Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
Well, we had the Senate hearing on the climate. Dr. Roy Spencer and Dr. Roger Pielke gave excellent talks. There’s a discussion of it here on WUWT and Dr. Judith Curry has a post on it at her blog.
I wanted to discuss the silver fox in the science house, the testimony of Mr. Frank Nutter, Esq. He represented the insurance and reinsurance industries, and presented their recommendations with an insurance company’s usual honesty and plain square dealing, combined with a lawyer’s well-known transparency and clarity.
Mr. Nutter’s bio from when he was a Moderator for an AGU conference includes …
Mr. Nutter currently serves on the Board of the International Hurricane Research Center … He recently served on the Council of the American Meteorological Society; the Board of the University Center for Atmospheric Research, a consortium of universities managing the National Center for Atmospheric Research sponsored by the National Science Foundation; and the Board of the Bermuda Institute for Ocean Sciences.
When I read that, I thought dang, they got an insurance guy who is actually a climate scientist? That’s a surprise. So I wondered, what are his qualifications for being on all of those climate-related boards?
Well … it turns out he has a law degree, which his bio spells out in full, a “Juris Doctorate”. And he has a winning smile. And presumably lots of money.
In any case, Mr. Nutter Esq. put a bunch of insurance company recommendations before the good Congresspersonages, and I busted out laughing when I read the first one.
Congressional Action
As Congress considers the impact of climate change, the RAA [Reinsurance Association of America] suggests the following legislative principles or actions to consider:
• Provide tax credits to individuals for specified mitigation and resiliency actions associated with extreme weather and climate change.
Now, what’s not to like in that? He’s interested in adaptation to evil CO2, and not in a carbon tax to mitigate CO2. He wants to upgrade our infrastructure to make America less vulnerable to the oft-rumored climate catastrophe, strengthen our resiliency and ability to weather the oft-foretold and oft-delayed climate catastrophe, or even just do a better job of surviving the next big storm … you almost want to congratulate him for his community spirit.
Almost …
Here’s the deal with insurance companies. They are in business to make money, and more power to them—insurance is a needed and useful service, and if they can’t make a profit everyone suffers. However, we need to keep in mind a few very important things.
The first one is that the more that people are scared of the future, the more insurance they will buy. So as you might imagine, the insurance companies have been the allies of climate alarmists from day one. Munich Re has been strongly pro-alarm since the early days. So has Swiss Re, and so has every insurer with half a brain. Climate alarmism is the insurer’s perfect storm, people will have to insure against all the foretold dooms—they have to protect themselves from flood, fire, famine, drought, sea level, storms, insect-borne diseases, and all of the thermally-induced biblical curses that were supposed to appear a decade ago. (We’re earnestly assured their appearance has only been postponed, not cancelled, so I guess there’s still hope for the rain of frogs.) Every time James Hansen or another of the terminally alarmist folks talks up the future climate terrors, the insurance industry applauds them all the way to the bank.
The second one is that like any business, insurers want to increase their income and cut their costs, or in other words, increase their profits. The best, of course, is if they can increase their incomes with no increase in costs or overheads. Then it’s all profit, of which more anon.
The third is that, despite all of Mr. Nutter’s hype and his charts, there is no evidence that extreme weather events are increasing. Even the IPCC has been dragged kicking and screaming to admit this. The land has been warming for a couple hundred years, but nowhere in there are any thermal catastrophes, or any increase in the extremes of wind, water, and weather.
Now with those three things in mind, let’s look at the insurers’ first prescription for the Congressfolk. They want tax credits for people to strengthen their houses … and that means that when the next inevitable weather calamity hits, Mr. Nutter, Esq. and his merry men will make even more money. Fewer claims for loss means more money in the bank.
I mean, that is a work of genius—in the name of green caution, convince Congress to give special tax breaks to a subsection of all taxpayers, that is to say homeowners. But not just any homeowners, a special subclass of homeowners, those who get their roofs blown off and such. They are a special subclass because they’re the ones costing the insurance companies money. So we give those folks tax breaks for strengthening their buildings. As a result, tax revenues go down, a small percentage of the taxpayers get a special tax break, the poor get nothing, and the insurance companies’ revenues go up … and this is supposed to be a good thing? The brilliant arrogance of the plan is stunning.
If nothing else, you gotta admire the gall of the thief proposing that we pay him to rob people … not that the insurers need the money, they’ve already made billions off of the climate scam, and they’ll make billions more before the lunacy has run its course.
Of course, once the houses are strengthened, I assume most folks reading this know enough not to expect the insurance rates to drop—after all, James Hansen has assured the insurers that a major calamity is inevitable, Thermageddon is just around the corner. So the insurers can’t possibly reduce their rates, that wouldn’t be fiscally responsible in the face of grave imaginary danger …
So the rates will remain the same, or even go up to match the prophesied thermal meltdown, and the losses will go down, and the insurers will make more money on both ends.
Remind me again why this lucre-driven jackanapes has been invited to speak on the same platform with climate scientists? Mr. Nutter may be an excellent lawyer, but in front of Congress with his insurance hat on he is just a wallet with a mouth, crying “Feed me! Feed me!”.
Now that you understand how the game is played, lets look at the other insurance company proposals, and I’ll translate them one by one, although you could likely do it yourselves. I will list their points in bold type, verbatim.
• Incent communities to develop and implement mitigation and resiliency initiatives.
English is such a great language. We’re going to “incent” communities to implement initiatives that will reduce the costs to the insurance companies. How to “incent” them is not specified, but I assume it involves “incenting” them with taxpayers money.
I don’t have to assume it will increase the insurers’ profits, however, that’s a given. Any “mitigation and resiliency initiatives” will put money directly into the insurers’ Swiss bank accounts. That’s the pure gravy I mentioned above. No additional expenses. No associated costs. No increases in overheads. Just a pure reduction in claims for loss, and that’s 100% profit.
• Reform the National Flood Insurance Program to reflect extreme weather and climate risk in its rates.
In other words, reducing the insurers costs from claims for loss is not enough—the insurance companies also want to be able to increase the rates at the same time. Note that the clever Mr. Nutter doesn’t mention the word “increase”, as in “increase the rates”. After all, “increase” is such an ugly term, don’t you think? No, they merely want to “reflect extreme weather and climate risk” by appropriately embiggening the premiums required under the Program, but they are not increasing the rates, oh, no, don’t say that.
Never mind that there is no evidence of an increase in extreme weather, despite 200 years of warming. Never mind that “climate risk” is undefined as befits its ethereal nature. They want to be able to increase the rates, so truth is not on the list of necessary ingredients.
• Apply Federal standards to state/local building codes and incorporate climate and extreme weather risk into these standards.
This is the same as their first proposal, just another way to get the buildings stronger to reduce the insurance companies’ costs. It will not be matched with a commensurate reduction in rates, so it is pure profit to the industry. Money for jam, as they say.
Next, “climate and extreme weather risk” are already in the standards. The standards involve engineers, not insurance lawyers. Do they think extreme wind and weather are not considered by every structural engineer?
Let me note one other profit stream for the insurance industries. Every time any standard is increased, whether for real or for imagined risks, the costs (and thus the value) of the building go up. And from the moment that construction starts until it is demolished, the building is insured. Finally, the premium paid to the insurers is some percentage of the insured value … I’m sure you can do the math.
• Purchase or relocate properties near coastal or river areas at repeat risk.
This one translates as “we’re tired of being forced to insure losers, so the US Government should buy them out using taxpayers’ money.”
Why doesn’t the Government ever do things like that for me? I mean, why don’t they solve some big business problem that is costing me money? And more to the point, if people insist on building on flood plains and barrier islands and below sea level, why should you and I or the US Government have to pay for their foolishness?
• Use nature to mitigate risk before and after extreme events.
Noble, green, and low-cost, nature is just the ticket … plus it puts money in the insurers’ pockets. Gotta love nature.
I could go on, but I’m sure you get the point. Once you look past the coat after coat of green paint on this pile of most cleverly worded proposals, it is nothing but a greed-driven, highly disguised push to have Congress do the insurers’ dirty work, and to have the taxpayers pay for it.
In my opinion, the insurance companies do not belong on the same dais with the scientists. Mr. Nutter’s proposed actions, one and all, increase the profits of the insurers. If we implemented all of his ideas they’d make billions more than otherwise. If scientists need to declare their conflicts of interest, then it should be noted that the insurance companies make more money out of climate alarmism than James Hansen ever made, even with his salary, his pension, and his awards. Not to mention the generous gifts he accepted … but all of that pales before money made by the insurers. They started stoking the climate hysteria early and often, and have kept pushing the hype right up to the present. And during that time, they have made billions out of the madness of crowds, they are looking to jack their profits even more … and someone thinks we should listen to a single word they say on the subject?
I mean, think about it. The insurance companies have it made. They have hordes of otherwise reasonable people who have drunk the koolaid and go around spouting doomsday prophecies about the Thermal End Times, and about simultaneous droughts and floods, and about meters and meter of sea level rise … it’s an insurer’s wet dream to have suckers of all stripes sounding every alarm bell like that, it’s golden.
Because to an insurance company, alarm bells and frightened people are money in the bank.
So no, they should not get a say at the highest levels. They should not get a special hearing in front of Congress. We know what they will say, duh, no mystery there. They will say that the taxpayers should pay for repairs and changes and mitigations that will make the insurers more money. In a way I don’t blame them for saying that, although I don’t like the deception, it’s a businesses’ job to sell their product.
But I do blame anyone who pays the slightest attention to Munich Re and Swiss Re and Frank Nutter and the rest of the insurance folks on the subject of climate. They are not your friends. Their advice is 100% self-serving. Their proposed benefits are measured in dollars, and not your dollars—dollars in their Swiss bank accounts.
Global warming supporters say that the science is all on their side … so who did the global warming folks send to plead their case to Congress?
An insurance company lawyer who says “fill our pockets with money, suckers, it’s all ever so green, and oh, you’re picking up the tab for lunch” …
I must say, however, that if Heidi Cullen and Frank Nutter are part of the global warming supporters “A-Team”, that we skeptical folk must be winning. That’s a pretty pathetic lineup.
w.
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Joe Public: not only do they offer flood insurance only where there is no flood possible; they keep increasing motor insurance premiums despite the fact both the accident rate and accident-related payouts have been on a steady decline in the UK for many years.
I was under the impression that the UK business overall — not just insurance — was dishonest from the first days of my sojourn in this country. The motor insurance business is just one of the most blatantly dishonest. Here I have to pay 10x the rate I paid in Illinois, while knowing full well that none of it is based on actual risks.
Mr. Nutter’s bio from when he was a Moderator for an AGU conference includes …
Mr. Nutter currently serves on the Board of the International Hurricane Research Center … He recently served on the Council of the American Meteorological Society; the Board of the University Center for Atmospheric Research, a consortium of universities managing the National Center for Atmospheric Research sponsored by the National Science Foundation; and the Board of the Bermuda Institute for Ocean Sciences.
===
So he’s got himself well placed to steer where research money gets allocated and hence what research gets done and hence what gets published. Then he gets invited to give “evidence” to a senate hearing.
Just remind me, was that the same AMS that was making dogmatic declarations about global warming on behalf of its members that members were not allowed to vote on or challenge??
Seems our canny lawyer freind knows how to stack the cards in his favour.
“… silver fox …? No, just a regular fox with scabies …
Lawrence Solomon notes in the Financial Post back in 2011 that the insurance companies have been pushing climate alarmism as far back as 1973.
More slick oil salesmanship at Munich Re | Spiegel: “Scientists are outraged”
http://notrickszone.com/2012/10/18/spiegel-slams-munich-re-distortions-of-weather-extremes-are-suspicious-and-irresponsible-hype/
Dead on as usual Willis!
We shouldn’t forget that the U.S. “National Flood Insurance” program only insures against loss of the structure, not the loss of the contents. Since a lot of regular policies exclude flooding, this leaves the insurance companies covered on the buildings, and covered (no payment) on the contents, while the homeowner can still wind up with just an empty shell. Such a deal.
Over time the insurance industry has done something marvelous, they’ve turned a modified Ponzi Scheme into a “legitimate” business. They even tell you up front the only special planetary alignments which will get you any of your money back.
What part of “flood plain” is so hard for people to understand? Not “if” but “when”.
Price of insurance against cold weather induced calamities has surely gone down, has it?
I’ll make it even easier for you. It’s called hunkering down–also avoidance behavior, also denial of a larger reality than you would like to deal with, also throwing the weaker ones off the back of the wagon to the “insurance” wolves, who after all are a beloved establishment institution, to all those with the money to spend on insurance–and it is what everyone in the world is doing now, more or less, rather than spurning the easy dogmas, and opening up to and learning the truth that is on offer in any situation (especially, in the context of climate “science”, all those, alarmist or lukewarmer, who believe in the Greenhouse Effect–patent still pending after all these years–of increasing atmospheric temperature with increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide, even a “little bit”. There is no such greenhouse effect, but don’t try to tell the experts.) Insurance is what rich people do to protect their wealth (in any form, including health); to the poor folks, who want to be left alone (it’s an unalienable, individual right), it’s a scam, and taxation without representation, and a few choice curses every time the subject comes up.
Dear Willis, I like “embiggening”. It makes me laugh and I know exactly what you mean.
Appropriately named.
Still, I think there are valid points to hardening structures near coasts.
I believe people near the coasts should build to modern wind resistant standards. Even my barn/workshop is built to 140 mph coastal residential standards. We have twice in recent years survived +125 mph winds and twice +90 mph winds with no damage, . That’s a good deal for all of us.
With a little bit of calculating, I could do an estimate of the additional cost incurred when we built my house and 800 sqf workshop. I suspect it is in the area of $5000. Most of the stuff is simple modifications of what you are doing when you build a structure anyway (like gluing the plywood to the rafters with construction adhesive as well as nailing it).
Maybe it’s the engineer in me, or maybe I just enjoy that all my stuff is not all over three counties after these storms. There’s something really convenient about that which makes me not miss the $5000.
And when you look at the fact that government has to help clean up some of that mess after the inevitable storms, I think it’s the responsible thing to do- if you want to live near the coast.
Gerry Parker
Willis, well done as usual.
But taking on lawyers representing insurance companies makes shooting fish in a barrel look like the height of sportsmanship.
And I speak as someone currently in dispute with my insurance company. They seem to think that they can get around the whole contract thingy. Not with me they can’t. But I suspect it works with a lot of people, unfortunately.
Conflict of Interest:
James Hansen
Al Gore
Michael Mann
Richard Muller
Heidi Cullen
Frank Nutter
All warmists who in some way using the AGW pseudoscience and scaremongering to get rich.
Curiouos graphic on page 16 of the PDF of his testimony, which I’m struggling to see why he included. From Munich RE, under the title of “What if they hit today?” it appears to show the estimated (insured) cost if historical storms happened with current development in place. Allowing for the fact that it’s necessarily heavily based on modelling, that would seem to be a reasonable measure of whether or not changing climate is really making things worse for the industry.
On that basis, only 3 of the 12 most costly have happened in the past 40 years. Which surely suggests that – if anything – recent climate has actually reduced the risk?
No doubt, Mr. Nutter had a large jar of palm grease in his brief case, the fragrance of which is irresistible to and draws politicians like blow flies. No wonder he has such a nice smile.
Willis – once again we have a demonstration that the internet does not convey irony, especially to those who would not recognise it if it hit them with a Mack truck. That said, I quite like “embiggen” and think that it adds a useful word to the English language.
As for the insurance industry (especially Munich Re) and its links to global catastrophe alarmism, Steve Milloy over at junkscience.com has been all over this issue for years. Good on you for pointing out this latest example of egregious self-interest, highlighting a long standing con on consumers and taxpayers.
Exactly on target. The reinsurance industry is basically unregulated as to what they charge. Since all insurance companies depend on reinsurance policies to secure themselves against massive losses, the reinsurance industry premiums are passed on as part of the premium. Regulators regulate premium pricing, not so much the costs insurance companies face. Reinsurance costs are seldom if ever questioned. According to outside studies, reinsurance costs for hurricanes are 500% of the actual risks.
And who has paid for the studies that the reinsurance industry uses to justify the cost?
The reinsurance industry.
“Embiggen” is a great neologism – originating here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisa_the_Iconoclast
– as was “Cromulent” which perfectly defines the scheme presented by the “Craptacuarly” named Frank Nutter. (see also http://www.cracked.com/article_15269_from-cromulent-to-craptacular-top-12-simpsons-created-words.html)
As for the verb to “incent” all I can say is “meh.”
Thanks for the excellent article.
One gripe …
“insurance is a needed and useful service”
No it isn’t, at least not needed. It may be useful on occasion (health insurance for your kids), but definitely not needed. The rates are set so that you are likely to pay more with insurance than without. If you are a millionaire, it makes absolutely no sense to have insurance for most things. It’s designed to take advantage of the less affluent. I’m sure you know this. It bears pointing out.
wsbriggs,
You are incorrect.
The National Flood Insurance Program offers up to $100,000 in contents coverage on their home owners policy.
I write those policies and I know what I am talking about.
Eric Barnes, since most people are not rich enough to cope with a catastrophic event, insurance is very necessary. If someone backs up a truck to my house while I am away and empties it of everything of value, or it burns down ditto, please explain why insurance is evil (I am not rich).
My view is that while the cost of insurance is debatable, the need for it is not. My personal hope is that I never have to claim on my home insurance policies – and if my premiums go toward helping someone whose house has been robbed or burned down, that is the whole point – plus – there but for the grace of God, go I.
“So as you might imagine, the insurance companies have been the allies of climate alarmists from day one. Munich Re has been strongly pro-alarm since the early days.”
Profits are taxable. If an insurance regulator requires an insurance company to retain a portion of profits to pay out potential future losses then those profits become ‘non-taxable’ loss reserves.
Now that the insurance companies have convinced the regulators that they need massive reserves in order to avoid taxes they now want homeonwers to get tax credits so that those massive losses never happen.
As usual Willis, you expose the charlatans of spin and propaganda. The obvious incentive is for insurance companies to offer huge premium discounts for people who live in defined areas that need “special” construction :”hardening” against known risk. As an example years ago all insurers would offer a discount on their premiums if I fitted an approved fire extinguisher in my automobile, but in the cockeyed world “discount” is a dirty word for them. At any pretext and Global warming is one oft quoted premiums just keep rising.
Here in Australia the high fire insurance premiums meant that many houses that were built in fire prone areas were left uninsured or under insured, and risks increased by green tree huggers (tree changers and environmentalists) who moved from urban areas to country locations took control of local councils mandating that that no one was permitted to remove undergrowth from forests, and if you tried to cut a firebreak around your property, sanctioned/recommended by the local fire brigade, you could be heavily fined thousands of dollars by way of regulatory controls for removing trees or undergrowth, hence our regular bushfires have increased in intensity due to these dumb acts.
With so many choosing NOT to insure for flood and fire due to the high cost, we now have huge public appeals to mitigate the total loss of uninsured properties and the State of Queensland allowed houses to be built on known flood plains, but they then failed to take out any state major disaster insurance (cost saving).
Australians are very generous in coming to the aid of people wiped out in natural disasters and many insurance companies tried to dodge their obligations by petty adherence to fine print in policies. (after all their customers could access appeal funding!!)
All of these issues (nothing to do with climate change) and petty local over regulation of green environmental laws, like prevention of past practices of burning off dry grass and reducing fire fuel loads in forests and permitting building in inappropriate bush locations, has meant more pressure on Insurance companies to be sympathetic and rely less on fine print to reject the claims of the ones that DID insure.
In the State of Victoria insurance has now been included as a component of municipal rates so all properties contribute to a fire service levy as an extension of the old principals of shared risk and risk reduction. But it remains to be seen if there will be any real reduction as already insurance costs and services, fees are rising.
The insurance industries have a few other cute profit protection ideas in the pipeline that rely on regulation and enforcement for safety and other reasons to shift costs away from their responsibility to inspect for risk.
A few years back public event insurers put such high premium cost on public events, that many community events could not be protected or be conducted due to costs and special conditions (wriggle room), they eventually negotiated a “satisfactory to them” settlement with the government that avoided them opening their books to state authorities so their actual, not their spun, claimed cost strategies, were kept away from public scrutiny. A nice skilled politician/industry arrangement to permit high event fee insurance, but not much less than the industry had demanded.
So yes, the question to ask them is show me your confidential claim histories and profit levels to justify your claim/spin before we grant you anything. Where business seeks concessions from statutory authorities that shift costs or require padding to profit margins it pays to be sceptical and ask for the proof.
Inevitably, trade factions introduce public choice complications and the long history of insurance industry dalliance with warmist policies deserves skepticism if not outright cyncism. To an extent this is a problem that needs to be cleaned up from within as Nutters testimony completely ignores industry tools for dealing with these problems.
to speak of premiums or the cost of insurance as one monolithic concept is equally silly. rates have risen dramatically for those in coastal locations subject to storm damage (as flood insurance itself is virtually unavailable in the private market having been displaced by earlier reactionary public insurance policy.)
but just as farm association policies favoring ethanol should make one cynical, they don’t represent the outlook of individual farmers. While the universe of insurance companies is a bit more attenuated than that of farmers, and economic response to these phenomenon are complicated by barriers to entry in the industry and complex state and federal laws with vast unintended consequences, you are simply flat wrong to suggest that premiums will not go down if risk of loss goes down. They will. Look at life insurance rates for non-smokers. But in our infinite wisdom health insurance companies can’t do the same thing.
If there is a large disparity between premiums and risks, capital will flow into the insurance industry and seek business by discounting against that spread in one way or another — premium or underwriting or some combination.
Insurance company suggestions for tax credits to harden threatened property come in a context where the kneejerk proposition has been for insurance policy (sorry) to be set by legislation rather than by simple economics where the insurance company offers a significant discount and/or underwriting consideration against recently inflated rates or refusal to write coverage in consequence of homeowners undertaking such retrofitting.
To an extent the public policy apparatus has already been captured because codes for new construction impose many of these requirements. I’m not suggesting Gerry Parker is wrong in seeing these as sensible but this could be done privately by the establishment of codes by insurance companies to meet underwriting guidelines. If you can’t get insurance you can’t get a mortgage.
There is a degree of public interest in that the government is essentially the disaster insurer of last resort and local government has property tax revenues and local economic functions at stake. But if we really allowed the market to function instead of imagining the least ripple was ‘market failure’ requiring legislation these risks would be better attenuated and more widely covered by private action.
But someone would no doubt call this all discrimination against people who don’t have the money to make those repairs. Then this would result in maybe a tax on insurance premiums for those who did make the repairs to create some grant pogrom for those who didn’t which either would fund repairs or subsidize insurance. The government knows no end of this kind of reactionary legislation and there is little wonder that the Wesley Mouches of our day working for the insurance companies are simply hellbent on getting theirs.
Yes it is reasonable to object to that proposal, but it is of the same species as tax credits for owning homes in the first place, a government gift to realtors, banks, homebuilders, etc.
Or the many state govt. rules against prepayment penalties on loans, one of the most dislocating economic policies we have in that arena.
I simply don’t buy the fear thing. You have to get insurance to get a mortgage. The only people to whom the fear rationale would apply are folks who have built value with sweat instead of bank equity or have paid off their mortgages. So I don’t buy that the insurance industry participation in the extreme weather pogram is to make a few retirees who have had their mortgage burning party buy insurance who wouldn’t.
First of all, the only time you are required to have wind and flood insurance on a building is if there is a mortgage on the property. That requirement is imposed by the lender to protect their investment. If you do not want to pay insurance, pay off the loan.
Second, insurance is a pool of money from which an insured can be paid for a claim. It is set up to protect the insured from great financial loss. Each of us has our own perception of the amount of financial loss we would be willing to suffer and we insure ourselves accordingly; lenders do not want to suffer any financial loss so you must insure for the amount of the loan balance as a minimum.
Third, in the US, insurers are regulated by the States (a very, very good idea contrary to what you hear but that is another discussion). In Florida most of the major insurance companies wanted to be selective in what areas they would provide wind insurance so Florida made the decision to require them to provide coverage for anyone seeking coverage (with appropriate premiums) but they still did not want to do this. So they were kicked out of Florida. Florida then set up a State insurance for property holders to get wind insurance, Citizens Insurance. It is for those who cannot find a private wind insurer for their property. I am one such property owner. Because my property is about a mile from the Gulf of Mexico, there was no private insurance company that would write so I am with Citizens. Recent upgrades to my property have lowered my premiums by almost 50%. Those included new roof with extra waterproofing, upgraded shingles, new windows with steel hurricane shutters and new doors that are hurricane rated. Now it probably cost much more in improvements than I am saving in premiums however, I have the security of knowing I will most likely not have to suffer serious damage to my property and all the trouble that brings. Plus the improvements added value to the house. At this time the State of Florida is trying to get people to obtain private insurance to reduce the liability to Citizens by lowering the requirements for the amount of cash on hand a company must have to operate in Florida. Every one of the new companies that have sprouted up under this lower requirement are Florida based companies that have no A.M.Best rating. The are under funded and have no ability to pay off major claims but have obtained the required reinsurance so they are technically legal. After researching these companies, I find that they are a bad risk to do business with. So once again, it is the level of risk I am comfortable with that dictates my decision. I am willing to pay a little more with Citizens knowing any claim will surely be paid.
Finally, our representatives grant insurance premium increases based on faulty climate scenarios and information. That is a very good reason to keep up the fight.