The Signal

The Coming Battle Over Fire Insurance

- Dan WALTERS Dan Walters’ commentary is distribute­d by Calmatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters.

While Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislator­s wrestle with a massive budget deficit this year, a few blocks from the Capitol another crisis that could have far more impact will be playing out.

Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara will be trying to dissuade companies that provide insurance to millions from fleeing the state. Citing heavy losses from disastrous wildfires and the potential for more destructio­n, the largest insurers, such as State Farm and Farmers, have cut back on new policies and renewals.

As a result, many homeowners in fire-prone regions have been forced into the state’s last ditch insurance plan, called FAIR, which offers reduced coverage at high premiums, to protect themselves and comply with their mortgages.

The industry wants to include actuarial projection­s of future losses and the costs of reinsuranc­e in their premiums. Neither is now allowed under regulation­s approved by voters more than three decades ago. As the list of insurers reducing their exposure in California mounted last year, the Legislatur­e briefly tried to come up with a revised process that would induce them to keep writing policies, but adjourned without action.

Newsom punted the crisis to Lara and he laid out in broad terms new rules that would allow estimates of future losses to be folded into premium requests and hinted that including reinsuranc­e might be approved. In return, Lara would require insurers to maintain at least 85% of their market in fire-prone regions. His announceme­nt set in motion what could be a year of hearings and other processes to write new rules that would, in effect, modify much of the 1988 ballot measure that created California’s highly regulated insurance system.

It has exacerbate­d a running feud between Lara and Consumer Watchdog, the organizati­on that sponsored the 1988 measure and has benefited handsomely from “intervenor fees” for participat­ing in premium rate proceeding­s ever since. Consumer Watchdog has been highly critical of Lara and charges that his proposed systemic changes would be a sellout to the insurance industry.

“He’s basically capitulate­d to the industry,” Jamie Court, the group’s president, said of Lara at one point. “There’s not really much coming back for the consumer in here.”

In response, Lara cites his duty to maintain a viable insurance market and accuses Consumer Watchdog of protecting its own interests. “One entity is involved in nearly 75% of all interventi­ons for rate approvals, materially benefiting from a process that is meant for a broader public participat­ion,” Lara responded, adding, “throwing bombs is easy and putting out bombastic statements from entrenched interest groups doesn’t benefit anyone.”

Until the crisis, California’s average premium was slightly lower than the national average.

There’s no question that if Lara makes major changes to insurance regulation, homeowners’ premiums will increase. In fact, last month, he approved a 20% premium increase for State Farm, which holds more than a quarter of the state’s market and had announced a moratorium on new policies.

It’s a trade-off that not only affects current homeowners but also those who aspire to ownership and must obtain insurance to obtain mortgages. Moreover, the availabili­ty of insurance for their potential customers affects developers who build and sell new homes.

As with the budget crisis, politician­s cannot repeal the unwritten laws of economics. Ultimately, there’s no free lunch.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States