Three of the five insurers struggled or outright failed to write enough policies to fully earn the money. Consequently, the
an insurer,
Short of long-term solutions this week, lawmakers will convene a seven-day special session on Monday to decide whether to direct
Commissioner’s pitch
Donelon said incentives are the best short-term solution to bringing life to
Citizen roles have more than doubled amid the crisis; it now holds approximately 125,000 policies. And its prices will rise significantly in the coming months as a rate increase approved last year, averaging 63%, takes effect. If citizens cannot offload much of their politics, Donelon warns that another big increase is likely in 2024.
Regulators hope the incentive money will convince private insurers to take policies out of state hands, though the incentive plan, as written, does not require insurers to take policies out of citizens . This is something the previous iteration did.
The commissioner will likely face a skeptical group of lawmakers who would prefer a more comprehensive solution to the state insurance crisis. Govt.
At the last meeting of the
“I don’t want to go to a special session if you don’t have all the numbers to get it through on both sides,” the state representative said.
Donelon replied, “I didn’t think the Legislative Assembly would hesitate to fund what they unanimously created.”
Market stimulus or giveaway?
A low-key crisis at first, the cost and availability of insurance is now a dominant concern.
After four hurricanes made landfall in
“The big picture that was lurking was the fact that you had a simmering crisis on the horizon that we hadn’t done anything for the past couple of sessions to shore up the insurance market,” said
Incentives aren’t a bad short-term approach, Cunningham said. However, he thinks the best long-term solution is to require better construction, which would reduce the number of major claims.
“If we can keep the roof on a house when we have a storm, the damage it causes goes down quickly – if the roof stays up,” Cunningham said.
In
But getting the desired outcome from such an unpredictable industry is hardly guaranteed.
Although Donelon has said that easing the burden on citizens is his main concern, the current program does not require participating insurers to underwrite citizen policies – which Donelon described as a compromise with the author of the bill, says the senator.
Even if participants avoid citizen policies, Donelon said he thinks more competing insurers could help reduce costs for other residents and stimulate interest from even more insurers.
Some observers think there is a better solution.
“I’m not a big proponent of paying corporations to put policies in place. I don’t think that’s the best use of state resources,” he said.
Instead, Nyce recommended direct subsidies to consumers based on their ability to pay, if affordability is the goal.
“Be upfront about it,” Nyce said. “If you want to look and see if people meet certain income requirements and subsidize them at the state level, go ahead and do it, but do it means-tested.”
Lessons learned
The first round of the incentive program, launched in 2007, attracted the interest of only six companies. Only five made the cut. Most had sold little or no home insurance coverage in
Some of the objectives of the insurance program were intangible. However, some things were clear: Regulators wanted to reduce the number of citizen-carried policies and increase options in the bottom third of the state.
The legislative auditor later revealed that the insurers had received the funds before the two parties signed the agreements. Donelon attributed the misstep to the state’s inexperience in administering the program.
For starters, insurers, who have received grants ranging from
Thus, if an insurance company received a
According to the rules, at least a quarter of this bonus had to come from citizens’ policies, and at least half from southern parishes
In five years he was supposed to write
According to Donelon, the real triumph of the program came years later. He said the five companies were “priming the pump” to develop a more competitive market.
“Eventually, in the years that followed, two dozen more in addition to those five companies came into our market – small, regional companies – and frankly, not as strong as the ones we gave the incentive money, which had higher requirements to qualify,” Donelon said in a recent interview.
Where are they now?
Another measure of the effectiveness of the program is what happened once the five insurers were no longer tied to the state by obligation.
Southern Fidelity was one of the biggest companies to fail last year, sending 42,000 policyholders scrambling.
Three of the insurers are still around to some extent. Three were sold, including
Imperial Fire & Casualty, which was based in
Donelon’s LDI approved the sale. The business began to fall apart a year later after the
One of the group’s top performers was ASI Lloyds, which received
ASI Lloyds collected nearly three times as much premium as was needed under the grant. But today, the insurer is a fairly small player in the state market.
In some ways, the challenge is more acute now than it was after Katrina, Donelon said, because the reinsurance coverage that helped small businesses take risks has dried up.
“It’s the biggest challenge I’ve had in 16 years as an insurance commissioner,” Donelon said. “The crisis is existential, really. If we don’t do what I propose to do, I truly believe that thousands of people in our state would lose their homes because of the unaffordability of citizen policies.”