Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara has responded to the California FAIR Plan Association‘s lawsuit challenging Lara’s recent order that the FAIR plan offer a homeowners policy with coverage for water damage, theft and loss of use in addition to the current dwelling fire damage, saying the group is putting profits ahead of consumer needs.
In the Los Angeles Superior Court complaint filed Thursday, the Fair Plan says the Sept. 24 order is “the commissioner’s attempt to require the FAIR Plan to sell his novel homeowners’ policy is contrary to the express goals underlying the FAIR Plan Act to assure stability in the property insurance market for property located in the state of California.”
Lara’s office rebutted those claims in a statement Sunday.
“The insurance industry running the FAIR Plan is once again putting its profits ahead of the needs of California consumers,” the statement read. “Forcing its policy holders to purchase separate insurance policies for liability and contents, often from the very same insurance companies who dropped their coverage in the first place, only drives up the price for consumers.”
The FAIR Plan’s purpose is to take all comers and Lara believes it is “falling short of its purpose and mission to be there for consumers when they need it most,” according to the statement, which further said that Lara will “not let up until Californians have the coverage options they need.”
But according to the FAIR Plan suit, by issuing his order Lara has “failed to consider the significant costs that will be incurred by the FAIR Plan in having to comply with this order and the harm that will result to FAIR Plan customers, FAIR Plan employees and the insurance industry.” The FAIR Plan is asking a judge to direct Lara’s to vacate his order.
The FAIR Plan is a joint association formed by insurers licensed to write basic property insurance. Lara’s order directs the FAIR Plan to submit a revised plan of operations to the Department of Insurance within 30 days. Lara’s directive will give about 200,000 Californians who currently rely on the FAIR Plan to protect their homes a more comprehensive option besides the bare-bones coverage that the FAIR Plan currently offers, according to a statement from Lara’s office. In addition, requiring the FAIR Plan to offer a more comprehensive homeowners’ policy “will save consumers from having to purchase a second companion policy to cover other hazards such as premises liability, water damage and theft,” according to Lara’s office.
But according to the suit, requiring the FAIR Plan to offer the type of homeowners’ policy specified will “severely impact and destabilize the normal insurance market for comprehensive homeowners’ (basic) policies.” The FAIR Plan will not act as the market of last resort, but instead as a competitor that offers a homeowners’ policy with less coverage than would be available from the voluntary market, the lawsuit alleges.
“All things being equal, California customers will be incentivized to purchase the commissioner’s novel and stripped-down homeowners’ policy … which will destabilize the property insurance market,” the suit states.
The order also is “irrational” in that it is geographically unlimited in that policies will be available for sale in areas unaffected by wildfires and in which there is no need for a FAIR Plan alternative, the suit states.
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Stinger says
I would love to have a link for the suit, itself, included on this.
Based solely upon the info given in this article it looks like the Insurance Commissioner has a valid point and the insurance companies are just whining about having to comply… “severely impact and destabilize the normal insurance market for comprehensive homeowners’ (basic) policies.” This reads as a meaningless complaint. Nearly everything lately can and does, “severely impact and destabilize the normal insurance market for comprehensive homeowners’ (basic) policies.”
Cali says
California Fair Plan Association vs Ricardo Lara available online to view.
Tim Scott says
Insurance companies are a scam, top to bottom and side to side. Any attempt to regulate them will inevitably be met with whining and crying.
This whole FAIR bit started because of wildfires getting houses instead of just forest and insurance companies saying they wouldn’t and couldn’t pay without “disaster relief.” Since they have to be bailed out by the state when the chips are down anyway now the state is trying to reduce their profits when there is not a disaster, which certainly seems reasonable.