s rate increase filing asked for a 4% increase for Haywood County, where he said “floods devastated a whole community.”

The remnants of Tropical Storm Fred in August 2021 led to deadly flooding in Haywood County, which is in the mountains west of Asheville, according to multiple news reports.

In response to questions about his office swaying insurance companies or overhaulin­g the state’s insurance system, Causey several times directed people to the only group he said could change the system.

“I encourage you to talk to your legislator­s,” Causey said.

This is the fourth homeowners insurance rate increase request since Causey has been in office, according to the Rate Bureau website. Five requests for dwelling rate increases have also been filed during his tenure.

Dwelling policies cover non-owner-occupied properties, such as rental and investment homes.

The most recent dwelling rate filing, July 13, 2023, was proposed to go into effect June 1 and would mean a 78.6% increase for policies on the Outer Banks. The statewide average increase would be 50.6%.

Causey worked in the insurance industry for over 25 years, including owning his own agency, according to his profession­al biography. He told The Pilot he worked in life, accident and health insurance.

Causey won his threeway Republican primary this month with almost 61% of the vote, according to the North Carolina State Board of Elections website, but told reporters before the talk that this was not a campaign stop.

He told The Pilot that he holds such forums across the state, and he’d already had a meeting in neighborin­g Currituck County scheduled with various law enforcemen­t agencies about “what we need to do to go after insurance fraud.”

He said during the talk that insurance fraud “is one of the biggest drivers pushing up our insurance premium.”

 ?? CORINNE SAUNDERS/STAFF ?? North Carolina Insurance Commission­er Mike Causey speaks in Manteo last week.
CORINNE SAUNDERS/STAFF North Carolina Insurance Commission­er Mike Causey speaks in Manteo last week.

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