Le Lézard
Classified in: Environment, Business
Subjects: ENI, AVO

Lara's Deal with Insurance Industry Does Nothing for Consumers and Does Not Address Climate Change, Says Consumer Watchdog


LOS ANGELES, Sept. 26, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Insurance Commissioner Lara's behind-closed-doors deal will allow the insurance industry to raise home insurance premiums for the 8.7 million Californians who insure their homes. But it does not guarantee that people who need coverage will be able to get it, nor does it do anything to reduce the risk of homes burning in California, Consumer Watchdog said today.

Lara announced last Thursday that he would allow insurance companies to skirt protections against price-gouging under California law, and in exchange insurance companies would start selling property insurance policies to more customers in high-risk areas. Insurance companies have publicly embraced the deal, but none have committed publicly to meet ironclad new sales benchmarks, much less the general threshold specified by Commissioner Lara, and no written agreement has been released. Even if insurers do expand offers of coverage, the new increases in premiums will make coverage unaffordable for those people.

While insurance companies have blamed climate change for their demand for higher insurance premiums, raising rates won't do anything to address the fact that builders have carte blanche to continue building in high-risk wildfire areas. Consumer Watchdog has recommended establishment of a state land use commission to address this, and that insurance companies be required to insure all homeowners who harden their homes. In addition, insurers should be required to stop their contributions to climate change through underwriting and investing in fossil fuel projects.

Rules finalized last year require insurance companies to offer discounts to homeowners who protect their homes from fire. However, the discounts that insurers began proposing in April have yet to be approved for implementation by the Department of Insurance.

"Commissioner Lara sold out Californians in exchange for a 'promise,' negotiated behind closed doors, that the insurance industry will start behaving itself once it gets the go-ahead to charge homeowners and renters hundreds or even thousands of dollars more every year," said Harvey Rosenfield, the author of Proposition 103.

"The insurance industry has shifted all of the costs of climate change onto homeowners, by non-renewing policies, increasing premiums, and delaying and denying claims. Now Commissioner Lara wants to give them private risk models to unjustifiably manipulate rates even higher. But nothing in his deal with the industry would make Californians' homes less likely to burn. Insurers have to be held to task for contributing to climate change by insuring and investing in the fossil fuel industry," said Carmen Balber, executive director of Consumer Watchdog.

Lara Targets Transparency, Accountability and Fairness Required by Voters

Invoking the threat of climate change, Lara presented his plan as a series of vague bullet points loaded with references to "sustainability," "modernization," "balance" and "transparency."

Here's how to read between the lines of the announcement:

No Quid for the Quo: Secret Agreement with Industry to Sell New Policies

In exchange for making changes that allow insurance companies to raise rates, Lara said he had "commitments from insurance companies to cover all parts of California by writing no less than 85% of their statewide market share in high wildfire risk communities." But he did not provide the agreement or any further specifics. And none of the insurance companies and lobbying organizations that have been pressing for the rollback in consumer rights have made any mention of the promised quid pro quo, much less confirmed the details of their alleged "commitment." Lara's press release featured quotes from various business groups but, conspicuously, no insurance companies.

Even if insurers made such a commitment, and assuming that it's not riddled with loopholes, Consumer Watchdog noted that raising rates will make it harder, not easier, for Californians who live in high-risk communities to afford coverage. If insurance is unaffordable, companies will not be able to meet their 85% target, leaving consumers with higher rates and decreased, not expanded, coverage.

What's Not in the Plan

What's Next

California law provides strong public protections against rogue government agencies captured by the industry they are supposed to regulate. Every agency is required to follow specific procedures when changing or adopting new regulations. State agencies must notify the public of proposed regulations; hold public hearings and allow the public extensive opportunity to comment on them. Lara estimated he would complete this process by December 2024. Additionally, any regulations adopted by the Commissioner must be consistent with Proposition 103. Proposition 103 authorizes consumers to go to court to make sure its protections are properly enforced and obeyed by insurance companies and the Commissioner.

SOURCE Consumer Watchdog


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