March 28, 2024

Press Release

Citizens Board approves 2017 rates

| 6/23/2016

Maitland -- Citizens Board of Governors on Wednesday approved recommended rates for 2017 that respond to rising non-weather water losses and assignment of benefit abuse that left unchecked will force rate hikes for years to come.

By unanimous vote, board members recommended a 6.8 percent statewide increases for personal lines policyholders, reversing a recent trend of lower rates for all but South Florida customers as the effects of water losses, assignment of benefits abuse and increased litigation begin to spread across the state.

Without significant reform, Citizens policyholders must brace themselves for continued rate hikes as water losses and increased costs surrounding assignment of benefits eat into surplus and force Citizens to repeatedly raise rates to fulfill its statutory obligations to set actuarially sound rates under the glide path.

The issue is complex and not unique to Citizens, said Barry Gilway, Citizens President, CEO and Executive Director. A solution will require the cooperative efforts of all stakeholders.

“The causes for these increases include the AOB document itself, referral fees & other inducements, unchecked solicitation for mitigation business, lack of licensing and regulation and a general lack of knowledge on the part of customers of the risks involved with an AOB,” Gilway said. The bottom line is that this is a crisis, not just for Citizens, but the entire Florida property market.”

Under the proposed rates, inland homeowners with multiperil policies would see an average increase of 6.3 percent, while homeowners along the coast would see rates climb by an average of 8.6 percent. Rates for condominium unit owners would rise by a statewide average of 7.1 percent. Despite statewide increases, thousands of Citizens customers will see rate reductions.

The 2017 proposed rates would have been higher had the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation not recently approved a set of Citizens policy contract changes regarding emergency services and notification requirements before permanent repairs can begin. Following Citizens’ lead, many private insurance companies have filed similar requests.

The rate recommendations will be submitted to the Office of Insurance Regulation, which will make its decision after holding a public hearing later this summer. The new rates will go into effect after January 1.

“Every year, our actuaries use recognized standards to formulate the rate recommendations presented to this board,” said Chris Gardner, Citizens Chairman. “We don’t want to raise rates, but we must respond to the actuarial data. Unfortunately, our policyholders are being required to pay higher rates because of inflated claims, increased litigation and abuse. We can’t keep asking them to do that.”

Citizens’ analyses show water losses have increased in both severity and frequency. Claims filed with Citizens under an assignment of benefits are more expensive and far more likely to lead to litigation, which only adds to the cost of the claim. Under current conditions, rates in Miami-Dade County would need to nearly triple to adequately pay claims. Statewide, personal lines rates would have to rise an average of 65 percent.

South Florida policyholders are far more likely to assign benefits to a third party – a contractor, water mitigation company or public adjuster – before submitting their claim. Nearly one in four South Florida policyholders assign their benefits to a third party.

Citizens is required by law to recommend rates that are actuarially sound, while complying with a legislative glide path that caps rate increases at 10 percent, excluding coverage changes and surcharges. In July, Citizens will submit its 2017 recommended rates to the Office of Insurance Regulation, which must establish rates for Citizens before they take effect.

Citizens has prepared a 2017 rate kit to provide members of the press with information about its 2017 rate filing, including county-by-county estimates for particular policy types. Additional information and answers to common questions about Citizens' rates and premiums are included in Citizens 2017 Rates Frequently Asked Questions. The kit also includes additional information about Citizens' costs and projected rate need for 2017.

Tags: Insurance

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