Florida’s governor this week signed the Insurer Accountability Act and two other bills that put new restrictions on insurers and require premium discounts for homeowners’ wind-mitigation efforts.
Senate Bill 7052 was passed this spring after the Florida Legislature approved controversial claims-litigation and attorney-fee limitations designed to help ease cost burdens on property insurers. The Florida Office of Å˽ðÁ«´«Ã½Ó³» Regulation, in a statement Thursday, said the accountability act will bar insurers from altering independent adjusters’ damage estimates unless they provide a full explanation and a copy of the original estimate to policyholders.
The practice came to light last December when three independent adjusters told Florida legislators that a number of insurers had been making wholesale changes to their reports while making it look like the insurer-revised reports had been written by the adjusters.
, which takes effect July 1, also:
- Clarifies that once a roof deductible is applied, no other deductible under the policy may be applied to any loss caused by the same covered peril.
- Extends the time period for an individual deployed to a combat zone or combat-support posting to file a property insurance claim for the duration of the deployment.
- Requires mitigation discounts be updated at least every five years and requires insurers to provide information on their websites describing hurricane mitigation discounts that are available.
- Requires liability insurers to follow proper claims-handling practices on behalf of their policyholders and increases penalties for insurers that do not.
- Prohibits officers and directors of impaired or insolvent insurers from receiving bonuses.
- Increases the maximum OIR administrative fines that may be levied on insurance companies by 250% in most cases, and by 500% for violations during a state of emergency, such as a hurricane.
, which Gov. DeSantis also signed this week, expands wind-mitigation benefits by requiring insurers to allow premium discounts in their rate filings. Many insurers had already provided credits for hurricane-hardening efforts, but the law now mandates some discounts. It takes effect July 1.
The bill also dropped the 2022 requirement that high-rise condominium unit owners must purchase flood insurance if they are covered by Citizens Property Å˽ðÁ«´«Ã½Ó³» for wind damage.
also expands the My Safe Florida Home mitigation program, which provides grants up to $10,000 for homeowners.
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