|
Despite particularly heavy losses in Louisiana and Mississippi -- mostly from hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Gustav
-- their average return in the 18 states was 7.4 percent, higher than the nationwide average for homeowners insurance. A more important driver of rates than past losses is what insurers expect to lose in the future. In the 21 years since Hurricane Andrew slammed Florida, insurers, reinsurers and credit rating agencies have come to rely on computer models that generate an array of hypothetical storms and try to predict the extent of possible property damage. The models' worst-case scenarios are big factors in driving rates. Companies have to build up enough reserves or buy enough backup coverage, called reinsurance, to avoid going broke after a severe storm. If loss projections look too great, companies may dump coastal policies to cut risk. In some states, regulators have been critical of modeling to determine rates. Even if regulators block their use, policyholders may still pay for their predictions indirectly. Reinsurers use models to set their prices, and credit rating agencies may downgrade an insurer's rating if they don't like what model results show. "It appears to be a cycle where it drives insurance companies to purchase even more reinsurance," said Wayne Goodwin, a Democrat who is North Carolina's elected insurance commissioner. One way to fight against higher rates is to shop widely for better prices. Sometimes, though, lower prices mean higher risks to a homeowner. Virden said his premium fell by about $400 when he found a new policy that offered less coverage. But he said it helped only marginally. "That increase to $5,000 a year really put the kibosh on our standard of living." Virden is a member of the Homeowners' Hurricane Insurance Initiative, a group seeking lower rates and more justification for pricing. The group has been trying to unite similar citizen-led efforts in Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Massachusetts and elsewhere. In south Florida, Nancy Loft-Powers is paying $7,300 a year to insure a 1,700-square-foot house in Deerfield Beach, Fla. "They're just jacking me and jacking me and jacking me," she said. "Really, it's horrific." Loft-Powers, who works as a nutrition consultant, said she bought additional houses in her neighborhood in 2000 and 2001 as investments. She said she lost the houses in short sales because the insurance payments became too high. "I had to sell them off," Loft-Powers said. Complaints also focus on state regulators. "We do not believe our Division of Insurance is doing the job that they should be doing in protecting the consumer from the greed of the industry," said Paula Aschettino, an Eastham, Mass., resident who founded Citizens for Homeowners Insurance Reform. "If they are not denying these increases, they are part of the problem." Goodwin, the North Carolina's insurance commissioner, said there's more to regulation than capping rate increases. "State insurance regulators have a dual role. One is to protect the consumer from excessive rates and inadequate insurance and to have insurance available," Goodwin said. "At the same time, state insurance regulators must balance with those duties the responsibility for companies to have an opportunity for profit and be solvent." One way companies are managing profits is by shifting risk to policyholders with exceptions to coverage and higher deductibles. Deductibles now can reach 5 percent of insured value when a hurricane hits, raising questions about whether some homeowners will be able to afford repairs. Alabama's Virden, for example, would have to pay for the first $18,500 of damage before his insurance kicks in. Amy Bach, executive director of United Policyholders, a California-based advocacy group that works with consumers on claims after disasters, said higher deductibles weaken the value of insurance, especially when premiums don't go down. "They've carved so many things out in recent years," Bach said of the industry. "Why aren't we seeing offsets for that?
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2013 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor