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Florida’s Citizens Pushes Policy Changes to Address Rising Water Loss Claims

April 4, 2016

Citizens Property Å˽ðÁ«´«Ã½Ó³»­ Corp.’s board of governors approved recommendations last month aimed at reducing the impact of what it calls skyrocketing water-loss claims that could reverse progress made in returning Citizens to Florida’s insurer of last resort.

According to a statement from Citizens, the approved changes include offering premium discounts to policyholders who choose managed repair agreements so that repairs can be completed by a Citizens-vetted qualified contractor. The board also approved placing sublimits on water loss claims if other incentives are not sufficient to reduce claims costs. Any changes must be approved by the Florida Office of Å˽ðÁ«´«Ã½Ó³»­ Regulation (OIR).

Citizens said the changes are needed following recent unsuccessful attempts to pass significant legislative reforms aimed at curbing abuses involving assignment of benefits (AOB), under which policyholders give third party vendors control over their claims following a loss. Florida legislators failed to pass legislation that would have addressed the issue before the 2016 session ended.

Citizens said water-loss trends connected to runaway AOB-based litigation threaten to reverse Citizens’ depopulation efforts as private insurance companies will begin raising rates or dropping policyholders, forcing them to return to Citizens.

“The unfortunate impact on Citizens policyholders will be premium increases in affected regions in 2017 and beyond, as well as potentially fewer private-market insurance options as private carriers reduce their exposure in the hardest hit areas,” said Barry Gilway, Citizens president, CEO and executive director.

Citizens said policyholders in South Florida can expect to see annual rate hikes approaching 10 percent in 2017 and beyond. Estimated rates in those counties would have to nearly triple to pay for non-wind related losses. Under the 10 percent glide path, Miami-Dade policyholders could see average premiums climb from $2,800 to $4,000 in just five years.

Policyholders in other parts of the state, who were expected to have rate decreases in 2017, also may be subjected to higher rates based on higher water claims and increased AOB-related litigation, Citizens said.

2017 Indicated Rates

Using rates approved by OIR for 2015, Citizens actuaries calculated current non-wind loss trends and determined the indicated rate need for Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties along with an overall figure for the rest of the state.

rising-water-costs-chartCitizens said it is working with OIR to identify and implement policy changes that would improve the claims process and avoid the need for across-the-board sublimits.

“For the past four years, we have worked hard to return Citizens to its role as a true residual insurer,” said Chris Gardner, chairman of Citizens Board of Governors. “Citizens remains committed to protecting surplus for the benefit of its policyholders when they need it. These loss trends, however, raise serious concerns.”

Citizens launched its Call Citizens First campaign earlier this year to encourage homeowners to report a loss as soon as they know there might be damage so it can inspect any damages before permanent repairs are made. Currently, however, Citizens said it is receiving first notice of loss for non-weather water losses an average of more than 30 days after the loss occurs and, in many cases, is not informed of the loss until after repairs are made. This delay is accelerating litigation, according to Citizens, which says it now receives an average of 620 new lawsuits a month.

Topics Trends Florida Profit Loss Claims Legislation

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