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Citizens Property Insurance Corporation

Citizens Property Insurance Corporation (Citizens) was created in 2002 from the merger of two other entities to provide both windstorm coverage and general property insurance for home-owners who could not obtain insurance elsewhere. It was established by the Florida Legislature in Chapter 627.351(6) Florida Statutes as a not-for-profit insurer of last resort, headquartered in Tallahassee, Florida, and quickly became the largest insurer in the state.[2] The company has no connection to Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance Corporation, the equivalent entity in Louisiana, or several similarly named "for-profit" subsidiaries in the Hanover Insurance Group.

Citizens Property Insurance Corporation
PredecessorFlorida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association
FormationJanuary 21, 1993; 31 years ago (1993-01-21)
Merger ofFlorida Windstorm Underwriting Association
TypeNonprofit corporation
59-3164851[1]
PurposeFlorida insurer of last resort
Location
ProductsPersonal and Commercial Property insurance
Key people
Barry Gilway, President/CEO & Executive Director
Main organ
Board of Directors (9)
Revenue (2022)
$1,897,811,815[1] (premiums)
Disbursements($2,446,392,132)[1] (operating loss)
Expenses (2022)$4,344,203,947[1] (claims)
Endowment$4,279,523,790[1] (reserve balance)
Websitecitizensfla.com

History edit

Catastrophe edit

Hurricane Andrew in 1992 was the costliest storm the United States had experienced, with $26.5 billion in damage. It took a huge bite out of the reserves for claims held by 30 insurance companies doing business in Florida. Eleven insurance companies were bankrupted, while others stopped writing or renewing property insurance policies in the state.[3] Those that remained raised premiums and deductibles across the board and limited the number of high-risk policies they wrote. Almost 1 million coastal homeowners were unable to find any company willing to insure their homes, so the Florida Legislature authorized the formation of the Florida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association (FRPCJUA) and the Florida Windstorm Underwriting Association (FWUA) as the insurers of last resort.[4] The Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund was also created and managed by the state as a resource for Florida consumers and insurers. It is funded by assessments to every property insurance policy in the state.[5]

Post Andrew edit

Hurricane damage between 1992 and 2003 was relatively manageable, with none or one major hurricane each year except 1998 (which had two). During that time, new insurance companies were started and existing carriers began writing policies again. By 1999, Florida Insurance Commissioner Bill Nelson stated that FRPCJUA and FWUA were close to shifting most of their 711,000 policies to private insurers.[3] In 2002, the Florida Legislature passed legislation to merge the Florida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association (FRPCJUA) and the Florida Windstorm Underwriting Association (FWUA). This resulted in the creation of Citizens Property Insurance Corporation (Citizens), whose goal is to more efficiently and effectively provide insurance to, and serve the needs of, home-owners in high-risk areas and others who cannot find coverage in the open, private insurance market.

High activity edit

There were four major storms in 2004 that made landfall in Florida, with total damages exceeding $57 billion. The following year brought five major storms, including Katrina, the most expensive Atlantic hurricane of all time.[6] Once again, several companies pulled out of the Florida market due to an extraordinary number of hurricane and new sinkhole related claims. Citizens became not just the insurer of last resort, but the insurer of only resort for many Floridians. As of 2005, Florida owed almost $5 billion, which would be recovered through insurance policy assessments.[7] The cost of insurance and its availability became an important "hot button" issue in Florida, especially in the 2006 elections.[4][8] Through 2006, Citizens Insurance charged its customers the highest rate approved by the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation to avoid competing with private carriers. Insurance agents were prohibited from writing policies through Citizens if there was a private (not surplus lines) carrier that would write the risk. If a qualified insurance company was willing to take a group of policies, Citizens Insurance would transfer them to that company and cancel coverage. Customers had no recourse.

Legislation edit

Florida Senate Bill 2498, known as the Glitch Bill, was signed into law by Governor Crist on June 11, 2007. This legislation permitted agents to write a Citizens policy for customers if the premium for a comparable policy offered by a private carrier was 15% (instead of 25%) more expensive. Customers were also allowed to stay with Citizens Insurance if they were notified that their policy was being assigned to a private carrier.[9]

After 2010, eight global insurance carriers, including State Farm, entered or re-entered the Florida market. While the cost of reinsurance fell by 10% in 2010 and was expected to decrease more in 2011, the cost of insurance to consumers remained the same.[10]

Post-recession edit

In 2010, State Farm and Renaissance jointly formed DaVinci Reinsurance Ltd. in Bermuda, which covered more than 3.5 million Florida homes in 2010. That same year, Japan-based Tokio Millennium Re Ltd. became an approved Florida reinsurance vendor.[10] As of 2011, Citizens had cash and investment totaling $11.3 billion and 1.3 million policyholders.[11] The Florida Council of 100 published a position paper in 2010 entitled, "Into the Storm: Framing Florida's Looming Property Insurance Crisis". Chief among problems identified was that Citizens Insurance was undercapitalized and charges "rates that are not actuarially sound".[7] The study also found that low-risk property owners were subsidizing high risk policies. They concluded that rates must be based on risk factors, including "geographical location, age of structure, and construction type". Florida House Bill 1495, passed in 2009, allows Citizens to raise rates gradually over five years to become actuarially sound. This was intended to shift the risk from taxpayers to the private sector.[7]

In the spring of 2012, Florida Governor Rick Scott stated in a survey with the Florida Council of 100 that Citizens Insurance had $504.8 billion in risk and just $6.1 billion in cash reserves. PolitiFact Florida, a fact checker of the Tampa Bay Times and Miami Herald, researched Scott's claims. They concluded that while the company did have $500 billion in exposure, storms would have to damage or destroy every Citizens-insured home in all 67 Florida counties. A "century storm", with a 1% chance of occurring in any year, would generate no more than $21 billion in claims.[12] Regarding the resources available to pay claims, the Citizen's own website states that their "Claims‐Paying Ability" is $19.5 billion.[13] There is a $1.5 billion disparity, prompting the governor to order Citizens to reduce its risk. Barry Gilway was hired on June 18, 2012, as president and chief executive officer of Citizens Property Insurance Corporation,[14] replacing Tom Grady.[15] With 42 years of experience in the insurance industry, he has a reputation as a turnaround specialist.[16] He was keenly aware that his first priority was to shrink the number of Citizens policies. Throughout 2012, Citizens asked 174,000 of its nearly 1.4 million policyholders to move their policies to five private insurers. Approximately 25,000 of that group chose to remain with Citizens,[17][18] but Florida's consumer insurance advocate Robin Smith Westcott warned that, "For the consumer, there really isn't enough information."[19] The state determined that those five private insurers were financially sound and able to absorb more customers, but issues such as higher premiums, customer responsiveness and number of consumer complaints must be determined by the policyholder. Florida law gives the consumer 30 days from notification to decline their policy transfer before it is assumed by a private firm.[19]

On February 8, 2013, Senator Jeff Brandes filed Florida Senate Bill 724, a comprehensive bill to overhaul Florida property insurance law[20] to avoid new "hurricane taxes" which would be necessary if another catastrophic hurricane ravaged the state. The proposal is unpopular among many Citizens customers because it would mandate more rate increases to what they consider to be already high premiums. A similar bill was defeated in 2012. However, businessman, and former US Representative Tom Feeney commented, "It is unfair to continue to require 77 percent of Florida homeowners to subsidize Citizens policies, in addition to 100 percent of businesses, charities, religious institutions, renters, automobile policyholders, local governments and school boards."[21] The bill did not make it out of the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee before the legislature adjourned in May 2013.[22]

Takeout policies edit

In an effort to encourage more private companies to acquire homeowners policies serviced by Citizens (known as takeout policies), the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (FOIR) was authorized to provide monetary incentives based on the number of Citizens policies acquired. In May 2013, just three of the eight members of the Citizens Board of Governors approved a deal[23] in which Heritage Property and Casualty Insurance, formed in 2012, was offered $52 million to take over 60,000 accounts ($867 per policy). Florida CFO Jeff Atwater admitted that Heritage did not have the financial strength to take over the policies without the incentive, but Citizen's President Barry Gilway insisted that Heritage was "one of the most well-capitalized" in Florida.[24] In March 2013, while negotiations were in progress, Heritage made a $110,000 donation to the re-election campaign of Governor Scott. A spokesman for the governor stated that the Citizens deal was not influenced by the governor.[24] State leaders criticized the deal as "corporate welfare for a politically connected startup".[24] Former Chief Financial Officer of Florida Alex Sink criticized the transaction, noting that Florida law limited the incentive to $100 per policy. She was also concerned that Heritage's reinsurance may not contain full risk transfer.[23]

New insurance companies in Florida must be approved by the Office of Insurance Regulation (OIR), which reviews the firm's business plan, projections and financial condition. The judgment of the OIR has been questioned because six of the 18 companies licensed to write "takeout" policies between 2007 and 2011 failed, even though Florida had no major hurricanes during that time frame. Florida taxpayers were forced to cover $400 million in losses.[25]

Despite concerns about the OIR, "State regulators have approved six property insurers to remove up to 151,000 policies from state-run Citizens Property Insurance Corp. in February [2014]. [...] Florida's Office of Insurance Regulation last month approved First Community Insurance Co. to take out as many as 51,249 Citizens policies, while Safepoint Insurance Co. may remove up to 40,000 policies. Elements Property Insurance Co. and Heritage Property Casualty Insurance Co. each have been approved for up to 20,000 policies. Southern Fidelity Insurance Co. and Southern Fidelity Property & Casualty can remove 10,000 each. Private insurers have taken out more than 312,000 Citizens policies this year. [Citizens] President Barry Gilway has said the goal is to trim Citizens down to about 800,000 policies."[26] As of April 2014, Citizen policies fell below one million, to 940,000. Cash reserves totaled $7.6 billion, a record.[27]

Model change edit

Since the 2005 pull back by insurance giants Allstate, State Farm, etc., small, in-state companies have been taking a larger share of policies. These start-ups have not followed the traditional insurance model by accumulating cash reserves to cover expenses in high claim years. Instead, they pay as much as half of the policy premium for reinsurance to offshore companies to cover claims. In the seven years since the last major Florida hurricane, profits have risen, but many small companies shifted that money into affiliated businesses and ignored the need for a reserve. Insurance rates were based on the company making a reasonable profit after expenses, which included funding a reserve. The OIR suggests that insurance companies have reserves and reinsurance to cover a once in 100-year storm. Many firms in past years purchased less, and if claims exceeded reinsurance and reserves, they were taken over by the state, who paid off remaining claims.[28] Those owners suffered no penalty for failing to act in an ethical manner.

As the 2013 season started, pressure on insurers to lower rates was high because reinsurance costs had fallen by 15% since 2012, which also had lower costs. Claim expenses were down thanks to seven years without a major hurricane, and rate hikes during those years increased revenue from premiums.[28]

Post Michael situation edit

As of 2019, Citizen's policy count had dropped to 419,000[29] but rose again due to a number of issues. Some companies stopped writing policies in high-claim South Florida, refused to renew where roof age exceeded 10 years or the home was built prior to Hurricane Andrew, before Hurricane-proof building codes were adopted. Since April 2021, four insurers were closed as insolvent. One of those, Avatar Property & Casualty, had 37,000 former customers looking for an insurer. Unfortunately for 2,000 of them, they had pending claims against Avatar, and most companies have underwriting guidelines that prohibit writing a new policy for a property with an open claim.[29] Lexington Insurance Company announced that they will discontinue home insurance, sending another 8,000 property owners to search for a new insurer. Lexington specialized in homes worth $1+ million and Citizens will only insure property values less than $700,000, so Citizens was not an option.[29]

Citizen's Policies numbered 807,910 on March 25, 2022.[29] When the regular Florida legislative session ended in March 2022, the Florida Senate had passed a bill to limit “free roof” claims and similar lawsuits, but the Florida House did not. Demotech is the company that issues financial stability ratings for 50 Florida-based insurers. On March 23, 2022 the top five executives from Demotech sent a letter to Florida's Governor plus the Senator and House leadership entreating them to pass reforms before the start of Atlantic hurricane season June 1. Failure to do so would cause Demotech to downgrade the financial stability ratings for "a number" of Florida insurers.[29] Sen. Jeff Brandes and other authorities have warned that collapsing companies would cause massive growth of Citizens Property Insurance Corp, a huge bailout from the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund and threaten the thriving real estate market.[29] Following Hurricane Ian in October, Citizen's policy count exceeded 1.1 million and the company was projected to insure 15% of the market by end of 2022.[30]

From early 2022 to the first quarter of 2023, seven Florida insurers had been declared insolvent including United Property & Casualty Insurance (UPC) with 135,000 policies.[31] Their policies were concentrated in Southwest Florida and experienced 25,000 claims with losses of $864 million from Hurricane Ian.[31] The Florida Insurance Guaranty Association board met on March 31 and filed for an emergency assessment of 1% on all Florida property insurance policies.[32] That is in addition to a 0.7% for 2022, a 1.3% assessment from July 1 2022 to June 30 2023, and another 0.7% ending December 31 2023.[32] As of April 7, 2023 Citizen's policies numbered 1,248,000. Citizens Insurance Board of Governors submitted a 14.2% rate increase on March 31, 2023 effective in November. However, Florida statutes limit rate increases on homesteaded property to 12% per year.[33]

In August 2023, the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation (FOIR) approved rate increases for commercial customers an average of 9.2% while rejecting the residential rate proposals that averaged 12% because they were based on "overall actuarial soundness, instead of individual actuarial soundness".[34]

Depopulation edit

Despite new state regulations that required homeowners with Citizen's Insurance to also purchase Federal Flood Insurance, June 2023 saw the number of Citizen’s policies balloon past 1.3 million.[35] Two private companies agreed to accept 26,000 Citizens policies in spring 2023. Citizens Insurance is expected to continue depopulating policies until they reach an acceptable number. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis admitted that Citizen's Insurance was not solvent: "If you did have a major, major hurricane hit with a lot of Citizens property holders it would not have enough to pay out."[35] DeSantis also signed a new state law that allows the policies from private companies to cost 20% more than Citizen's rates.[35]

Florida House Bill 837, passed March 24, 2023, was intended to reduce the number and cost of insurance lawsuits in Florida.[36] That issue was one of the reasons cited by insurance companies leaving Florida according to the Insurance Commissioner Michael Yaworsky.[37]

In August 2023 FOIR announced that Mainsail Insurance Company from Texas was approved to operate in Florida. They also disclosed that 280,000 of Citizen's policies were approved for assumption by several insurers by October 2023.[37]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "ANNUAL STATEMENT CITIZENS PROPERTY INSURANCE CORPORATION". citizensfla.com. Citizens Property Insurance Corporation. Retrieved August 22, 2023.
  2. ^ "Insurance". Florida Today. Melbourne, Florida. March 6, 2011. pp. 8A.
  3. ^ a b Ostrow, Nicole (March 22, 1999). "State-run insurer shedding policies". Florida Times-Union. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on September 1, 2004. Retrieved April 25, 2011.
  5. ^ "Today In Florida History August 25th". Florida Times-Union. August 25, 2011. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  6. ^ Knabb, Richard D; Rhome, Jamie R; Brown, Daniel P (December 20, 2005). Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Katrina: August 23 – 30, 2005 (PDF). National Hurricane Center (Report). United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Weather Service. Retrieved November 27, 2012.
  7. ^ a b c "Into the Storm: Framing Florida's Looming Property Insurance Crisis" (PDF). Florida Chamber of Commerce/Florida Council of 100. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
  8. ^ "Remember the Lessons of Hurricane Andrew". October 10, 2004.
  9. ^ Grover, Nancy. "Final Florida Property Insurance Package Much More Than 'Glitch' Bill". May 8, 2007. National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies. Archived from the original on June 28, 2013. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  10. ^ a b Reed, Matt (March 3, 2011). "Insurers still like Florida". Florida Today. Melbourne, Florida. pp. 1B.
  11. ^ Reed, Matt (April 24, 2011). "Citizens Property is in good shape". Florida Today. Melbourne, Florida. pp. 1B.
  12. ^ "Rick Scott said Citizens has $500 billion in risk exposure but less than $10 billion in cash". PolitiFact Florida. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
  13. ^ "2012 Estimated Claims‐Paying Ability (Projected)" (PDF). Citizens Property Insurance. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
  14. ^ "Executive Profile Barry J. Gilway". Bloomberg Business Week. Retrieved February 18, 2013.[dead link]
  15. ^ Adams, Michael (October 24, 2012). "Florida's Citizens President Gilway: Staff Firings Premature". Insurance Journal. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  16. ^ "Introduction of Barry Gilway" (PDF). Citizens Insurance Co. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  17. ^ Hemlock, Doreen (November 7, 2012). "Switched from Citizens this week? You can still go back". Orlando Sentinel.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on May 28, 2014.
  19. ^ a b Donna Gehrke-White, Paul Owers (September 26, 2012). "Citizens customers need more facts about private insurers, advocates say". SunSentinel. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
  20. ^ Dunkelberger, Lloyd (February 8, 2013). "Senator files bill aimed at shrinking Citizens". Herald-Tribune. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
  21. ^ Olorunnipa, Tolu (January 23, 2013). "Big bill—and maybe higher rates—coming soon on Citizens Property Insurance". Miami Herald. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
  22. ^ "SB 724: Citizens Property Insurance Corporation". May 3, 2013. Florida Senate. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  23. ^ a b Sink, Alex (June 24, 2013). "Alex Sink blasts new Citizens deal". Florida Times-Union. Archived from the original on June 28, 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2013.
  24. ^ a b c Olorrunnipa, Toluse (June 2, 2013). "Despite no hurricanes, many 'takeout' insurers fail". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  25. ^ Times/Herald (June 3, 2013). "Many 'takeout' insurers fail". Florida Trend. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  26. ^ . Sun-Sentinel. December 4, 2013. Archived from the original on January 18, 2020. Retrieved December 5, 2013.
  27. ^ Gehrke-White, Donna (May 24, 2014). "Property owners better protected as hurricane season nears". SunSentinel. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
  28. ^ a b Anderson, Zac (June 1, 2013). "Insurers making strong profits; will lower rates follow?". Daytona Beach News-Journal. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Hurtibise, Ron (March 29, 2022). "Grim new developments reveal more trouble in Florida home insurance market". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  30. ^ "Citizens Insurance topped 1.1 million Policies". WCJB-TV. November 1, 2022. Retrieved November 2, 2022.
  31. ^ a b Saunders, Jim (February 21, 2023). "Insolvent Insurer United Property & Casualty Headed to Receivership". News Service of Florida. Daily Business Review. Retrieved April 18, 2023.
  32. ^ a b Saunders, Jim (April 17, 2023). "Property-insurer insolvencies hit Florida policyholders in Wallet". New Service of Florida. WCJB Gainesville. Retrieved April 18, 2023.
  33. ^ "Citizens Property Insurance approves double digit rate hike". CBS News. CBS Miami. March 29, 2023. Retrieved April 18, 2023.
  34. ^ Saunders, Jim. "Florida insurance regulators order Citizens back to drawing board on rates". msn.com. Gainesville WCJB-TV. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  35. ^ a b c Elias, Dave (June 8, 2023). "State-run insurance company expected to drop thousands of policyholders". Waterman Broadcasting of Florida, LLC. NBC-2 WBBH Fort Myers. Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  36. ^ "Civil Remedies". flsenate.gov. State of Florida. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  37. ^ a b DeLisa, Caden. "OIR approves Mainsail as newest domestic property insurer; Citizens in line to shed nearly 300,000 policies". thecapitolist.com. The Capitolist. Retrieved August 21, 2023.

External links edit

  • Citizens Property Insurance Corporation Official website
  • 2012 CITIZENS STATUTE
  • Homeowners for Affordable Coverage -- Homeowners Against Citizens

citizens, property, insurance, corporation, confused, with, citizens, insurance, louisiana, citizens, created, 2002, from, merger, other, entities, provide, both, windstorm, coverage, general, property, insurance, home, owners, could, obtain, insurance, elsewh. Not to be confused with Citizens Insurance Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance Corporation Citizens was created in 2002 from the merger of two other entities to provide both windstorm coverage and general property insurance for home owners who could not obtain insurance elsewhere It was established by the Florida Legislature in Chapter 627 351 6 Florida Statutes as a not for profit insurer of last resort headquartered in Tallahassee Florida and quickly became the largest insurer in the state 2 The company has no connection to Louisiana Citizens Property Insurance Corporation the equivalent entity in Louisiana or several similarly named for profit subsidiaries in the Hanover Insurance Group Citizens Property Insurance CorporationPredecessorFlorida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting AssociationFormationJanuary 21 1993 31 years ago 1993 01 21 Merger ofFlorida Windstorm Underwriting AssociationTypeNonprofit corporationTax ID no 59 3164851 1 PurposeFlorida insurer of last resortLocation2101 Maryland Circle Tallahassee Florida 32303ProductsPersonal and Commercial Property insuranceKey peopleBarry Gilway President CEO amp Executive DirectorMain organBoard of Directors 9 Revenue 2022 1 897 811 815 1 premiums Disbursements 2 446 392 132 1 operating loss Expenses 2022 4 344 203 947 1 claims Endowment 4 279 523 790 1 reserve balance Websitecitizensfla com Contents 1 History 1 1 Catastrophe 1 2 Post Andrew 1 3 High activity 1 4 Legislation 2 Post recession 2 1 Takeout policies 2 2 Model change 3 Post Michael situation 4 Depopulation 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editCatastrophe edit Hurricane Andrew in 1992 was the costliest storm the United States had experienced with 26 5 billion in damage It took a huge bite out of the reserves for claims held by 30 insurance companies doing business in Florida Eleven insurance companies were bankrupted while others stopped writing or renewing property insurance policies in the state 3 Those that remained raised premiums and deductibles across the board and limited the number of high risk policies they wrote Almost 1 million coastal homeowners were unable to find any company willing to insure their homes so the Florida Legislature authorized the formation of the Florida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association FRPCJUA and the Florida Windstorm Underwriting Association FWUA as the insurers of last resort 4 The Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund was also created and managed by the state as a resource for Florida consumers and insurers It is funded by assessments to every property insurance policy in the state 5 Post Andrew edit Hurricane damage between 1992 and 2003 was relatively manageable with none or one major hurricane each year except 1998 which had two During that time new insurance companies were started and existing carriers began writing policies again By 1999 Florida Insurance Commissioner Bill Nelson stated that FRPCJUA and FWUA were close to shifting most of their 711 000 policies to private insurers 3 In 2002 the Florida Legislature passed legislation to merge the Florida Residential Property and Casualty Joint Underwriting Association FRPCJUA and the Florida Windstorm Underwriting Association FWUA This resulted in the creation of Citizens Property Insurance Corporation Citizens whose goal is to more efficiently and effectively provide insurance to and serve the needs of home owners in high risk areas and others who cannot find coverage in the open private insurance market High activity edit There were four major storms in 2004 that made landfall in Florida with total damages exceeding 57 billion The following year brought five major storms including Katrina the most expensive Atlantic hurricane of all time 6 Once again several companies pulled out of the Florida market due to an extraordinary number of hurricane and new sinkhole related claims Citizens became not just the insurer of last resort but the insurer of only resort for many Floridians As of 2005 Florida owed almost 5 billion which would be recovered through insurance policy assessments 7 The cost of insurance and its availability became an important hot button issue in Florida especially in the 2006 elections 4 8 Through 2006 Citizens Insurance charged its customers the highest rate approved by the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation to avoid competing with private carriers Insurance agents were prohibited from writing policies through Citizens if there was a private not surplus lines carrier that would write the risk If a qualified insurance company was willing to take a group of policies Citizens Insurance would transfer them to that company and cancel coverage Customers had no recourse Legislation edit Florida Senate Bill 2498 known as the Glitch Bill was signed into law by Governor Crist on June 11 2007 This legislation permitted agents to write a Citizens policy for customers if the premium for a comparable policy offered by a private carrier was 15 instead of 25 more expensive Customers were also allowed to stay with Citizens Insurance if they were notified that their policy was being assigned to a private carrier 9 After 2010 eight global insurance carriers including State Farm entered or re entered the Florida market While the cost of reinsurance fell by 10 in 2010 and was expected to decrease more in 2011 the cost of insurance to consumers remained the same 10 Post recession editIn 2010 State Farm and Renaissance jointly formed DaVinci Reinsurance Ltd in Bermuda which covered more than 3 5 million Florida homes in 2010 That same year Japan based Tokio Millennium Re Ltd became an approved Florida reinsurance vendor 10 As of 2011 Citizens had cash and investment totaling 11 3 billion and 1 3 million policyholders 11 The Florida Council of 100 published a position paper in 2010 entitled Into the Storm Framing Florida s Looming Property Insurance Crisis Chief among problems identified was that Citizens Insurance was undercapitalized and charges rates that are not actuarially sound 7 The study also found that low risk property owners were subsidizing high risk policies They concluded that rates must be based on risk factors including geographical location age of structure and construction type Florida House Bill 1495 passed in 2009 allows Citizens to raise rates gradually over five years to become actuarially sound This was intended to shift the risk from taxpayers to the private sector 7 In the spring of 2012 Florida Governor Rick Scott stated in a survey with the Florida Council of 100 that Citizens Insurance had 504 8 billion in risk and just 6 1 billion in cash reserves PolitiFact Florida a fact checker of the Tampa Bay Times and Miami Herald researched Scott s claims They concluded that while the company did have 500 billion in exposure storms would have to damage or destroy every Citizens insured home in all 67 Florida counties A century storm with a 1 chance of occurring in any year would generate no more than 21 billion in claims 12 Regarding the resources available to pay claims the Citizen s own website states that their Claims Paying Ability is 19 5 billion 13 There is a 1 5 billion disparity prompting the governor to order Citizens to reduce its risk Barry Gilway was hired on June 18 2012 as president and chief executive officer of Citizens Property Insurance Corporation 14 replacing Tom Grady 15 With 42 years of experience in the insurance industry he has a reputation as a turnaround specialist 16 He was keenly aware that his first priority was to shrink the number of Citizens policies Throughout 2012 Citizens asked 174 000 of its nearly 1 4 million policyholders to move their policies to five private insurers Approximately 25 000 of that group chose to remain with Citizens 17 18 but Florida s consumer insurance advocate Robin Smith Westcott warned that For the consumer there really isn t enough information 19 The state determined that those five private insurers were financially sound and able to absorb more customers but issues such as higher premiums customer responsiveness and number of consumer complaints must be determined by the policyholder Florida law gives the consumer 30 days from notification to decline their policy transfer before it is assumed by a private firm 19 On February 8 2013 Senator Jeff Brandes filed Florida Senate Bill 724 a comprehensive bill to overhaul Florida property insurance law 20 to avoid new hurricane taxes which would be necessary if another catastrophic hurricane ravaged the state The proposal is unpopular among many Citizens customers because it would mandate more rate increases to what they consider to be already high premiums A similar bill was defeated in 2012 However businessman and former US Representative Tom Feeney commented It is unfair to continue to require 77 percent of Florida homeowners to subsidize Citizens policies in addition to 100 percent of businesses charities religious institutions renters automobile policyholders local governments and school boards 21 The bill did not make it out of the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee before the legislature adjourned in May 2013 22 Takeout policies edit In an effort to encourage more private companies to acquire homeowners policies serviced by Citizens known as takeout policies the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation FOIR was authorized to provide monetary incentives based on the number of Citizens policies acquired In May 2013 just three of the eight members of the Citizens Board of Governors approved a deal 23 in which Heritage Property and Casualty Insurance formed in 2012 was offered 52 million to take over 60 000 accounts 867 per policy Florida CFO Jeff Atwater admitted that Heritage did not have the financial strength to take over the policies without the incentive but Citizen s President Barry Gilway insisted that Heritage was one of the most well capitalized in Florida 24 In March 2013 while negotiations were in progress Heritage made a 110 000 donation to the re election campaign of Governor Scott A spokesman for the governor stated that the Citizens deal was not influenced by the governor 24 State leaders criticized the deal as corporate welfare for a politically connected startup 24 Former Chief Financial Officer of Florida Alex Sink criticized the transaction noting that Florida law limited the incentive to 100 per policy She was also concerned that Heritage s reinsurance may not contain full risk transfer 23 New insurance companies in Florida must be approved by the Office of Insurance Regulation OIR which reviews the firm s business plan projections and financial condition The judgment of the OIR has been questioned because six of the 18 companies licensed to write takeout policies between 2007 and 2011 failed even though Florida had no major hurricanes during that time frame Florida taxpayers were forced to cover 400 million in losses 25 Despite concerns about the OIR State regulators have approved six property insurers to remove up to 151 000 policies from state run Citizens Property Insurance Corp in February 2014 Florida s Office of Insurance Regulation last month approved First Community Insurance Co to take out as many as 51 249 Citizens policies while Safepoint Insurance Co may remove up to 40 000 policies Elements Property Insurance Co and Heritage Property Casualty Insurance Co each have been approved for up to 20 000 policies Southern Fidelity Insurance Co and Southern Fidelity Property amp Casualty can remove 10 000 each Private insurers have taken out more than 312 000 Citizens policies this year Citizens President Barry Gilway has said the goal is to trim Citizens down to about 800 000 policies 26 As of April 2014 Citizen policies fell below one million to 940 000 Cash reserves totaled 7 6 billion a record 27 Model change edit Since the 2005 pull back by insurance giants Allstate State Farm etc small in state companies have been taking a larger share of policies These start ups have not followed the traditional insurance model by accumulating cash reserves to cover expenses in high claim years Instead they pay as much as half of the policy premium for reinsurance to offshore companies to cover claims In the seven years since the last major Florida hurricane profits have risen but many small companies shifted that money into affiliated businesses and ignored the need for a reserve Insurance rates were based on the company making a reasonable profit after expenses which included funding a reserve The OIR suggests that insurance companies have reserves and reinsurance to cover a once in 100 year storm Many firms in past years purchased less and if claims exceeded reinsurance and reserves they were taken over by the state who paid off remaining claims 28 Those owners suffered no penalty for failing to act in an ethical manner As the 2013 season started pressure on insurers to lower rates was high because reinsurance costs had fallen by 15 since 2012 which also had lower costs Claim expenses were down thanks to seven years without a major hurricane and rate hikes during those years increased revenue from premiums 28 Post Michael situation editAs of 2019 Citizen s policy count had dropped to 419 000 29 but rose again due to a number of issues Some companies stopped writing policies in high claim South Florida refused to renew where roof age exceeded 10 years or the home was built prior to Hurricane Andrew before Hurricane proof building codes were adopted Since April 2021 four insurers were closed as insolvent One of those Avatar Property amp Casualty had 37 000 former customers looking for an insurer Unfortunately for 2 000 of them they had pending claims against Avatar and most companies have underwriting guidelines that prohibit writing a new policy for a property with an open claim 29 Lexington Insurance Company announced that they will discontinue home insurance sending another 8 000 property owners to search for a new insurer Lexington specialized in homes worth 1 million and Citizens will only insure property values less than 700 000 so Citizens was not an option 29 Citizen s Policies numbered 807 910 on March 25 2022 29 When the regular Florida legislative session ended in March 2022 the Florida Senate had passed a bill to limit free roof claims and similar lawsuits but the Florida House did not Demotech is the company that issues financial stability ratings for 50 Florida based insurers On March 23 2022 the top five executives from Demotech sent a letter to Florida s Governor plus the Senator and House leadership entreating them to pass reforms before the start of Atlantic hurricane season June 1 Failure to do so would cause Demotech to downgrade the financial stability ratings for a number of Florida insurers 29 Sen Jeff Brandes and other authorities have warned that collapsing companies would cause massive growth of Citizens Property Insurance Corp a huge bailout from the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund and threaten the thriving real estate market 29 Following Hurricane Ian in October Citizen s policy count exceeded 1 1 million and the company was projected to insure 15 of the market by end of 2022 30 From early 2022 to the first quarter of 2023 seven Florida insurers had been declared insolvent including United Property amp Casualty Insurance UPC with 135 000 policies 31 Their policies were concentrated in Southwest Florida and experienced 25 000 claims with losses of 864 million from Hurricane Ian 31 The Florida Insurance Guaranty Association board met on March 31 and filed for an emergency assessment of 1 on all Florida property insurance policies 32 That is in addition to a 0 7 for 2022 a 1 3 assessment from July 1 2022 to June 30 2023 and another 0 7 ending December 31 2023 32 As of April 7 2023 Citizen s policies numbered 1 248 000 Citizens Insurance Board of Governors submitted a 14 2 rate increase on March 31 2023 effective in November However Florida statutes limit rate increases on homesteaded property to 12 per year 33 In August 2023 the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation FOIR approved rate increases for commercial customers an average of 9 2 while rejecting the residential rate proposals that averaged 12 because they were based on overall actuarial soundness instead of individual actuarial soundness 34 Depopulation editDespite new state regulations that required homeowners with Citizen s Insurance to also purchase Federal Flood Insurance June 2023 saw the number of Citizen s policies balloon past 1 3 million 35 Two private companies agreed to accept 26 000 Citizens policies in spring 2023 Citizens Insurance is expected to continue depopulating policies until they reach an acceptable number Florida Governor Ron DeSantis admitted that Citizen s Insurance was not solvent If you did have a major major hurricane hit with a lot of Citizens property holders it would not have enough to pay out 35 DeSantis also signed a new state law that allows the policies from private companies to cost 20 more than Citizen s rates 35 Florida House Bill 837 passed March 24 2023 was intended to reduce the number and cost of insurance lawsuits in Florida 36 That issue was one of the reasons cited by insurance companies leaving Florida according to the Insurance Commissioner Michael Yaworsky 37 In August 2023 FOIR announced that Mainsail Insurance Company from Texas was approved to operate in Florida They also disclosed that 280 000 of Citizen s policies were approved for assumption by several insurers by October 2023 37 See also editCitizens InsuranceReferences edit a b c d e ANNUAL STATEMENT CITIZENS PROPERTY INSURANCE CORPORATION citizensfla com Citizens Property Insurance Corporation Retrieved August 22 2023 Insurance Florida Today Melbourne Florida March 6 2011 pp 8A a b Ostrow Nicole March 22 1999 State run insurer shedding policies Florida Times Union Retrieved February 18 2013 a b Florida Monitor Office of Insurance Regulation Archived from the original on September 1 2004 Retrieved April 25 2011 Today In Florida History August 25th Florida Times Union August 25 2011 Retrieved February 18 2013 Knabb Richard D Rhome Jamie R Brown Daniel P December 20 2005 Tropical Cyclone Report Hurricane Katrina August 23 30 2005 PDF National Hurricane Center Report United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration s National Weather Service Retrieved November 27 2012 a b c Into the Storm Framing Florida s Looming Property Insurance Crisis PDF Florida Chamber of Commerce Florida Council of 100 Retrieved February 20 2013 Remember the Lessons of Hurricane Andrew October 10 2004 Grover Nancy Final Florida Property Insurance Package Much More Than Glitch Bill May 8 2007 National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies Archived from the original on June 28 2013 Retrieved June 5 2013 a b Reed Matt March 3 2011 Insurers still like Florida Florida Today Melbourne Florida pp 1B Reed Matt April 24 2011 Citizens Property is in good shape Florida Today Melbourne Florida pp 1B Rick Scott said Citizens has 500 billion in risk exposure but less than 10 billion in cash PolitiFact Florida Retrieved February 19 2013 2012 Estimated Claims Paying Ability Projected PDF Citizens Property Insurance Retrieved February 19 2013 Executive Profile Barry J Gilway Bloomberg Business Week Retrieved February 18 2013 dead link Adams Michael October 24 2012 Florida s Citizens President Gilway Staff Firings Premature Insurance Journal Retrieved February 18 2013 Introduction of Barry Gilway PDF Citizens Insurance Co Retrieved February 18 2013 Hemlock Doreen November 7 2012 Switched from Citizens this week You can still go back Orlando Sentinel Property Insurance Five companies may take over Citizens policies Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on May 28 2014 a b Donna Gehrke White Paul Owers September 26 2012 Citizens customers need more facts about private insurers advocates say SunSentinel Retrieved February 20 2013 Dunkelberger Lloyd February 8 2013 Senator files bill aimed at shrinking Citizens Herald Tribune Retrieved February 20 2013 Olorunnipa Tolu January 23 2013 Big bill and maybe higher rates coming soon on Citizens Property Insurance Miami Herald Retrieved February 20 2013 SB 724 Citizens Property Insurance Corporation May 3 2013 Florida Senate Retrieved June 4 2013 a b Sink Alex June 24 2013 Alex Sink blasts new Citizens deal Florida Times Union Archived from the original on June 28 2013 Retrieved June 24 2013 a b c Olorrunnipa Toluse June 2 2013 Despite no hurricanes many takeout insurers fail Tampa Bay Times Retrieved June 4 2013 Times Herald June 3 2013 Many takeout insurers fail Florida Trend Retrieved June 4 2013 Six insurers eying 150 000 Citizens policies Sun Sentinel December 4 2013 Archived from the original on January 18 2020 Retrieved December 5 2013 Gehrke White Donna May 24 2014 Property owners better protected as hurricane season nears SunSentinel Retrieved May 27 2014 a b Anderson Zac June 1 2013 Insurers making strong profits will lower rates follow Daytona Beach News Journal Retrieved June 4 2013 a b c d e f Hurtibise Ron March 29 2022 Grim new developments reveal more trouble in Florida home insurance market South Florida Sun Sentinel Retrieved March 30 2022 Citizens Insurance topped 1 1 million Policies WCJB TV November 1 2022 Retrieved November 2 2022 a b Saunders Jim February 21 2023 Insolvent Insurer United Property amp Casualty Headed to Receivership News Service of Florida Daily Business Review Retrieved April 18 2023 a b Saunders Jim April 17 2023 Property insurer insolvencies hit Florida policyholders in Wallet New Service of Florida WCJB Gainesville Retrieved April 18 2023 Citizens Property Insurance approves double digit rate hike CBS News CBS Miami March 29 2023 Retrieved April 18 2023 Saunders Jim Florida insurance regulators order Citizens back to drawing board on rates msn com Gainesville WCJB TV Retrieved August 21 2023 a b c Elias Dave June 8 2023 State run insurance company expected to drop thousands of policyholders Waterman Broadcasting of Florida LLC NBC 2 WBBH Fort Myers Retrieved June 15 2023 Civil Remedies flsenate gov State of Florida Retrieved August 21 2023 a b DeLisa Caden OIR approves Mainsail as newest domestic property insurer Citizens in line to shed nearly 300 000 policies thecapitolist com The Capitolist Retrieved August 21 2023 External links editCitizens Property Insurance Corporation Official website 2012 CITIZENS STATUTE Homeowners for Affordable Coverage Homeowners Against Citizens Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Citizens Property Insurance Corporation amp oldid 1171583384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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