Los Angeles Times

Newsom pushes for faster review of home insurance rate increases

Governor is proposing a bill that would require a decision within 60 days.

- By Laurence Darmiento

With insurers continuing to pull back from the California’s homeowners’ market, Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to speed up the process by which the companies have their requests for rate hikes reviewed.

The governor said Friday that he is backing a bill that would require the Department of Insurance to complete reviews of proposed premium increases within 60 days to halt any more exits from the market. Here’s what to know:

What exactly did the governor say?

Newsom said that immediate steps need to be taken to stabilize the market, which has seen insurers not renew existing policyhold­ers , stop writing new policies or pull out of the market entirely — sending many homeowners to the insurer of last resort, the state’s FAIR Plan, which is now on the hook for more than $300 billion in payouts. Newsom said he was “deeply mindful” of the burdens placed on the plan.

The governor said he had considered issuing an executive order, but instead is proposing a bill that would require the Insurance Department to speed up its review process of premium rate-hike requests.

“We need to stabilize this market. We need to send the right signals. We need to move,” he said.

Isn’t there already an insurance reform package being

hashed out in Sacramento?

Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara is holding hearings on his Sustainabl­e Insurance Strategy, a set of comprehens­ive regulation­s intended to stabilize rates and make it more attractive for insurers to write homeowners policies, especially in wildfire areas such as hillsides and canyons.

However, these regulation­s won’t become law until the end of the year — a deadline sought by the governor, assuming it can be met.

“It should not take this long for emergency regulation­s,” Newsom said. “We can’t wait until December.”

How would this bill fit into the larger set of reforms?

Lara has reached a grand bargain with the insurance industry to make the market more attractive, though details are still being worked out.

The plan would allow insurers to include the cost of reinsuranc­e they buy to protect themselves from large fires and other catastroph­es into premium costs. It also would allow them to set rates using sophistica­ted algorithms to predict the risk and cost of future fires, rather than just base them on past events. It’s unclear how an insurer’s applicatio­n for an expedited rate approval this year would fit into the proposed reforms.

Has Lara reacted to the governor’s proposal?

The commission­er tweeted Friday that his department has taken “significan­t steps forward” to implement his planned reforms but more needs to be done — and that his department is working with the governor and the Legislatur­e “on critical budget language that keeps us on track to get the job done.”

What do consumer groups have to say?

Jamie Court, president of Consumer Watchdog, said he didn’t understand the proposal, worrying that it would be a “rubber stamp” on proposed rate increases.

He noted that Propositio­n 103, the landmark 1988 initiative that gives the insurance commission­er authority to review rate hikes, already mandates that they are conducted within 60 days except in certain circumstan­ces. Those circumstan­ces include requests for rate increases exceeding 7% for homeowners insurance, which allow consumers to seek a hearing, or the commission­er’s own decision to conduct a hearing.

What is the insurance industry’s reaction?

Rex Frazier, president of the Personal Insurance Federation of California, a trade group of property and casualty insurers, said despite the promise of 60-day rate reviews under Propositio­n 103, they are taking longer. He said the Insurance Department will often request that insurers waive their rights to a speedy decision or face an administra­tive hearing, which can lead to extensive delays. However, Frazier withheld comment on the governor’s proposal until the draft language is released.

What are the next steps?

Newsom’s office will release the draft bill, which will be carried by a member of the Legislatur­e and be included in the process for adopting the state budget, which the Legislatur­e must approve by June 15. Newsom made his remarks Friday in outlining plans for a revised $288-billion budget, which calls for a series of cutbacks to close a nearly $45-billion shortfall.

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