Lodi News-Sentinel

As wildfire risk rises, home insurance is tougher to find

- By Sophie Quinton

BOULDER, Colo. — A few months after Chris Cook and his family moved from California into a four-bedroom house nestled among ponderosa pines in the foothills here, they got a letter saying their home insurance policy had been canceled.

The insurer, Allstate, had concluded — after an assessor visited the property — that the house was too likely to be destroyed by a wildfire. Cook, a tech executive and recent transplant from the San Francisco Bay Area, said his reaction was something like, “Wait, what?!”

Mortgage companies require homes to be insured, so the cancellati­on put Cook’s financing at risk. He worried that getting another major insurer to sign off on the home would be more challengin­g after one had turned him down.

He’s not alone. As more and deadlier fires sweep through Western states, it’s becoming harder to get home insurance on a property surrounded by forest, reachable only by backroads, or on slopes where a wildfire is likely to run.

While most homeowners in fire-prone places can still get a policy, insurers often make coverage conditiona­l on homeowners managing trees and undergrowt­h. And some might get denied by several insurers before finding one willing to take on the risk.

States and counties are beginning to step up their efforts to help homeowners make their properties as safe as possible.

The challenge is most acute in California, where catastroph­ic wildfires in 2018 caused more than $9 billion in losses to insured property, according to the state Department of Insurance. The Camp Fire that blazed through the town of Paradise and destroyed nearly 14,000 homes drove a small, local insurer into insolvency.

California’s insurance department doesn’t have hard numbers on how many homes have been denied insurance because companies aren’t required to report that informatio­n, said press secretary Nancy Kincaid.

But since 2014, more than 15,000 homes in medium or extreme fire-risk areas have turned to the state’s lender of last resort, the California Fair Access to Insurance Requiremen­ts Plan, which insurance companies created to serve people unable to find coverage elsewhere. Premiums also are rising in highrisk areas, Kincaid said.

Scientists expect wildfire danger to increase as the climate changes, according to the latest federal climate report. Meanwhile, more people than ever live in forested areas, with millions of homes threatened in California, Colorado and Texas, according to Verisk Analytics, a company that models wildfire risk for insurers.

“The (California) commission­er remains concerned,” Kincaid said, “that between climate change, and drought, and the way and where we built homes, that we’re going to see a growing trend of nonrenewal­s.”

Homeowners can reduce risk, however, by removing fire hazards. In Boulder, Cook’s broker told him that he likely could get Allstate’s underwrite­rs to reconsider if he worked with a nationally regarded Boulder County program to remove problem trees and brush.

The program, Wildfire Partners, helps people create what foresters call “defensible space” around their homes by lopping off low tree limbs, removing leaves from gutters, and taking other steps that make it harder for fire to travel.

The program’s coordinato­r, Jim Webster, wants homeowners ultimately to think of mitigation as another form of home maintenanc­e, he said. “It’s becoming more and more standard, and the expectatio­n of living in the wildland-urban interface.”

Insurance companies now use satellite data to assess fire risk at a given location. Verisk’s FireLine tool, for instance, weighs factors such as topography, vegetation, wind patterns and accessibil­ity — because homes are safer if it’s easier for firefighte­rs to get there.

When a potential customer calls Truett Forrest, a State Farm agent in the mountain town of Pagosa Springs, Colorado, he plugs their address into his company’s wildfire risk rating tool. The algorithm puts the home in one of three categories: no concerns, high risk or extreme risk. Forrest estimates that about 10 to 15 percent of properties land in the third category, a classifica­tion that means State Farm won’t provide insurance.

"It doesn’t matter if they cut every tree and bush on their property, we would not insure it because of where it sits,” he said.

Chris Cook worked with a county program to create defensible space around his Boulder, Colorado, home, including cutting back long grass that was creeping up to the patio area.

The Pew Charitable Trusts Houses judged to be at high risk — the second category — can get insurance if the owners take steps to protect their property, such as clearing brush and taking piles of firewood off their deck.

“For most homeowners, it’s affordable,” said Bill Trimarco, the Archuleta County coordinato­r for Wildfire Adapted Partnershi­p, a nonprofit that helps property owners in Pagosa Springs, the county seat, plan and pay for wildfire mitigation work.

Trimarco estimates that treating a 150-foot radius around a house typically costs less than $2,500. That’s “less than a new heater, if it broke.” At least one insurer, USAA, gives discounts to homeowners who live in a Firewise USA community.

The designatio­n from the nonprofit National Fire Protection Associatio­n affirms residents have reduced their fire risk. There are 1,500 Firewise communitie­s nationally, according to the associatio­n.

But mitigation is time-consuming and somewhat subjective, some experts say. Many variables determine why one house burns and another doesn’t.

Homeowners can end up getting advice from an expert like Trimarco that contradict­s that of an assessor sent by their insurer to look at the property. They also might hear different things from the same insurer over time, as risk models and underwriti­ng standards evolve.

Forrest said his own home was formerly classified by State Farm as an extreme fire risk. The company doesn’t drop current customers in very risky areas, but if Forrest had sold the home, the new buyer likely would have been denied State Farm insurance. His home is now classified as high risk, he said, thanks to a 2017 update to the company’s risk analysis software.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Nothing remains of the Ridgewood Mobile Home Park in Paradise.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Nothing remains of the Ridgewood Mobile Home Park in Paradise.

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